Exercise 9: Renal System Physiology: Activity 1: The Effect of Arteriole Radius on Glomerular Filtration Lab Report Pre-lab Quiz Results You have not completed the Pre-lab Quiz. 03/31/14 page 1 Experiment Results Predict Question: Predict Question 1: What will happen to the glomerular capillary pressure and filtration rate if you decrease the radius of the afferent arteriole? Your answer : b. Both pressure and filtration rate will decrease. Predict Question 2: What will happen to
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Name: Lonnie Holman-Hernandez Instructions: For each activity below‚ please refer to Chapter 5 on Learning in your textbook to complete the questions provided. After completion‚ please submit your assignment via Blackboard. Activity Handout #3 Identify the CS‚ UCS‚ CR‚ and UCR Read through the examples below and then identify the CS‚ UCS‚ CR‚ and UCR in each of the examples. 1. Pamela is walking her child at a mall and a lady walks by and stops to see the baby. The lady has a shiny
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cup of coffee cost only a quarter.” In this activity‚ we are interested in calculating how many current dollars that cup of coffee‚ or batch of cookies‚ or hourly wages would be equivalent to. 1. Suppose a winter jacket costs $80 in 2003 and inflation was measured at 27% over the period from 2003 to 2013. If all other variables were to remain constant‚ how much would that jacket cost in year-2013 dollars? Use the inflation formula below to complete this calculation:
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Traveling in Neurons Two opposing ideas about the nervous system * Reticular theory ( the nervous system consisted of a large network of fused nerve cells) * Neuron theory ( the nervous system consisted of distinct elements or cells * Discovery of staining led to the acceptance of neuron theory. Staining is a chemical technique that caused nerve cells to become colored so they stood out from surrounding tissue * A way of electricity is transmitted in groups of neurons‚ such as the
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PhysioEx Lab Unit 1 Print Options This box will be automatically hidden when printing. ← Back to Set Page Alphabetize terms Flip terms and definitions 2hr OGTT level aboe 200mg/dl: confirms diabetes dx 2hr. OGTT level b/w 140-200mg/dl: impaired glucose tolerance absolute refractory period: period when cell membrane is totally insensitive to additional stimuli‚ regardless of the stimulus force applied. ACTH: hormone released by the anterior pituitary. stimulated by a hypothalamic hormone
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summation Summation can be defined as the method which neurons use to communicate with each other‚ determining if the cumulative postsynaptic potential in the neuron is enough to pass the threshold for firing. There are two types of summation‚ spatial summation and temporal summation. Both types of summation are similar in that they work to strengthen the EPSP of a neuron‚ meaning they help create more postsynaptic potential so that neurons are more likely to fire. Spatial summation and temporal
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A neuron is a nerve cell in the brain‚ it is essentially the building block of the nervous system. Each neuron is itself a miniature decision making device‚ reacting to signals it receives from hundreds‚ even thousands of other neurons. Each signal is either excitatory or inhibitory. Excitatory signals increase the likelihood of an action potential happening‚ inhibitory make an action potential in a nerve cell less likely. The action potential is a nerve impulse. Once the excitatory signals over
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Session 1- PhysioEx Exercise 11—Kyle 1. List the following values from Chart 1: Hematocrit value for healthy male living at sea level in Boston 48 Hematocrit value for healthy female living at sea level in Boston 44 2. Were the values listed in question 1 within normal range? Yes 3. Describe the difference between the male and the female hematocrit for an individual living in Boston. The secretion of erythropoetin from the kidneys stimulates testosterone in males. Erythropoetin makes
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Upper motor neurons and lower motor neurons act to carry nerve impulses from the brain out to the muscles in the body. Upper motor neurons supply input to the lower motor neurons. They do this by either synapsing directly to lower motor neurons‚ or by synapsing with a local circuit neuron‚ which then synapses with a lower motor neuron. The upper motor neurons originate in the motor region of the cerebral cortex or brainstem. The neurons from the cerebral cortex are important for planning‚ initiating
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Exercise 2: Skeletal Muscle Physiology: Activity 2: The Effect of Stimulus Voltage on Skeletal Muscle Contraction Lab Report Pre-lab Quiz 1. Skeletal muscle fibers are innervated (stimulated) by c. motor neurons. 2. A single action potential propagating down a motor axon results in d. a single action potential and a single contractile event in the muscle fibers it innervates. 3. In resting skeletal muscle‚ calcium is stored in c. the sarcoplasmic reticulum. 4. During the latent period
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