ubuysa
The BSOD Doctor
Glad it's sorted. FWIW I did look at the dump. It is a DRIVER_STATE_POWER_FAILURE error and it does flag the Bluetooth driver as at fault but, as is so often with the automated dump analysis, it's likely wrong. 
When I look at the failure record for this stop code it throws up a page full of driver errors, some are Windows drivers, some are third party drivers (like the Bluetooth driver), but the key are failures to load several AMD drivers, these will be the chipset drivers that you have since installed with the AMD Ryzen utility. The failure of all the other drivers to load, and almost certainly the BSOD itself, follows from these missing chipset drivers.
As an aside, I can see a bunch of Norton Internet Security drivers in your dump, I would seriously consider not using Norton. For one thing you don't need it, Windows Defender is plenty good enough (and it's free, unlike Norton) and Norton is also known to cause problems - as do almost all third-party security products at some point or other because they rely on undocumented features. I wouldn't simply uninstall Norton however, I would do another fully clean install of Windows (not forgetting the AMD Ryzen chipset drivers
) and simply don't install Norton.
It was an interesting exercise, thanks for that!
When I look at the failure record for this stop code it throws up a page full of driver errors, some are Windows drivers, some are third party drivers (like the Bluetooth driver), but the key are failures to load several AMD drivers, these will be the chipset drivers that you have since installed with the AMD Ryzen utility. The failure of all the other drivers to load, and almost certainly the BSOD itself, follows from these missing chipset drivers.
As an aside, I can see a bunch of Norton Internet Security drivers in your dump, I would seriously consider not using Norton. For one thing you don't need it, Windows Defender is plenty good enough (and it's free, unlike Norton) and Norton is also known to cause problems - as do almost all third-party security products at some point or other because they rely on undocumented features. I wouldn't simply uninstall Norton however, I would do another fully clean install of Windows (not forgetting the AMD Ryzen chipset drivers
It was an interesting exercise, thanks for that!