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The COTA is treаting а pаtient fоllоwing a Tоtal Hip Arthroplasty. The COTA instructs the patient to do the following during bed mobility activities to maintain their THA precautions:
Pаtient Bаckgrоund A 52-yeаr-оld patient presents with intermittent drоoping of the right eyelid (ptosis), double vision when reading (diplopia), and increasing difficulty chewing and swallowing after a long day. Muscle weakness improves with rest. The clinician suspects myasthenia gravis. Part 1: Brief description In 2–3 sentences, state what myasthenia gravis is and describe its typical clinical features. (max 100 words) Part 2: Symptom analysis For each listed symptom, briefly answer the following ~75–90 words per symptom (max 270 words total) A. Ptosis Which major body system is primarily involved? (name the system) Explain, in 1–2 sentences, the physiological/mechanistic reason this symptom occurs in MG (link to neuromuscular transmission). Explain how this represents a homeostatic imbalance. B. Diplopia (double vision) Which major body system is primarily involved? Explain the mechanism for diplopia in MG. Explain the homeostatic disruption causing the visual symptom. C. Difficulty chewing/swallowing (fatigable bulbar weakness) Which major body system is primarily involved? Explain the mechanism for chewing/swallowing difficulty in MG. Explain the homeostatic disruption and why symptoms worsen with activity. Part 3: Clinical implication & brief management note Name one immediate clinical implication or safety concern for this patient (e.g., airway risk, nutrition) and one standard management/treatment approach that addresses the imbalance (brief). (max 80 words) Part 4: Cite the website(s) you used in APA format Example: Cleveland Clinic. (2024, January 10). Myasthenia gravis. Cleveland Clinic. https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/12357-myasthenia-gravis See RUBRIC here.