Thursday, 23 April 2015

BLACK BLUE and with some I LOVE YOU TOO! 22.04.15

Tuesday Night 21.04.15
SISTA JOAN Arrives from London..




Too SEXY to be a Granny



 http://www.conceptb.fr/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Bikram-yoga.jpg
Wednesday 22.04.15
PAIN MED YOGA POSITION #112..
" Supta Dex-A-Morph Baddha Konasana"

(Supine Butterfly Half Budda with Dex and Morph Sub Q) 

ONE LAST SPIN IN THE SUN..
 The Pink Lady with the Pink Lady in the Garden

ONE LAST SUN BATH



The Black and Blue part...

Tuesday..."White out"

http://my.clevelandclinic.org/ccf/media/Images/heart/artery8.JPG
 
Wednesday Dry "G" begins..PAIN 9.8/10


 BEST PAIN POSE..FETAL

Dry "G"  explained

Gangrene is the medical term used to describe the death of an area of the body. It develops when the blood supply is cut off to the affected part as a result of various processes, such as infection, vascular (pertaining to blood vessels) disease, or trauma. Gangrene can involve any part of the body; the most common sites include the toes, fingers, feet, and hands.
Two major types of gangrene exist:
  • Dry gangrene is caused by a reduction of blood flow through the arteries. It appears gradually and progresses slowly. In most people, the affected part does not become infected. In this type of gangrene, the tissue becomes cold and black, begins to dry, and eventually sloughs off. Dry gangrene is commonly seen in people with blockage of arteries (arteriosclerosis) resulting from increased cholesterol levels, diabetes, cigarette smoking, and genetic and other factors.
  •  The stages are similar to wet gangrene, except there is no infection, pus, wetness, or crackly-feeling skin because there is no gas production in the uninfected tissue. There are many diseases that may lead to dry gangrene; the most common are diabetes, arteriosclerosis, and tobacco addiction (smoking). Infrequently, dry gangrene can occur quickly, over a few hours to days, when a rapid arterial blockage occurs (for example, an arterial blood clot suddenly occludes a small artery to a toe). Dry gangrene often produces cool, dry, and discolored appendages (sometimes termed "mummified") with no oozing fluid or pus, hence the term "dry." 
  •  In EOL Life situations No AMPUTATIONS are advised and Septicemia/sepsis (endotoxic shock) is monitored for added EOL complications

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