If your gastrostomy tube is pulled or falls out please remain calm. Take a note of the time. You will need a new tube inserted as soon as possible, otherwise the stoma tract (hole through your skin) will start to heal and may close completely within a few hours.
To display your products using YouTube Shopping, you need to set up YouTube Shopping in the Google & YouTube channel. After you set up YouTube Shopping, customers can buy your products as they watch your YouTube videos.
If you want your customers to have the option to checkout directly on YouTube, then you need to have Shopify Payments activated. If you don't have Shopify Payments, then customers check out on your online store.
You need to make sure that your YouTube channel account email address matches the email address that you use for your Google & YouTube channel. If you don't use the same email address, then you need to add the email address that you use for your Shopify account to your YouTube account as a YouTube channel manager. Refer to Add or remove access to your YouTube channel on YouTube Help.
Ann Pietrangelo is freelance writer and health reporter with bylines on a variety of consumer health publications and leading health information websites. Through her books No More Secs! Living, Laughing & Loving Despite Multiple Sclerosis and Catch That Look: Living, Laughing & Loving Despite Triple-Negative Breast Cancer, she shares her experiences in the hope that others will feel less alone in their health struggles. Learn more at her website.
Erica Hersh is a health writer, editor, and communications strategist based in Boston, MA. In 2014, she fulfilled her lifelong dream of being on Jeopardy. She did not, however, fulfill her dream of winning on Jeopardy.
Tubal ligation is typically done as a laparoscopic surgical procedure. Your surgeon will make small incisions in your abdomen that provide access to the fallopian tubes. The tubes are cut and sealed, or closed with clamps or rings. Tubal ligation stops an egg from traveling into the uterus, where it could have been fertilized by sperm.
Tubal ligation is designed to permanently eliminate the possibility of pregnancy. For this reason, medical professionals sometimes try to dissuade young people with a uterus from having the procedure. However, there is no legal age requirement for tubal ligation.
If you have concerns about your health and how pregnancy might affect you, talk with a medical professional. In some instances, it may make sense to have a tubal ligation. In others, treatments might be available that will make pregnancy safer for you.
If you or your partner has a genetic condition, or you have a family history of a specific disease, you may be concerned about passing it on to a child. If so, talk with a medical professional. They may recommend carrier screening.
Carrier screening is a genetic test that lets you know if you carry genes for specific genetic disorders. You might also opt to get pregnant and have your embryos tested for the condition instead. This is known as preimplantation genetic testing (PGT). PGT are types of procedures that can be done in conjunction with in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Some studies indicate that sterilization regret, which can lead to depression, occurs in around 28 percent of people who get a tubal ligation. The amount of time that has passed since the procedure took place is noted as a potential cause.
If you and your partner both have uteruses, you may assume your partner will be the one who carries a pregnancy. In some circumstances, you may find out it will be challenging for them to do so, for medical reasons. In this instance, you may wish to rethink your decision to tie your tubes.
Tubal ligation may or may not be the right choice for you. No matter your age, if you think you may wish to have children someday, you may be better off with long-term birth control rather than sterilization.
Here is what people with tracheostomy (and those caring for them) should know about caring for your equipment and stoma (the hole through your neck and windpipe, or trachea), along with what you can expect as you adjust to living with a Passy-Muir valve, eating, and other activities with a trach in place.
In response to these changes, the body produces more mucus. Suctioning clears mucus from the tracheostomy tube and is essential for proper breathing. Also, secretions left in the tube could become contaminated and a chest infection could develop. Avoid suctioning too frequently as this could lead to more secretion buildup.
The secretions should be white or clear. Yellow, brown or greenish secretions may be a sign of infection. If the changed color persists for more than three days or if it is difficult to keep the tracheostomy tube in place, call your surgeon's office.
If there is blood in the secretions (it may look more pink than red), you should initially increase humidity and suction more gently. A Swedish or artificial nose (HME) is a filtered cap that can be attached to the tracheostomy tube to help maintain humidity.
Putting the patient in the bathroom with the door closed and shower on will increase the humidity immediately. If the patient coughs up or has bright red blood mucus suctioned, or if the patient develops a fever, call your surgeon's office immediately.
The curved tube that is inserted into a tracheostomy stoma is meant to be changed regularly. A week or two after your tracheotomy procedure, your surgeon will perform the first tracheostomy tube change to make sure the stoma and tracheostomy site are healing properly. Make sure to have your caregiver go with you to that appointment, where you will learn about how to change tubes.
It is important that caregivers feel confident and competent in tube changing before leaving the hospital in case an emergency tube change is needed. The procedure is not without risks. For optimal safety, two people should be present during a tube change.
The outer cannula is the outer tube that holds the tracheostomy open. A neck plate extends from the sides of the outer tube and has holes to attach cloth ties or a self-adhering strap around the neck.
There are different types of tracheostomy tubes with certain features for different purposes. These are manufactured by different companies. However, a specific type of tracheostomy tube will be the same no matter which company manufactures them.
Lung secretions (mucus) coat the inside of the tracheostomy tube requiring the tube to be changed once a week, although some patients may be fitted with a different tube that can be left in longer. The tube may have to be changed more often if secretions become very dry or if the patient has a chest infection and is producing more or thicker secretions.
The nose and mouth provide warmth, moisture and filtration for the air we breathe. Having a tracheostomy tube, however, bypasses these mechanisms. Humidification helps keep secretions thin and to avoid mucus plugs.
For someone who requires heated mist, you can use an electric heating rod that fits into the nebulizer bottle. Many of these heating elements do not shut off automatically. Make sure the bottle does not go dry, which could melt the plastic or even cause a fire.
More moisture will accumulate in the aerosol tubing with heated mist. Moisture that accumulates in the aerosol tubing must be removed frequently to prevent blocking of the tube or accidental aspiration (inhalation that causes choking).
Sterile saline drops can be instilled into the trach tube if secretions become thick and difficult to suction. A saline nebulizer treatment is also helpful to loosen secretions if the patient has a nebulizer machine. Additional fluid intake also helps to keep secretions thinner.
Secretions can be kept thin during the day by applying a heat moisture exchanger (HME) to the trach tube. An HME is a humidifying filter that fits onto the end of the trach tube and comes in several shapes and sizes, all of which fit over the standard trach tube opening. There are also HMEs available for portable ventilators. Bedside ventilators have built-in humidifiers. HMEs also help prevent small particles from entering the trach tube. Change the HME daily and as needed if soiled or wet.
If your tube uses a reusable inner cannula, the tube should be cleaned two to three times per day or more as needed. Please note that this only applies to reusable inner cannulas. Cleaning is needed more immediately after surgery and when there is a lot of mucus buildup.
Many people with a trach can speak, after time and practicing with or without special equipment. Normal speech relies on a steady stream of air that comes from the lungs and passes through the vocal cords. When the trach tube is inserted, most of the air bypasses the vocal cords and goes out through the tube. Some air may leak up to the vocal cords, but it may not be forceful enough to drive the vocal cords into vibration, or it may only allow enough force for very short utterances.
All trach tubes should fit easily into the airway with some space around the tube. If the tube fits snugly inside the trachea, all the exhaled air will leave the body through the tracheostomy tube and no air can pass through the vocal cords.
A person with a trach can cover the tube by holding a finger or placing a cap over the tube for short periods, but this may make it harder for the person to breathe, and may not be tolerable for everyone. Also, this practice can introduce germs and contaminants from the hand or fingers into the body and cause an infection, a particularly critical problem for those at risk for aspiration. Some may get enough air for speech without blocking the tube, but may not have the awareness, muscle movement or muscle tone to speak in this way.
Several types of valves can be attached to the tracheostomy tube to help a person speak. These valves allow air to enter through the tube and exit through the mouth and nose. Use of certain valves may also help reduce secretions, increase sense of smell, reducing choking risk, increase blood oxygenation and make it easier to remove the trach tube for people whose tracheostomy is not permanent.
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