Sit in the same area where you sat before

Sit in the same area where you sat before
Slide Note
Embed
Share

Older patients in primary care often take statins, but the decision to start, stop, or continue statin treatment in individuals over age 75 can be complex. This article discusses the importance of evaluating the level of benefit, potential risks such as polypharmacy and drug interactions, and the impact on cardiovascular events and mortality. It explores findings from randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses, highlighting the benefits of statin treatment for secondary prevention in individuals with vascular disease history and the potential benefits for primary prevention in those over age 75, particularly for major cardiac events.

  • Statin treatment
  • Elderly patients
  • Polypharmacy
  • Cardiovascular events
  • Randomized controlled trials

Uploaded on Feb 24, 2025 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Warm-Up Sit in the same area where you sat before. Study for your quiz. What is the area of a triangle with a height of 4 inches and a base that is the length of 3 inches?

  2. Clear Your Desk Except paper and pencil.

  3. Finished with Quiz? Staple any work you have to your quiz and put your quiz in the class bin. Get your homework for tonight (the side with #4- 9 on it) from the front desk and write your homework in your Bull Book. Take notes on what you read. Open your textbook to page 397 and read to page 398. Look at #19 to know what a diagonal is. Read Lesson 9-3 and 9-4. What does congruent mean?

  4. Area of Special Quadrilaterals Use your basic shapes that you know triangles and rectangles to find the area. Two sides that have the same measurement are marked with a short line through the sides. Diagonal a line that goes from one point on a shape through the middle to another point, not the edge though Hypotenuse longest side of a right triangle, side of triangle that slopes Find area of a triangle using the base and height, not the hypotenuse

  5. Trapezoid

  6. Parallelogram

  7. Warm-Up What is the area of the isosceles trapezoid below?

  8. Rhombus

  9. Kite

  10. Game http://www.xpmath.com/forums/arcade.php? do=play&gameid=11 http://www.bonnmath.com/uploads/1/2/9/5/ 12955794/wssection91.pdf

  11. Homework Complete the back of your homework #1-6 due Friday. Fold your paper in half. On the top half, draw a special quadrilateral (one that we have discussed this week) and label the lengths of the sides and height. On the bottom half, put your answer and the work you did to solve your problem. Quiz on area of special quadrilaterals next Wednesday. Review Benchmark Test next Monday and Tuesday.

  12. Warm-Up A rectangle measures 3 inches by 4 inches. If the lengths of each side double, what is the effect on the area?

  13. Practice A rectangle measures 3 inches by 4 inches. If the lengths of each side double, what is the effect on the area? The lengths of the sides of a bulletin board are 4 feet by 3 feet. How many index cards measuring 4 inches by 6 inches would be needed to cover the board?

  14. Extra Credit Opportunity Worksheet in yellow extra credit folder.

  15. Volume http://www.illustrativemathematics.org/illustr ations/534

  16. Volume Will need to find volume of prisms with fractions for the lengths. A right rectangular prism has edges of 1 , 1 , and 1 . How many cubes with side lengths of would be needed to fill the prism? What is the volume of the prism? 120 cubes

  17. Practice A large cube has dimensions 3/2, 5/2, and 5/2 inches. Each of the smaller cubic units in the model is inch on each side. How many small cubes can fit inside the large cube?

  18. Practice http://www.illustrativemathematics.org/illustr ations/535

  19. Net Imagine a cube and then take it apart so that you can flatten it out. Vertex corner Face Edge

More Related Content