The answer to this is C. Radiation Exposure.
If the ballerina wants to improve her leg extension, she should focus on both flexibility and muscle strength. These two should go together. Flexibility alone or the latter will not help improve extensions. Higher extensions are more dependent on the muscles of your legs.
Alcohol is used in over the counter medications because it is a solvent and can more thoroughly dissolve the solid ingredients of the medication.
The answer would be true because we know that alcohol is sold over the counter
Body planes, look at this website for more info
https://www.google.co.uk/url?q=https://www.boundless.com/physiology/textbooks/boundless-anatomy-and-physiology-textbook/introduction-to-anatomy-and-physiology-1/mapping-the-body-33/body-planes-and-sections-289-1344/&sa=U&ved=0ahUKEwjQs8XR9YrUAhXHKcAKHapnD58QFggUMAI&usg=AFQjCNH0hXmL_w50JNtIeUTU7BDPw10XDg
Answer:
The book of Zoobiquity, by Barbara Natterson-Horowitz and Kathryn Bowers, and which was published in 2012, is a really interesting one, as, written from the perspective of a medical doctor, a cardiologist, it evaluates the importance of also learning about animals, and how closely they are related to human beings, to the point that, human medicine and veterinary medicine should come together more and learn from one another. The book basically shows that medicine could enrich itself even more if it learned that many of the conditions and illnesses that affect human beings are present in animals as well. This means that the two branches: one dealing with people, and one with animals, could come together more often and share knowledge and information.
The authors mention several instances in which it is proven that animals and human beings suffer from similar conditions and the solutions to them, at least in humans, could come from learning from animals. As such, Natterson-Holowitz and Bowers mention those programs on which both veterinary medicine and human medicine could collaborate and learn from one another.
Another way, different from those mentioned in the book, that both medicines could help each other would be in the studying of socializing patterns, which can also be similar in humans and animals. By learning from animals how these patterns occur, how they handle socialization and certain issues of this process, might help medical doctors understand certain patterns in human beings that are very similar to those of animals.