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Harp
post Dec 1 2008, 01:04 PM
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Do I get really light-headed after I take baths?
My mom suggested it was because the water was too hot, but I lowered the temp. and I still felt really dizzy when I got out.
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*KINGdinguhling*
post Jan 24 2009, 02:33 AM
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lmaooo
 
Reidar
post Jan 24 2009, 03:15 AM
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QUOTE(fire @ Jan 24 2009, 01:52 AM) *
I am most certainly sure you mean outflow, when you stand up your body doesn't have enough time to vasoconstrict the lower arterioles and veins in order to maintain a more even blood pressure as the blood rushes down due to a thing called GRAVITY!!!!!.

Yeah, non uni season.


Haha, no. Your accentuation of the word "influx" does not cohere with the attempted contrast to "outflow" because an "influx" can be in any which direction. If blood is rushing out from the head, it obviously must be effusing into something. I'm usually the one to bring up semantics so I'm sympathetic to others who feel that a singularity is enough to throw off the sentence, but only when the parsing of words isn't completely wrong. Also, vasoconstriction does not maintain a "more even blood pressure" because the act of constraining the pressure gradient is inciting a disparity from the region that is insulated from said CBF; the very definition of "constriction" necessitates unevenness. That's how hemodilation acts diametrically to balance out, and vice versa, but only with one and the other doing so in synchronization.

This all becomes very basic when you've studied NO2 products for so long.
 
fire
post Jan 24 2009, 04:50 AM
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Hells, I don't doubt the fact you know what youre saying, however no where did you state that the sudden loss of blood from the brain causes her faintness. However I can argue the use of the vasocontriction in order to maintian the "more even blood pressure" as it is a reflex in the neural system due temperature biofeedback, its initial effect is yes a change in pressure...

You know what? f*ck this, I haven't done neurophysiology in a year, you win, is that what you want to hear?
 
*KINGdinguhling*
post Jan 24 2009, 04:53 AM
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f*ck that i refuse to let reidar win, like letting the retard cut in front of you
 
fire
post Jan 24 2009, 04:56 AM
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Dude had me cracking open my old lecture notes. NO I refuse to do so. I'm on freaking holidays, I've been studying for a year straight last year. IT IS MY BREAK, I REFUSE TO LOOK AT UNI BOOKS FOR AN E-FIGHT
 
*KINGdinguhling*
post Jan 24 2009, 04:59 AM
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because your arguing with
 
fire
post Jan 24 2009, 05:03 AM
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On another note, Reidar how do I back squat without f*cking up my back everytime?
 
*KINGdinguhling*
post Jan 24 2009, 05:07 AM
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reidar, can you crush an a can on your forehead
 
gojira
post Jan 24 2009, 05:14 AM
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QUOTE(KINGdinguhling @ Jan 24 2009, 05:07 AM) *
reidar, can you crush an a can on your forehead


engrish prs
 
Reidar
post Jan 24 2009, 05:15 AM
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QUOTE(fire @ Jan 24 2009, 04:50 AM) *
Hells, I don't doubt the fact you know what youre saying, however no where did you state that the sudden loss of blood from the brain causes her faintness.


That's exactly what "The influx of blood rushing from your head" asserts. The "influx" is consequently flushing from the head.

QUOTE
However I can argue the use of the vasocontriction in order to maintian the "more even blood pressure" as it is a reflex in the neural system due temperature biofeedback, its initial effect is yes a change in pressure...


That's a fallacious amounting of what facilitated fusion leads to. Vasoconstriction in and of itself does not cause the balance, but incites hemodilation to create the equity you're trying to attribute it (constriction) to, which is not an incommensurate process like the repression of blood flow is.

QUOTE(fire @ Jan 24 2009, 05:03 AM) *
On another note, Reidar how do I back squat without f*cking up my back everytime?


Do box squats so your form doesn't suck.
 
LittleMissSunshi...
post Jan 24 2009, 05:27 PM
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rawr?
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QUOTE(KINGdinguhling @ Jan 24 2009, 12:19 AM) *
i have no idea if hes lying or not, but im agreeing cause it sounds smart

QUOTE(gojira @ Jan 24 2009, 12:20 AM) *
you follower.

loled @ that ^.

i agree with Reidar, my sister tends to just sit or lay down for certain amount of time and then takes a shower. she get's headaches.
 
Blyat
post Jan 26 2009, 01:50 PM
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mabey becuase when you get up/out from the bath, you move too quickly up and that can make you dizzy
 
karmakiller
post Jan 27 2009, 08:48 PM
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^ Someone hasn't been keeping up with the topic.
 
*KINGdinguhling*
post Jan 27 2009, 11:37 PM
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QUOTE(KINGdinguhling @ Jan 24 2009, 02:07 AM) *
reidar, can you crush an a can on your forehead

 
Maccabee
post Jan 28 2009, 12:08 AM
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Its cause the water was hot and when you got up it was cold and the sudden tempeture change made you light headed. One time my mom had to take a really hot bath and when she got out to fast she fainted.
 
Comptine
post Jan 28 2009, 09:56 PM
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QUOTE(JosephCohen123 @ Jan 28 2009, 12:08 AM) *
Its cause the water was hot and when you got up it was cold and the sudden tempeture change made you light headed. One time my mom had to take a really hot bath and when she got out to fast she fainted.


You're dumb.
 
heyo-captain-jac...
post Jan 28 2009, 10:03 PM
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QUOTE(Comptine @ Jan 28 2009, 08:56 PM) *
You're dumb.

x2
 
goth-nina
post Feb 25 2009, 10:55 AM
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I actually fainted after a hot bath when I was a kid. Of course, it was the temp of the water. Could be something you used, a bath product, or you're simply tired--haha.
 
Blyat
post Feb 25 2009, 05:00 PM
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QUOTE(karmakiller @ Jan 27 2009, 08:48 PM) *
^ Someone hasn't been keeping up with the topic.

lol guilty ^__^
 

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