The first thing you should do is to check all vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, temperature) refer to the physician in charge of the patient. In this patient who looks pale with a slight grimace on general survey, with irregular and bounding pulses, the differential diagnoses with be: (1) cardiac pathology, (2) hemorrhagic shock, or (3) severe anemia. The attending physician shall be informed immediately for the proper management to be ordered.
<span>This problem is solved by the law of effusion, which states that the rate of effusion is ~ 1/sqrt(molecular weight). Calculate the molecular weights of the different gases:
HBr = 80.91 g/mol
NO2 = 46.0055 g/mol
C2H6 = 30.07 g/mol
Thus, the approximate relative rates are HBr ~ 0.112, NO2 = 0.1474 and C2H6 = 0.1824.
Answer: C2H6 effuses fastest.</span>
Answer:
D. spontaneous recovery
Explanation:
Based on the information provided in regards to the situation at hand it seems that Jane's nausea best illustrates spontaneous recovery. This is a phenomenon discovered by Ivan Pavlov which refers to the re-appearance of a conditioned response thought to have been gone after a significant delay. Which is what is happening since Jane suddenly began having nausea (conditioned response) after having entered the waiting room a couple of decades later.
40-140 degrees because then bacteria comes into play
Answer:
Explanation:
Fracture healing is a complex process that requires the recruitment of appropriate cells and the subsequent expression of appropriate genes at the right time and in the right anatomical location. Bones are richly supplied with blood vessels. Most apparent are the nutrient arteries (one or more per bone) that arises from adjacent arteries outside the bone and enter the bone through the nutrient foramina. The nutrient artery divide in the medullary cavity into ascending and descending branches. Blood get to the bone cells through the haversian systems or osteons which are microscopic canal systems that house the blood vessels. The end of bones are supplied by epiphyseal and metaphyseal arteries.