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Cocaine abuse is a major worldwide health problem. Patients with acute cocaine toxicity may require urgent treatment for tachycardia, dysrhythmia, hypertension, and coronary vasospasm in order to prevent pathological sequelae such as acute coronary syndrome, stroke, and death. This activity reviews the evaluation and management of cocaine toxicity and highlights the role of the interprofessional team in caring for affected patients.
Objectives:Describe the toxicokinetics of cocaine toxicity.Describe the typical history and physical exam findings for a patient with cocaine toxicity.Summarize the management options for cocaine toxicity.Explain the importance of improving care coordination among the interprofessional team to enhance the delivery of care for patients with cocaine toxicity.Access free multiple choice questions on this topic.
An interprofessional team can improve patient outcomes. Emergency department nurses are often responsible for triage. I high index of suspicion is needed. Emergency department and urgent care doctors and nurse practitioners are involved with initial treatment, while intensivists, cardiologists, and hospitalists continue care. Pharmacists monitor medication usage and dose, as well as check for drug-drug interactions and contraindications. Specialty-trained nurses, such as emergency and critical care nurses, administer treatments, monitor patients, and notify the team of changes in the patient's condition. They also provide education to the patient and the family.
User:AdonisRouse has been adding multiple pictures to Angel Williams, Velvet Sky and The Beautiful People (professional wrestling). Could someone check to see if the surface somewhere else. The user claims he created said pictures himself. Gavyn Sykes (talk) 01:45, 8 September 2008 (UTC)Reply[reply]
A future project could also be La Familia (professional wrestling): With Adam Copeland, Curt Hawkins and Zack Ryder, Bam Neely, Chavo Guerrero, and Vickie Guerrero. (But that would be a lot of work). iMatthew (talk) 21:45, 13 September 2008 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Seeing as pro wrestling articles have recently updated - though of course not TOO recently - to having a "Reception" section, does having a "Professional Reviews" section, similar to that of what's seen on articles regarding music albums, sound like a good idea? The idea itself most likely wouldn't pass, but I'm just "throwing" it out there for the purpose of having different reviews from professional sources (according to what I've seen, Canadian Online Explorer, and Dave Meltzer's Wrestling Observer, just to name a few) listed on PPV events. Superslammin (talk) 17:37, 20 September 2008 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I know that this is as minor of an issue as it can possibly get, but are period marks necessary at the end of matches under results? I bring this up since there are several articles that either have a period at the end of a match result, or do not. Again, I know that this really isn't anything to worry about, but there's really no harm in having a customary, traditional format for all professional wrestling PPV articles regarding the matter. Superslammin (talk) 01:18, 19 September 2008 (UTC)Reply[reply]
No Mercy (2008) (meaning the name of the professional wrestling pay-per-view event was that the wrestlers [real people with real names having stage names that aren't their birth names] weren't going to show mercy against each other on October 5). The 2008 in brackets means that the professional wrestling pay-per-view event (which features WWE's creative staff writing matches for guys with stage names that pretend to hit each other) took place in the year 2008. Lots of people with birth names wrestled (pretended to hit each other) at the event. The main event was decided after x took x's arm and buckle it under his knee, fold it in half, cut it off, and slammed it down towards the mat (the professional wrestling [mock combat with fake characters] ring).
I found this on the requested articles page for the project and did some research, and it looks like something I could take a crack at and make a decent article out of. However, I checked AFD and deletion log and found that the article had previously been deleted (here's a link to the deletion discussion. It seems like the discussion was very brief and one of the main complaints was not enough sources. I'm fairly sure I could dig up the sources through OWOW or similiar sites, as well as CZW's website itself, although anyone with the actual DVDs would be highly appreciated. I'm just wondering whether anyone would have any complaints about recreating the article in a better referenced format. Thanks, DoomsDay349 19:35, 6 October 2008 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I moved Jack Reynolds (professional wrestling) to Jack Reynolds (broadcaster). First of all, his stints as a wrestling announcer were brief enough to where he may possibly be as well known from working at WUAB than from working for the WWF. Second, check this out. That article title may have not been a good idea in the first place if a few random web searches turn up a Jack Reynolds who was a wrestler (possibly even in main events) in the 1930s.RadioKAOS (talk) 13:24, 5 February 2012 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I've noticed that two similar search terms redirect to two different articles. WWE Tag Teams/Stables redirects to List of professional wrestling rosters whereas the similar Wwe tag teams and stables redirects to List of WWE personnel. Since these are very similar it appears logical that they should both redirect to the same place but I am not sure what article that should be so I am asking for assistance.--174.93.169.157 (talk) 04:32, 1 May 2012 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Posted this on the template's talk page on 22 April but got no replies. Anyone have any opinion? I propose merging the Raw/SD/NXT/Multibranded sections. Given the virtual end of the brand split where upper-card wrestlers from any brand appear on both Raw/SD as they wish, whereas lower-card wrestlers don't even appear on Raw/SD but on NXT/Superstars and also given that even WWE (through its newest version of its website) doesn't even bother to track which wrestler belongs to which brand, I propose we simply merge the sections. Also, can we separate the commentators/announcers/hosts from the wrestlers... just like we separate the Spanish commentators and the referees? I also propose that we remove the "appearing on the SmackDown brand" from the wrestlers' pages. i.e. Bryan Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler signed to WWE and appearing on its SmackDown brand. --> Bryan Danielson (born May 22, 1981) is an American professional wrestler signed to WWE. Starship.paint (talk) 09:12, 1 May 2012 (UTC)Reply[reply]
A team wins the title, not the titles, yeah? I say yeah. And I change articles accordingly. But I'm just one man, with a PS3 controller (not very efficient for Wikipedia!). If you omnipotent folks at the top with your high-tech marvels are in agreeance that this very common mistake should be widely eradicated, could you please assemble a crack team of editors, or build some sort of bot? The truth must be known! Mustn't it? InedibleHulk (talk) 18:02, 2 May 2012 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I'm not seeing your logic when you claim "lost to" isn't correct, yet "would win" is perfectly reasonable. If nobody actually loses a match, how can anyone actually win? Shall we say "Mark Calloway (in his 'Undertaker' costume) laid on an entirely cooperative Randy Orton after the two created the illusion of an actual piledriver, while the (kayfabe) referee slapped the mat three times (as the script called for), giving gullible fans the impression he won the fixed bout."? Of course not. Almost everyone knows wrestling is fiction, and the professional wrestling article (linked to in every wrestler's lead) spells it out clearly for those who don't. InedibleHulk (talk) 22:15, 21 May 2012 (UTC)Reply[reply] 2b1af7f3a8