Hynd Bio 270 Lab Practical

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What's the percent increase of a single twitch to tetany formula?

((magnitude of force - force of single twitch) / force of single twitch)) x 100

Frequency of stimulation = ?

(1 twitch / # ms on bottom graph) x 100

heart rate = what?

(1/ r to r interval) x 60

what's the formula for fick's law of diffusion

(change in concentration) x (SA) / (molecular weight x change in x)

how do you calculate mean arterial pressure (MAP)?

(systolic - diastolic / 3) + diastolic

how to calculate the *frequency of stimulation*:

*F = 1 stimulus / i ms* i = interval given from the graph (ms) convert.. X 1000ms/ 1 sec = *stimulations/second*

Diffusion rates are different because...

*Fick's law*: molecular weight is inversely related to diffusion rate

one factor that contributes to difference in metabolic rate of mouse & human:

*SA:Volume ratio* SA increases= SA:V ratio decreases SA/V increases = Metabolic rate decreases O2 intake increases= body heat escapes more slowly

scatter plot *figure caption*

*basically describes the trendline* figure 1. as the __________ increases/decreases, __________ decreases/ increases

inhibitor

*noncompetitive*- allosteric *competitive*- active site increase inhibitor = decreases rate b/c unable to bind

bar graph should include:

- NO title - NO gridlines - axis titles - error bars - figure caption - units

*ECG & pulse wave tracings lab:*

- R-R interval (seconds) - heart rate (bpm) - pulse wave velocity (m/sec)

what happens to lung volumes after exercising

- TV increases - IRV decreases - ERV decreases - VC stays the same

*single muscle twitch & tetany lab:*

- force of a single twitch (force) - contraction time in a single twitch (seconds) - relaxation time in a single twitch (seconds) - frequency vs. voltage) - % increase in strength of mm. contraction (%) - frequency of stimulation (stimulations/sec.)

*reflex amplitude lab:*

- latent period (seconds) - angle of rotation (degrees) - # of synapses

*urinalysis lab*:

- specific gravity (NO UNITS!) - glucose concentration of a sample.

*respiration lab*:

- vital capacity (VC) (liters) - respiration rate (RR)(bpm)

What is the isotonic concentration for NaCl (the first molar concentration of the NaCl solution where hemolysis did not occur)?

.16 M

. What is the isotonic concentration for glucose (the first molar concentration of the glucose solution where hemolysis did not occur)?

.32 M

Based on your answers and knowledge from the previous questions, what would you expect the isotonic concentration of iron(III) chloride (FeCl3) to be?

0.08 M

How many receptive fields are being stimulated when two points are felt as one?

1

paired:

1 group/ same person being tested twice (before & after)

Put the six steps of the Scientific Method in order of their occurrence.

1)Observe 2)Question 3)Hypothesize 4)Experiment 5)Interpret results 6)Conclude

Will your t-test to determine whether resting metabolic rate in mice is significantly greater than humans be 1-tailed or 2-tailed?

1-tailed

Parts and functions of the reflex arc

1. Sensory (afferent) receptor reacts to stimulus 2. Afferent pathway conducts nerve impulses to the CNS 3. Integration center of the CNS translates afferent information to efferent 4. Efferent motor pathway sends nerve impulses to the effector 5. Effector responds to the efferent impulses by contracting or secreting

Reflex arc steps (5):

1. receptor 2. sensory afferent neuron 3. integration center 4. motor efferent neuron 5. effector

What's the average typical specific gravity of urine?

1.001 - 1.030

Frequency formula

1/ interval

frequency

1/i

normal rate of breathing (breaths/min)

12-15 respiratory cycles per min

unpaired:

2 different groups ( male vs. females, treatment mice vs. placebo mice)

How high would the fluid rise in the tube under ideal conditions at 25° C if the solution in the bag were changed to 0.5 M NaCl? Express your answer in millimeters (mm).

252,704 mm

Under ideal conditions (that is, conditions where the hydrostatic pressure is negligible, there are no wall effects, the solution is not diluted by water influx, etc.), how high would the fluid rise in the tube at 25° C ? Express your answer in millimeters (mm).

252,704 mm

The discrepancy in the molar concentrations in the previous two questions is explained by NaCl's dissociation in water. Because of this principle, there are

2x the number of osmotically active particles in solution as glucose for a given molar concentration. This increases the tonicity of the NaCl solutions, preventing water from entering the cells and lysing the cells at lower molar concentrations.

For spatial summation, what was the smallest stimulus current required to evoke the weakest contraction (i.e., the threshold stimulus)?

4 mA

obstructive lungs can expand to _______% at a maximum but usually it's around ____%

50; 30

If arterial blood pressure is 110/50, the pulse pressure is __________________ mm Hg.

60

What's the formula for heart rate?

60 / RR

How do you measure respiration rate?

60 / amount of time one breath takes

For spatial summation, what was the smallest stimulus current required to evoke the maximal contraction?

7 mA

If arterial blood pressure is 110/50, the mean arterial pressure (MAP) is __________________ mm Hg.

70

if someone's lung capacity is normal, it can expand to _____%

80

What is FEV1/VC if someone has a restricted lung capacity due to a tumor, for example?

90% or above

*average* in excel

=average()

*stdev* in excel

=stdev()

The FEV1/VC ratio is clinically significant because it is an indicator of airway resistance .

A healthy individual's FEV1/VC ratio is near 80% , while an individual with an obstructive lung disease will likely have a FEV1/VC ratio of less than 50% because of a collapsing of the small airways.

FEV1/VC ratio

A normal FEV1/VC ratio is 80%, meaning a normal healthy human can expire 80% of their lung capacity, or vital capacity, in one second. If that number drops below 50% then the person most likely has an obstructive lung disease such as asthma. The person has healthy lungs, but the airways leading to the lungs are blocked causing the person to exhale less air in the same amount of time. If the FEV1/VC is greater than 90% then the person most likely has a restrictive lung disease such as pulmonary fibrosis. The person's lungs no long have the same compliance as a healthy individual, so a higher percentage of the air is expired since the lungs do not expand all of the way.

Valsalva's maneuver effect on heart activity

A person forcefully expires against a closed glottis, changing the intrathoracic pressure which dramatically affects CO, VR, MAP, and HR Stroke volume and blood pressure falls while the heart rate increases (intrathoracic pressure increases, heart rate doesn't change, blood pressure increases, then venous return decreases, decreasing SV and pulse pressure, heart rate increases, blood pressure drops)

Of the following, which was not a controlled variable in the scientific method lab experiment? a) All of the above were controlled variables b) None of the above were controlled variables c) angle of the microscope slide d) the height from which the solution was dropped e) the flatness of the microscope slide

A) all of the above

Which values were affected by simulated airway obstruction? Why? Should any have remained the same?

All measurements in the table except for the vital capacity were affected. A person with obstructed airways still has the same vital capacity because the lungs remain the same size and only the airways leading into the lungs are affected

Using the data in the previous two questions, you can see the vital capacity didn't significantly change because of the obstruction while peak expiratory flow decreased . Due to this change in flow, the total amount of time required to expire the entire volume of the vital capacity increased as a result of the obstruction.

Also as a result of the obstruction, FEV1 decreased , which, in turn, decreased the FEV1/VC ratio.

P- value

Always compared to .05 (less than or equal to is significant)

A physiologic explanation of the p-values calculated in the previous question is a s follows: Tidal volume increased after exercise because CO2 production increased owing to the increased metabolic rate of exercising skeletal muscle. This change in CO2 stimulated the central chemoreceptors resulting in faster and deeper breathing.

As a result of the tidal volume increasing, inspiratory and expiratory volumes both significantly decreased while vital capacity did not significantly change . Since total lung capacity is equal to the vital capacity plus residual volume (which is a constant), total lung capacity did not significantly change .

What is the relationship between surface area and metabolic rate?

As surface area increases, metabolic rate decreases

Osmotic pressure is the driving force for the influx of water into the dialysis bag and, by extension, the force that drives the sucrose solution up the tube. As the solution height increases, the weight of the column of solution also increases, resulting in a downward force; this is the hydrostatic pressure. What effect does the hydrostatic pressure have on the movement of sucrose up the tube?

As the hydrostatic pressure increases, the speed of the solution movement up the tube decreases.

What is the relationship between volume and metabolic rate?

As volume increases, metabolic rate decreases

What effect does body size have on metabolic rate?

As weight increases, metabolic rate decreases

What effect does body size have on oxygen consumption?

As weight increases, oxygen consumption increases

Based on the data posted on Canvas, would you say the atria or ventricle take longer to depolarize? Why?

Atria take longer to depolarize; the average length of the P wave is longer than the average length of the QRS complex

Explain the mechanism (process) by which blood pressure can change in response to posture.

Blood pressure can change in response to posture due to the gravitational pull of blood. When in a supine position, blood vessels are at the same level as the heart which creates less of a gravitational influence. When in a supine position for an extended period of time then switching to a standing position, there is a large gravitational change. Gravity forces the blood into the venous system of the lower limbs, also known as orthostatic hypotension. There is an immediate drop in blood pressure when this happens. Two baroreceptors in the body, in the aortic arch and the carotid sinus, measure the pressure exerted on the nearby blood vessels and notices any change in blood pressure. When the baroreceptors detect that the pressure has dropped, more action potentials will fire to send messages to the cardiovascular system in the medulla. The cardiovascular system then sends sympathetic signals to increase heart rate and this in turn will increase the cardiac output and the mean arterial pressure

What's the most important factor in stimulation of breathing?

CO2

Give a physiologically sound explanation why contraction velocity is faster than relaxation velocity.

Ca2+ reuptake by the lateral sacs is active and requires the use of pumps while Ca2+ release from the lateral sacs is passive and does not require the use of pumps.

What does an isotonic solution involving RBCs look like?

Cloudy, not red

Is color blindness a deficiency in rods, cones or both?

Color blindness is a deficiency in cones. Cones are cells that perceive color

Discrete data uses

Column graph, data can only take whole number values (ex. 1, 2, 3)

Conclusion vs. Inference

Conclusion: Ephedrine significantly decreases the weight of mice. Inference: There is a significant difference.

For spatial summation, describe the muscle contraction response as the stimulus current was increased.

Contraction force increased until reaching a plateau when all the motor units were recruited.

Where is water reabsorbed during urine formation?

Descending limb

What occurs in the the *jejunum* of a person with gall bladder disease?

Digest carbohydrates Absorb carbohydrates, proteins, cholesterol

What nutrients are absorbed in the stomach of of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

Digestion of HCl, proteins denature

Exercise significantly increases pulse wave velocity

During exercise, the blood vessels increase in size. The sympathetic innervation on the blood vessels causes vasodilation. When the blood vessels increase in radius, the vessel becomes more stiff because the vessel has increased its elasticity.

What effect does increasing temperature have on enzymatic reactions?

Enzymatic reactions have an optimal temperature so anything below or above that would decrease the reaction rate

Look up the molecular weight of eosin and blue dextran. Match their molecular weights below.

Eosin=650 g/mol Blue dextran=2,000,000 g/mol

Exercise significantly increases heart rate

Exercise increases heart rate because the SA node is firing faster. The SA node fires faster because the sympathetic nervous system, is turned on when exercising which is allowing more permeability of ions in the cell so that depolarization can happen faster so the threshold can be met quicker.

The effect of exercise on breath-hold time

Exercise significantly reduces breath-hold time Exercise increases metabolic activity which increases CO2 concentration which triggers the central chemoreceptors to trigger a breath.

calculating *respiration rate (RR)*:

F = 1 / i = 1breathe / 1 sec. convert.. X 60 sec / 1 min = *breathe/ min* M at first peak, X on second peak (plug into equation) *(normal = 12-16 bpm)*

the percentage of the amount of total air let out in a maximal expiration over one second

FEV1/VC

What is left after digestion in a person with gall bladder disease?

Fats, amino acids, cholesterol

The number of synapses involved in a reflex is greater/fewer than a reaction?

Fewer

Which of the following captions best describes the figure below comparing exercise and caloric expenditure?

Figure 2. The effect of exercise on caloric expenditure.

What is the spirogram's red line measuring?

Flow (L/sec)

What is the spirogram's red line measuring?

Flow Rate (L/min)

When is bone conduction useful?

For those who have hearing loss due to problems with the middle ear but still have a proper functioning cochlea

Based on the values measured above for normal tidal breathing, inspiratory flow is faster than expiratory flow. This is because muscular effort is used only for inspiration at rest; conversely, expiration is passive recoil/relaxation of the diaphragm.

Further, due to the flow rates above and the fact the volume inspired is equal to the volume expired, inspiratory time is less than the expiratory time.

Heart rate:

HR = 60 / R-R = bpm

What is happening to the cells in a solution that clears?

Hemolysis

A subject determines their urine specific gravity to be 1.016. The subject then exercises vigorously, sweats profusely and drinks no extra fluids. Of the following choices, which would be the likely measurement you would expect of their urine specific gravity after this experiment?

Higher than 1.016

High R-value

Highly correlated (low value=ot correlated)

Sense of taste

Humans have difficulty identifying tastes when plugging their nose because our sense of taste is controlled by the olfactory system, which is also predominantly responsible for perceiving odors

*metabolism lab*:

IV: *species* DV: *metabolic rate*

Briefly state the hypothesis that tested in this experiment. Remember that a hypothesis has to be specific, testable and refutable. Based on your background knowledge, create a hypothesis which will predict the outcome of your experiment. Include in your hypothesis a description of how intermolecular bonds explains the relationship between the independent and dependent variables. It is a good practice to state a hypothesis in the form of "If [condition], then [prediction]." For example, "If I break the speed limit [condition or cause], then I am likely to be cited by the police [prediction or effect]." Note: make the hypothesis universal, then observe how the hypothesis applies to your specific situation. Finally, be sure NOT to reverse cause and effect (e.g. "If the police give me a citation, then I will break the speed limit").

If a solution has relatively strong intermolecular forces, then it will have a relatively small drop diameter.

Hypertonic

If a system has a higher solute concentration than its environment, it is said to be hypertonic to to its environment

Hypotonic

If a system has a lower solute concentration than its environment, it is said to be hypotonic to its environment

How does your body mimic the same effect of increasing stimulation frequency?

If the frequency is increased then the stimulus will reach threshold, creating an action potential. If there are more action potentials the movement in the muscle will increase. The action potential is caused by piggybacking of the stimulation produced. Once it has reached the threshold the muscle will twitch. This is similar to what happens in the body because your body wants neurons to be fired at a faster rate, creating tetany. If tetany is created then there will be an increase in contraction strength of the muscle

Generate a hypothesis about the migration rate of the two dyes through the agar. Remember how to formulate a hypothesis from the Scientific Method lab.

If the molecular weight is greater, then the diffusion rate will be slower.

At time 0, the osmotic pressure was driving the movement of water into the bag and forcing the sucrose solution up the capillary tube. However, as the experiment continued, the speed of the solution rising up the tube decreased due to the increasing hydrostatic pressure.

If the system were left until equilibrium was reached, eventually the hydrostatic pressure would increase in magnitude such that it was equal in magnitude and in the opposite direction of the hydrostatic pressure; this would result in a flatter plateau than seen in Figure 2 resulting from the cessation of movement of the solution up the capillary tube.

Where is NaCl reabsorbed during urine formation?

In the ascending limb

Where are water, electrolytes, and vitamins absorbed?

In the ileum

Where does carb digestion start?

In the mouth

What effect does increasing H2O2 have on enzymatic reactions?

Increasing H2O2 (substrate concentration) increases reaction rate but will eventually plateau

What effect does increasing ionic concentration have on enzymatic reactions?

Increasing NaCl decreases enzymatic reactions linearly

What effect does increasing catalase have on enzymatic reactions?

Increasing catalase (increasing enzyme) would increase the reaction rate linearly

What effect does increasing CuSO4 have on enzymatic reactions?

Increasing enzyme inhibitor concentration decreases the reaction rate linearly

What effect does increasing pH have on enzymatic reactions?

Increasing pH increases reaction rate until it reaches neutrality where it declines

Tetany

Increasing the frequency of shocks to the point where no relaxation is allowed and the muscle contraction increases smoothly up to a point of maximum strength where individual twitches cannot be observed

Explain the mechanism of temporal summation.

Increasing the frequency of stimuli results in less time for Ca2+ to be returned to the lateral sacs and when the following stimulus occurs, the Ca2+ released from the lateral sacs is added to the remaining Ca2+ in the cytosol which results in more cross-bridging and a greater contraction force.

Conduction system of the heart

Intrinsic system where a signal passes from an SA node, AV node, the bundle of His, right and left bundle branches, and the Purkinje fibers

Ion- dipole interaction as compared to dipole- dipole interaction between water molecules

Ion- dipole interaction is stronger than dipole- dipole

Which of the following is the strongest intermolecular attraction?

Ion-dipole

Why is protein not found normally found in the urine?

It is too large to be filtered

The effect of substrate concentration on reaction rate (h202)

It was shown that as the substrate concentration increased, the reaction rate increased. This continued until the reaction became saturated and is shown as the trend line plateau *increase so there would be more substrates for enzymes to bind to

List, from most sensitive to least sensitive, the body parts tested for two-point discrimination.

Lip, Hand, Calf, Neck, Back, Forearm

Finding *force of a single muscle twitch* on graph

M at start of force peak (top) X at top of peak of force (top) *force*

measure *vital capacity*:

M at the highest peak, X at the lowest peak = VC (TV+IRV+ERV) *Liters*

finding the *contraction time* of the single muscle twitch:

M at the start of the contraction (top) X at the top of the peak (top) *seconds*

finding the *relaxation time* of the single muscle twitch:

M at the top of the peak (top) X at the bottom of the peak (top) *seconds*

Find *latency period* on graph

M on beginning of Stimulus (top) X on beginning of angle peak (bot.) *seconds*

Find *Angle of rotation* on graph

M on beginning of angle peak (bot.) X on highest angle peak (bot.) *degrees* *NORMAL = 5-25 degrees*

mean arterial pressure (MAP):

MAP = (( 2 X diastolic) + systolic) / 3

For the single twitch, where are the marker and the point selector placed to measure the force?

Marker = beginning of contraction; point selector = peak of contraction

For the single twitch, where are the marker and the point selector placed to measure the latent time?

Marker = beginning of stimulus; point selector = beginning of contraction

For the single twitch, where are the marker and the point selector placed to measure the relaxation time?

Marker = peak of contraction; point selector = end of contraction

Metabolic rate of mice as compared to the metabolic rate of humans

Metabolic rate of mice is *larger than metabolic rate of humans*

Metabolic rate of mice as compared to the metabolic rate of humans

Metabolic rate of mice is larger than metabolic rate of humans

A large bucket of water and a small glass of water are each brought to a boil in a cold room. The small glass will cool faster due to its larger surface area to volume (SA:V) ratio. Its relatively large surface area compared to the volume facilitates convective heat loss ; the bucket loses heat slower due to its relatively small surface area compared to the volume.

Mice have a larger SA:V ratio than humans and therefore lose heat faster than humans. Since mice are endothermic (warm blooded; capable of internal generation of body heat), they must generate more heat per m2 via metabolism than humans to prevent their body temperature from falling .

polysynaptic

More complex reflexes usually involve additional neurons (interneurons) and more than one population of motor neurons

What occurs in a hypertonic solution involving RBCs?

More water is inside the cell than outside so water moves outside the cell, cell undergoes crenation, solution is now cloudy but not red

Purpose of the conduction system of the heart

Myogenic: specialized cardiac cells pass an electrical signal throughout the heart to ensure that the muscle tissue depolarizes and contracts in a sequential manner from atria to ventricles resulting in a coordinated heartbeat

What nutrients are absorbed in the mouth?

NONE

Large intestine absorbs

Na+, Cl-, and H2O, also vitamin K

What nutrients are absorbed in the large intestine of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

None

What nutrients are absorbed in the duodenum of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

None because there is no lipase of protease

If an experiment wants to know if something makes a greater (or lesser) result, what type of test is used?

One tailed

Atrial depolarization

P wave

Type 1

PAIRED T-TEST

pulse pressure (PP):

PP = systolic - diastolic *mmHg*

On an EKG, the measure of atrial depolarization and contraction

PQ interval

What interval represents the AV nodal delay on an EKG?

PQ interval

Referred pain

Pain felt in a part of the body that is not directly receiving stimuli because nerves from various parts of the body converge not their way to the spinal cord

What type of test is used when the same subject groups are used twice (before and after)?

Paired

A correlation of -1

Perfect negative linear relationship

A correlation of +1

Perfect positive linear relationship

Conclusion: Exercise significantly decreases breath-hold time.

Physiologic explanation: The increased metabolic rate associated with the increased muscle activity during exercise produces more CO2, which increases the stimulus to breathe resulting in a significantly shorter breath-holding duration.

What do rods do?

Provide vision only in shades go grey, high sensitivity to light, low visual acuity

ventricular depolarization

QRS wave

On an EKG, this represents one full cardiac cycle

RR interval

R- squared value

Reflects the amount of variation in Y that is accounted for by the variation in X

Pearson's R

Reflects the degree of linear relationship between two variables (ranges from +1 and -1)

Differentiate between a reflex and a reaction

Reflexes are faster and involuntary but purposeful while reactions are voluntary responses to external stimuli

Regression vs. Correlation

Regression indicates that one variable is dependent on another and each variable is either dependent or independent Correlation simply says two measures relate to each other but no causation is implied

Contraction time vs. relaxation time

Relaxation of a muscle takes longer because it is an active process that transports Ca2+ back to the SR

What do cones do?

Responsible for color vision, low sensitivity to light, high visual acuity

On an EKG, where systole occurs

ST interval

Increasing H2O2 shows

Saturation

What would you expect to be the breath-hold duration of an individual who exercised briefly (~2-4 minutes) then engaged in a bit of hyperventilation? Why?

Someone who engaged in a short exercise, then hyperventilated you would expect to see a "normal" breath hold time. Exercising would decrease the breath hold time but hyperventilating would increase it thus these two would cancel each other out.

Auditory pathway of bone conduction

Sound vibrations felt in the facial bones (mastoid process), bone vibrates, sound reaches the cochlea directly where it can be transmitted to the brain

Auditory pathway of air conduction

Sound waves are funneled into ear via the pinna, through the EAC, vibrating the tympanic membrane, malleus, incus, stapes, oval window, wave inc cochlea fluid set basilar membrane into motion, displacing hair cells to send neural signals to the auditory cortex in temporal lobe of the brain

ventricular repolarization

T wave

On an EKG, where diastole occurs

TP interval

Total lung capacity(TLC)

TV+IRV+ERV+RV

How does your body mimic the same effect of increasing stimulation frequency?

Temporal summation

Given the following bonds between atoms... a) C - O - H b) H - O - H ...select the correct statement below.

The O in (a) will be less partially negative than the O in (b).

Exercise significantly decreases PQ intervals.

The PQ interval represents the atrial depolarization up to the beginning of the ventricular depolarization. The AV node delay in the heart is not as long during exercise due to the sympathetic system turning on. WHen the sympathetic system turns on, ions in the cell become more permeable allowing the threshold to be met quicker.

How are PWV and blood flow different?

The PWV deals with the distance the pulse wave along the vessel wall travels with relation to time whereas blood flow of fluid is the volume of blood moving with relation to time. In order to determine the flow, velocity and length of movement along vessel would be multiplied

Which wave/interval in Figure 3 changed the most after exercise?

The TP segment change the most after exercise. The time of the segment decreased more than any of the other waves or segments. The TP segment is the period between the T wave, or ventricular repolarization, and the P wave, or atrial depolarization. This increase in change versus the others is because the intervals and segments are changeable with sympathetic innervation. The P and T waves time as well as the QRS complex stay the same because the AV and SA node are not directly influencing their firing. Since the AV node and SA node control the intervals and segments, it can increase with exercise due to the sympathetic system increasing the permeability of the cells allowing for the threshold to be met at a faster rate when exercising.

Do the atria or the ventricles take longer to depolarize?

The atria takes longer to depolarizes because potassium channels remain closed so further depolarization can not occur until the voltage gated calcium channels help it to reach the threshold and start another graded potential. There is no specialized system in the atria. The current must spread from cell to cell which will take much longer than in the ventricles. The ventricles have cardiac cells which allows the contractile muscle to move fast. This is shown in Fig. 3 through the P wave and QRS complex. The P wave represents atrial depolarization and the QRS complex represents ventricular depolarization. The graph shows that the P wave took a longer period of time than the QRS complex did

What do your results tell you about the relative locations of the rods and cones on the surface of the retina?

The colored circles aren't as large as the black one due to the fact that the location of the cones are coming from the fovea, one small point

Which relaxed faster, the muscle before exercise or the muscle after exercise? Explain why this happened with good physiological reasons as to why the relaxation times should have been different

The muscle before exercise relaxed faster. This can be explained by the mechanism of muscle relaxation. Muscle relaxation occurs when calcium is returned to the lateral sacs when electrical stimulation stops. Calcium is actively pumped from the cytosol back into the lateral sacs by the Calcium-ATPase pump. A muscle after exercise will take longer to relax because more calcium will be in the cytosol and due to saturation of the Calcium-ATPase pump, pumping more calcium back into the lateral sacs will take longer.

twitch summation

The muscle fiber therefore has not completely relaxed and the next stimulus is applied before the first muscle twitch is over. This will result in the next contraction building upon the previous contraction and add to that response

The effect of temperature on reaction rate

The overall trend showed that as the temperature increased so did the reaction rate. However, after approximately 50℃, there was a steady decrease in the reaction rate as the temperature continued to increase *temps too high will denature a protein, too low will slow down reaction rate

The effect of ionic concentration (NaCl) on reaction rate

The trend showed a gradual decline in reaction rate as the concentration of NaCl increased *due to the disassociation of NaCl into Na+ Cl-, these ions are responsible for breaking apart the hydrogen bonds located in the second and third structure of the proteins

A correlation of 0

There is NO relationship

What occurs in a hypotonic solution involving RBCs?

There is more water outside the cell than inside so water moves into the cell, the cell undergoes hemolysis and bursts, making the solution red and transparent

A correlation of 0

There is no relationship between the two variables

You should not have seen a measurable twitch at a stimulus of 0 mA. What does this tell you about the number of muscle fibers contracting at this stimulus current?

This tells us that at 0 mA there are no motor units firing. Until there was a measurable twitch, there were either no motor units firing or not enough. The motor units before about 8 mA have not reached the threshold, and there was too few of them to show a response.

The pressure change in the previous question is detected by the baroreceptors in the carotid sinuses and aortic arch which then initiate fewer impulses sent to the cardiovascular control center in the medulla oblongata. As a compensatory response to the pressure change, the cardiovascular control center increases sympathetic and decreasing parasympathetic firing.

This will increase heart rate, which will increase cardiac output and constrict arterioles, increasing total peripheral resistance. these mechanisms will collectively increase the mean arterial pressure..

Why is there differential pressure within arteries?

To ensure that arterial blood flows away from the heart

In terms of the relationship between body size (weight) and oxygen consumption, body weight increases, O2 consumption increases .

True

In terms of the relationship between of body size (weight) and metabolic rate, as body weight increases, metabolic rate decreases.

True

True or false: A physiologic explanation for the observed effect of age on pulse wave velocity would be PWV velocity is directly correlated with vascular stiffness. As one ages, the vessels progressively become "stiffer" due to things like arteriosclerosis/atherosclerosis which increases the velocity of the pulse wave.

True

If an experiment wants to know if something makes a difference, what type of test is used?

Two tailed

Since your body operates by means of action potentials which are all-or-none, how does your body mimic the same effect of increasing current?

Unless a current reaches the threshold, there will not be an action potential. Once it does reach threshold, it will be sent to the nerve causing a twitch. Your body mimics the same effect because it wants to continue to recruit more motor neurons in order to increase the contraction strength of muscles.

Now, perform a t-test to determine whether resting metabolic rate in mice is significantly greater than humans. Will you use a paired or unpaired t-test

Unpaired

What type of test is used when two different subject groups are used?

Unpaired

What is the spirogram's blue line measuring?

Volume (L)

Two factors that affect blood pressure and their influence

Volume of blood and compliance of vessels Increasing volume of blood increases blood pressure (and vice versa) and increasing the compliance of vessels decreases blood pressure (and vice versa)

*membrane transport lab*:

Water is *permeable* to the bag of glucose and it moves *into* the bag & up the tube because of *osmotic* pressure and because of *hydrostatic* pressure the *osmosis=diffusion*

Is hydrogen bonding weaker or stronger than polar covalent bonds?

Weaker

The effect of the Valsalva maneuver heart rate (bpm)

When blood returns to the heart through the inferior and superior vena cava, it is defined as venous return. When there is an increase in pressure in the thoracic cavity, the vena cava are constricted and in turn the venous return decreases. When the subject performed the valsalva maneuver, the pressure in the thoracic cavity was increased, but because the baroreceptors in the body cannot differentiate between a normal raise in blood pressure and when someone performs the valsalva maneuver, the body defaults to interpreting the increase as raise in blood pressure. When the baroreceptors are falsely triggered, the signals are sent to the cardiovascular system to increase parasympathetic nervous system activity in an attempt to lower the blood pressure. This is seen in the graph at 11 seconds by a quick drop in heart rate when the valsalva maneuver has first begun. As the maneuver continues, the heart rate begins to rise after the drop in pressure and an increase is seen in the graph at 15 to 25 seconds. Once the subject ended the valsalva maneuver and began to breathe normally again, the pressure in the thoracic cavity dropped and a drop in heart rate can be seen at 28 seconds. The heart then regulated its normal beating patterns as the pressure returned to normal and blood vessels returned to their normal radius, seen in the final part of the graph at 33 seconds.

The effect of hyperventilation time on breath-holding time

While hyperventilating there is a decrease in the amount of CO2 in your blood. The central chemoreceptors in the medulla detects an increased amount of CO2 in your blood. The more you hyperventilate, the longer you can hold your breath due to the fact that your body has to regain the CO2 in your blood to reach the threshold of the receptor to trigger a breath.

Continuous data uses

XY scatter line graph and can take any value within a range (ex. 4.5, 6, 7.8)

Muscle twitch

a brief, weak contraction produced from a single action potential that is too short and wake to be useful

What is urea?

a product formed by the liver from ammonia and carbon dioxide

What should the summation graph look like on lab tutor?

a right handed mitten

Muscle unit

a single motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates

mechanism of summation

a single neuron fires multiple motor units immediately following the previous one before it can fully relax. This results in a "right hand mitten" effect on the force versus stimulus current graph.

tidal volume

a specific volume of air is drawn into and then expired from the lungs

Null hypothesis

a statement that indicates there is no relationship between measured values, or no difference among groups:

Alternative hypothesis

a statement that rivals the null hypothesis

Which of the following molecules is the is the most polar? a) water (H2O) b) ethanol (EtOH) c) isopropanol (PrOH) d) potassium chloride (KCl)

a) water (H2O)

five general properties of liquids

a. Surface Tension b. Has specific evaporation point c. Takes shape of its container d. Definite Volume e. Specific Density

when labeling a table, is the figure title above or below the table?

above

Soda lime is placed in the mouse metabolism chamber to

absorb carbon dioxide

soda lime

absorbs the carbon dioxide exhaled by the mouse

What nutrients are absorbed in the large intestine of a person with gall bladder disease?

absorption of water, Na+ and Cl-

Our urine should be slightly acidic or basic?

acidic

High acidity urine (lower than 4.8)

acidosis, fever, high protein diet

Why does chewing the item help in its identification of the item?

activation of chemoreceptors also feel texture

the process by which your finger adjusts to the temperature of water

adaptation

Negative afterimage

adaptation in the rods and cones;When activated photoreceptors in the retina are exposed to light for prolonged time, their sensitivity will decrease. Cones in these regions of the retina that are subject to certain color stimuli will receive greater stimulation from other cones, thus producing complementary colors.

How does muscle fatigue influence the muscle to take a longer time to relax?

after the muscles have been exercising a lot, there is not as much ATP to help with the reabsorption of calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum so it takes longer

what are some things that affect metabolic rate

age, weight, stress, diet, genetics, fitness, gender

What's more effective in hearing? Osseous conduction or air conduction?

air conduction

Which of the sound conduction routes is normally the most effective in conveying vibrations to the organ of hearing

air conduction;The sound waves travel through the ear and strike the tympanic membrane. These vibrations move to the incus, malleus and stapes which then trigger the movement of the basilar membrane. The basilar membrane supports the organ of corti and hair cells can be found here. The organ of corti is what takes these signals and generates them into a neural component to be sent to the central nervous system. It is the most efficient way because the air traveling through the ear uses these parts of the ear (basilar membrane, organ of corti, hair cells etc.) to create the vibrations

Sticks which test for protein in the urine

albusticks

*p-value* from the t-est

always compared to *< 0.05* (less than or equal to is significant) excel: paired (1) unpaired (2)

Catalase

an enzyme, which is found in many cells, but in highest concentrations in the liver, since the liver often functions to break down toxins present in the blood. Catalase catalyzes the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide as shown in Equation B1:

Peroxides

an form in the body during respiration, and are chemically reactive, which means that they can chemically modify (and thus render useless) other biological molecules.

NACL

an ionic compound and therefore will disassociate into 2 ions when put into water

in order to explain how something is happening

anthropomorphic

Dermatomes

are areas of the skin that originate from the same spinal nerve root *Because the elbow and forearm share the same dermatome, the pain from sticking the elbow in the cold water seemed to travel up the arm, along the same dermatome

Enzymes

are most often proteins

reflexes

are similar each time they are initiated, are faster than reactions, are said to be involuntary, and are purposeful, in that they sometimes serve to remove the stimulus that is causing harm to the body.

Pulse wave velocity (PWV):

arm length (m) / M at bottom of S wave (top) and X at the bottom of the pulse wave (bot.) *m/second*

What's the formula for pulse wave velocity?

arm length (m) / PW (s)

What is normal FEV1/VC?

around 80%

Poiseuille's Law

arterial blood flow volume takes the pressure gradient along the length of the tube, blood vessel radius, blood viscosity and length of the tubes

The effect of enzyme inhibitor concentration (CuSO4) on reaction rate

as the enzyme inhibitor concentration increased, the reaction rate gradually decreased *the concentration of this inhibitor increases, the lesser the number of enzymes can bind to substrates which in tern decreases the reaction rate

P-wave

atrial depolarization

what occurs in the P wave on an ECG?

atrial depolarization

The P wave indicates

atrial depolarization (atria is contracting, pumping blood into the ventricles)

when over a period of time, the hair cells in the ear become tired to that frequency and the sound is more difficult to hear

auditory fatigue

Mean arterial pressure (MAP)

average pressure over the length of one cardiac cycle (diastolic + 1/3 pulse pressure)

why does varying the stimulus strength affect the twitch force

because there is an increase of motor units firing as the strength is increased. This is made possible by spatial summation, with several units being fired at once increasing the force. The twitch force will plateau due to the motor units all firing at once, making the twitch force not able to continue to increase.

teleologic:

behavior of human beings "working to achieve a goal" ex. acquiring knowledge, reading a book, getting food, *to get rid, to get more, to take in more*

when labeling a graph, is the figure title above or below the graph?

below

Normal specific gravity of urine

between 1.015- 1.025

Normal pH of urine

between 4.8-7.5

Where is the AV nodal delay on an EKG?

between the P and Q

Brownish yellow or green urine indicates

bile pigments (yellow foam is definite evidence)

Brownish yellow/green

bile pigments. Yellow foam is definite evidence of bile pigments.

ileum absorbs

bile salts, water Vitamins

what's the username and password for the computer?

biology; leapfrog11

Red to smoky brown urine indicates

blood and blood pigments

Red to smoky brown

blood and blood pigments.

What color is the compliment of yellow?

blue

Adaptation

body gets use to a stimulus, resultant of phasic receptors that include a reduced number of action potential in response to maintained stimulus

a hearing aid is placed against the mastoid process of the skull, allowing sound to be heard through _____ conduction.

bone

Isotonic

both systems have the same solute concentration as well as the same solvent concentration

ERV

bottom of normal breath and the bottom of the big breath

What's the unit for heart rate?

bpm

what's the unit for heart rate

bpm

catabolism

break down food to release energy

What's the unit for respiratory rate?

breathes/ minute

muscle twitch

brief, weak contraction produced from a single action potential that is too short and weak to be useful

Exercise-induced sympathetic stimulation to the autorhythmic cells of the SA node increases the permeability of the muscle cell membrane to both calcium and sodium ions which

brings the membrane to threshold at a more rapid pace.

In comparing the two values calculated above, these values are equal because

by switching from 1 M sucrose to 0.5 M NaCl, the concentration of the solute is halved but the number of osmotically active particles is doubled

Define pulse wave velocity

calculating the distance between the heart and the finger where a transducer is attached and dividing the distance by the difference between ventricular contraction and the generation of pulse pressure in the finger

Protein in the urine

can occur because of excessive muscular exertion, prolonged cold baths, excessive ingestion of protein

waste for a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

carbohydrates, fats, proteins

Stomach digests

carbs and proteins

where are peripheral chemoreceptors located in the body?

carotid artery and aorta

Facilitated diffusion

carrier-mediated diffusion, is simply diffusion in which particles are physically transported across a membrane by a carrier (usually a protein).

What's the enzyme that was used in the enzyme lab?

catalase

Enzymes

catalyze chemical reactions so that they occur in a timely and sequential manner to produce a product.

turbulent

causes the wall of the vessel to vibrate

pinocytosis

cell drinking

Pinocytosis

cell drinking, method in which a small amount of extracellular fluid is brought into the cell in small pouch- like vesicles

Phagocytosis

cell eating

Phagocytosis

cell eating, a method used by cells to internalize large multi molecular particles

What is left after digestion in a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

cheeseburger

Taste-bud receptors

chemoreceptors, which are activated by the presence of saliva and require the chemicals to be dissolved to work

Inorganic constituents of urine

chlorides, phosphates, sulfates, and ammonia

jejunum absrobs

cholesterol, monosaccharide, amino acids, monoglycerides

Low specific gravity of urine

chronic nephritis, diabetes

What color should urine normally be?

clear

urochromogen

color of normal urine is due to a pigment called which is the end-product of hemoglobin breakdown, as shown below: Hemoglobin -> Hematin -> Bilirubin ->Urochrome -> Urochromogen

cones

color; smaller perceptive fields

measuring glucose concentration of a sample:

compare sample stick to marker, units in *mg/dL* or *%*

What are the 2 types of enzyme inhibitors?

competitive inhibitors and allosteric inhibitors

In the formula for osmotic pressure, the change in concentration = what?

concentration inside - concentration outside (1 for glucose, 0.5 for NaCl)

If a patient cannot hear sounds through regular transmission, but can hear through osseous conduction, what is likely the problem?

conduction deficiency

In color blindess, retina deficiency is in the

cones

occluded

constricted blood vessel

Formula for contraction velocity

contraction strength (d)/ contraction period (t)

Contraction velocity = ?

contraction strength (v) / contraction period (s)

Relaxation velocity = ?

contraction strength (v) / relaxation period (s)

Contraction velocity

contraction strength/contraction period

Relaxation velocity

contraction strength/relaxation period

what's the left/rising side of a twitch called?

contraction time

Which takes longer? Contraction velocity or relaxation velocity?

contraction velocity because the Ca is passively moving out of the SR but in relaxation, it is an active process as Ca must be moved back in

how do you calculate frequency of summation (twitch/sec)?

count the number of twitches before summation starts and then divide it by the time in secs where summation starts

bone conduction:

cranial bones directly to cochlea

Covalent bonds

created by the sharing of electrons between two atoms although sharing is not always equal, resulting in polar covalent bonds

A hypertonic solution causes what to occur?

crenation

the shrinking of red blood cells

crenation

ventilation

cyclical breathing movements that alternately inflate and default the alveolar air sacs

Since your body operates by means of action potentials, which are all-or-none, how does your body mimic the same effect of increasing current? a) Temporal summation b) Spatial summation c) By firing more neurons d) Two of the above are true

d) two of the above are true

What's a possible reason for someone having protein in their urine?

damage to glomerulus

As solute concentration increases, solvent concentration

decreases

Does ERV increase or decrease after exercise?

decreases

Does IRV increase or decrease after exercise?

decreases

Metabolism

definedasallthechemicalreactionsinthebodythatinvolveenergytransformation.

receptors

detect the change

blood pressure

developed, by the contraction of the heart muscle and resulting compression of the blood within the chambers of the heart.

What's a possible reason for someone having glucose in their urine?

diabetes

what's a possible reason for glucose in someone's urine?

diabetes

High specific gravity of urine

diabetes, fever, acute nephritis

Sticks which test for glucose in the urine

diasticks

the movement of particles from a higher concentration to a lower concentration

diffusion

Facilitated Diffusion

diffusion in which particles are physically transported across a membrane by a carrier (usually a protein)

Osmosis

diffusion of water molecules & moving through a selectively permeable membrane

What occurs in the the * L. intestine* of a person with gall bladder disease?

digest nothing absorb water

What occurs in the the *duodenum* of a person with gall bladder disease?

digest protein absorb toxins, water

What occurs in the the *mouth & esophagus* of a person with gall bladder disease?

digest starch absorb nothing

What occurs in the the *stomach* of a person with gall bladder disease?

digest starch, protein absorb nothing

What occurs in the *duodenum* of of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

digest start absorb toxin & water

What nutrients are absorbed in the mouth of a person with gall bladder disease?

digestion of carbs

What occurs in the the mouth of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

digestion of carbs

What nutrients are absorbed in the duodenum of a person with gall bladder disease?

digestion of carbs, protein, fiber absorption of water

What nutrients are absorbed in the jejunum of a person with gall bladder disease?

digestion of disaccharides into monosaccharides, tripeptides into dipeptides, no absorption

What nutrients are absorbed in the stomach of a person with gall bladder disease?

digestion of proteins begins, no absorption

Functions of pepsin

digests certain peptide bonds resulting in protein fragments

Lower Specific gravity

diluted, clear, pale yellow 1.002-1.008: closer to 1 which is water *hydrated*

what are the winding tubes called right after the loop of henle in the kidneys?

distal convoluted tube

pulse wave velocity = what?

distance in m from heart to finger / s wave to shoulder in secs

2 tailed

does NOT favor a direction, NO bias; looking for the difference b/w the two -- *"is there a difference"*

Functions of HCl

does not digest anything, activates pepsinogen, denatures proteins, kills microorganisms

when discussing your conclusion based on the t test, how do you say it?

don't say there is a statistic significance between the two but say it in terms of the problem.

Hydrostatic pressure

downward force

State the dependent variable of the scientific method lab experiment.

drop diameter

Digestion of *lipids* begins in the

duodenum (pancreatic, lingual lipase) emulsification via bile salts

Digestion of lipids begins in the

duodenum (pancreatic, lingual lipase) emulsification via bile salts

monosynaptic

employs only two neurons and on synapse

jejunum digests

end starch & proteins, tri-dipeptides, disaccharides

Active transport

energy is required to move particles against a concentration gradient

Active transport

energy is required to move particles against a concentration gradient from lower concentrations to higher concentration

what's the principle of enzyme kinetics called when h202 causes oxygen production to rise and then level out?

enzyme saturation

What is salivary amylase?

enzyme secreted by the salivary glands of the mouth that hydrolyzes polysaccharides (starch, glycogen) into disaccharides (maltose) and monosaccharides (glucose)

What is lingual lipase?

enzyme secreted in the mouth that hydrolyzes long chain triglycerides into partial glycerides and free fatty acids

41 degrees celsius

equivalent to a state of hyperthermia in the body

33 degrees Celsius

equivalent to a state of hypothermia in the body

Stomach absorbs

ethyl alcohol and aspirin

Cloudy urine

evidence of phosphates, rates, pus, mucus, bacteria, epithelial cells, fat, and chyle

bar graph *conclusion*

ex. "ephedrine significantly reduces the weight of mice"

An experimental "control" and a "controlled" variable are the same thing.

false

The attraction (or repulsion) between two or more molecules in a solution is an example of an intramolecular force.

false

The greater the concentration of a substance, the ______ the rate of diffusion

faster

The greater the surface area of the cell membrane, the ______ the rate of diffusion

faster

*waste* for a person with gall bladder disease?

fats

bar graph *figure caption*

figure 1. the effect of _________ on ________.

systolic BP

first sound, top number, contracts

Blood pressure

force exerted by blood on vessel walls

osmotic pressure

force pushing water & glucose up the tube

hydrostatic pressure

force that pulls down, eventually stoping the movement of glucose up the tube

The number of stimuli that occur per minute during a contraction period

frequency

the number of twitches the muscle experiences

frequency

alveolar air sacs

gas exchange between air and blood

when asked for the magnitude of a muscle twitch, how do you find that?

get the y value at the top of the peak

Phasic receptors

get used to a sitmulus over time and stop sending signal

anthropomorphic:

giving the characteristics of humans to an animal, or inanimate object ex. *needed, expanded, stretched

*clear* test tube solution: red & transparent

glucose solution is *hypotonic* compared to inside of RBCs. explained: water concentration is high on the outside of the RBC, so then water rushes into RBC causing hemolysis

*cloudy* test tube solution: cloudy, but not red

glucose solution is *isotonic & hypertonic* compared to inside of RBCs. explained: water moves from inside to outside, causing cells to shrivel up, but not lyse yet.

what do you use to measure the glucose concentration of urine?

glucose stick

is the number of synapses necessary for a reaction greater or fewer than in the involuntary reflex?

greater

restrictive lungs can expand to what?

greater than or equal to 80%

What's the substrate that was used in the enzyme lab?

h202

what is secreted on the downward side of the loop of henle

h2o

Teleology

he use of a non-mechanistic process to explain a natural occurrence "to (verb)" 1. The purpose of the visual sense is to see 2. The heart sped up in order to send blood around the body 3. Respiration rate will increase after exercise to provide oxygen to the body

residual volume (RV)

he volume of air remaining in the lungs after a full expiration

Effect of exercise on heart activity

heart pumps blood faster to get more oxygen, increases heart rate, increases blood volume, venous return, stroke volume

how do you determine the approximate % increase in strength of muscle contraction bt the individual twitch and titanic contraction

height of tetany - height of the first hill x 100

A hypotonic solution causes what to occur?

hemolysis

what's it called when red blood cells are hypotonic and burst

hemolysis

Hemoglobin in the urine

hemolytic anemia, transfusion reactions, yellow fever, smallpox, malaria, hepatitis, mushroom poisoning, renal infections

In the solutions that that "clear" when blood is added, the red blood cells are

hemolyzing because the cells are in placed in a hypotonic solution. That is, water is/are permeating the cell membranes and increasing the intracellular volume until the cells burst . This destruction of the cells' membranes allows light to pass straight through the solution without being refracted.

Sticks which test for hemoglobin in the urine

hemosticks

what's berkeley's cat's name?

henry no

The more solutes and the darker the urine, the _______ the specific gravity will be

higher

KCL, Water, Ethanol, Isopropanol

highest surface tension from greatest to least

A nomogram is used to determine

human surface area

Given your answers from the previous question, humans should have a higher resting metabolic rate than mice because they have

humans should not have a higher resting metabolic rate than mice

Enzymes secreted int he stomach

hydrochloric acid (HCl) and pepsin

The interaction between water molecules is called

hydrogen bonding

Small intestine digests

hydrolysis of disaccharides to glucose

Small intestine digests

hydrolysis of protein fragments into amino acids

the force that eventually stops the movement of water up the capillary tube is called what?

hydrostatic pressure

when there is more solute outside the cell than outside the cell

hypertonic solution

The longer the subject hyperventilated, the longer they could hold their breath because

hyperventilation removed carbon dioxide from their blood, thus removing the stimulus to breathe.

when there is more solute inside the cell than outside the cell

hypotonic solution

Is the glucose solution hypotonic or hypertonic compared to the red blood cells

hypotonic; the water rushes into the red blood cells and cause it to lyse

hypertonic

if one system has a higher solute concentration than the other, the one with the greater amount of solute

paired t-test

if the samples are naturally paired in some way, such as assessment being performed on the same subject twice (for example, before and after an experimental medication is administered)

Bile salts are absorbed in

ileum

Digestion of *carbs* begins

in the *mouth* (salivary amylase), continues in *duodenum* (pancreatic amylase), further continues in the *jejunum* (maltase, sucrase, lactase)

Digestion of carbs begins

in the mouth (salivary amylase), continues in duodenum (pancreatic amylase), further continues in the jejunum (maltase, sucrase, lactase)

*Ketones* in urine

inadequate levels of carbs & patients with diabetes

The effect of enzyme reaction rate on catalase

increase in the catalase, the reaction rate also increased *catalase lowers the activation energy of a reaction which will overall increase the reaction, as more is introduced the reaction rate will speed up

How do you cause summation?

increase the stimulus frequency and decrease the time between contractions

A physiologic explanation for the observed effect of exercise on PQ interval would be the following:

increased sympathetic stimulation increases the excitability of the AV node and thereby decreases the length of the AV node delay .

Does exercise increase or decrease one's heart rate?

increases

Does tidal volume increase or decrease after exercise?

increases

NaCl graphs enzyme

increasing salt conc. = increase disruption - decrease in rxn. rate (linear)

Motor Unit recruitment

increasing stimulus will increase the # of motor units eventually max of motor units will be stimulated instantaneous

Temporal summation

increasing the # of times stimulus occurs every second one at a time increasing frequency leads to tetany sequential

Summation

increasing the frequency of shock so that the second stimulus is applied before the first muscle twitch is over and the second stimulus will build upon the previous and add to that response

The variable over which the experimenter has control is the __________________ variable.

independent

Enzyme concentration %

indicates *inhibition*; increasing enzyme conc. = increases rxn. rate; *linear*

Substrate [H202] concentration %

indicates *saturation*; increasing substrate= increases rxn rate until plateau at x=__

Myogenic muscle

indicates that a muscle is capable of generating an action potential and depolarization from within the muscle itself, no nerves to signal the contraction

Large intestine contains

indigestible food residue, unabsorbed bile salts, and remaining fluid

sympathetic/parasympathetic

influence heart rate and myocardial contractility, but they do not generate the electrical activity that causes the heart to actually beat.

what is the principle of enzyme kinetics called when a certain molecule is added in order to slow down the reaction?

inhibition

*spirometer*

instrument used to produce the above lung volumes

In the membrane transport lab, originally the net movement of water was where?

into the bag

initially, is net movement of water into/out of/or is there no movement in the dialysis bag

into the bag

The fluid in the body's capillaries has a greater concentration of protein than does the interstitial fluid surrounding the capillaries. The capillary wall is freely permeable to water, but impermeable to protein. In what direction will water move in this system?

into the capillaries and out of the interstitial fluid

1 tailed

introducing bias; reduces, increases, decreases, larger, smaller (ex. "er" give aways)

EKG

is NOT a recording of a single action potential across the membrane of a single cell; rather is the measurement of a wave of electricity (depolarization) spreading over the heart.

Inspiratory flow

is faster because it is an active process while expiratory flow at rest happens is a passive process. Inspiratory flow happens with the active contraction of those the diaphragm and the intercostal muscles. When those muscles relax, the elastic recoil allow for them to return back to their resting position and creates a vacuum so that CO2 is drawn out of the lungs.

resting metabolic rate (RMR)

is measured 3 to 4 hours after a light meal without prior physical activity.

skeletal muscle

is neurogenic and requires innervation and stimulation by a nerve to depolarize and consequently contract

Basal metabolic rate (BMR)

is the energy required for each person to sustain vital functions in the waking state.

1-tail

is the mean of one array larger/smaller than another

2-tail

is there a difference between the means of the two arrays

Since your body operates by means of action potentials, which are all-or-none, how does your body mimic the same effect of increasing current?

it activates more motor units which increases the voltage generated

If pulse wave velocity increases, what happens to blood pressure?

it also increases

What does adding NaCl to a reaction do to it?

it causes the dissociation of NaCl and water so the hydrogen bonds are broken and the reaction velocity does down in a slanted line

after vigorous exercise, what happens to someone's inspiratory reserve volume?

it decreases

disabled catalase causes what to happen to oxygen production?

it decreases in a slanted downward sloping line

What happens to the reaction velocity when pH increases?

it goes up and then once the enzyme reaches it's optimal pH, it goes down

What happens to the reaction velocity when temperature increases?

it goes up and then once the enzyme reaches it's optimal temperature (37 deg c usually) it goes down

after vigorous exercise, what happens to someone's tidal volume?

it increass

What happens to the reaction velocity when more substrate is introduced

it rises and then flattens out as the enzyme becomes saturated

In the formula for osmotic pressure, what unit does temperature need to be in?

kelvin

Sticks which test for ketones in the urine

ketosticks

% increase of force

large peak - small peak / small peak

how to calculate the *approximate % in strength of muscle contraction*:

largest peak- smallest peak / smallest peak x 100 *percentage* USE WAVES ON RIGHT SIDE: *small peak* M at the bottom of the first peak (red) X at the top of the short/first peak (red) *large peak* M STAYS at the bottom of the first peak (red) X at the top pf the largest peak (red)

After you exercise, can you hold your breath for more or less time?

less because metabolic rate and co2 levels go up

What is FEV1/VC if someone has an obstructed airway?

less than 50%

Proprioceptors

located in the muscle, joints, and ears to determine where our bodies are located in space

is the latent period of a reaction longer or shorter than the latent period of an involuntary reflex?

longer

what's the unit for pulse wave velocity?

m/s

What's the unit for pulse wave velocity?

m/sec

The unit for the stimulus of a muscle twitch

mA

hypothetico-deductive reasoning

making intelligent guesses about the world and testing them in a yes/no manner

A MetaCheck machine is an instrument used to

measure human oxygen consumption

refractometers

measure urine specific gravity

PWV

measured by calculating the distance between the heart (approximately in the center of the chest cavity) and the finger where the transducer is attached and dividing that distance by the time difference between ventricular contraction (the end of the QRS complex) and the generation of pulse pressure in the finger

Metabolic rate

measures the rate at which the body utilizes energy

spirometry

method of choice for a fast and reliable screening of patients suspected of having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

The metabolism of who is greater? Humans or mice?

mice

who has the higher metabolic rate? mice or humans?

mice

Diastolic

minimum pressure exerted by ejected blood during ventricular diastole (filling and relaxing)

After you hyperventilate, can you hold your breath for more or less time?

more

Where does carb digestion start?

mouth

Components of the digestive system:

mouth, esophagus, stomach, duodenum, jejunum, illium, large intestine, waste

Filtration

movement of particles due to an applied force

Spatial recruitment

multiple motor units are recruited at the same time to increase the force increase the voltage

reaction

multiple synapse w/ CNS polysynaptic (*greater* number of synapses involved)

When you don't have your eyes to guide you in a certain direction, what do you have to rely on?

muscle memory

Neurogenic muscle

muscle requires innervation and stimulation by a nerve to depolarize and consequently contract

Fatigue

muscle weakness that results in slower reactions

cardiac muscle

myogenic, indicating that it is capable of generating an action potential and depolarization (and consequent contraction) from within the muscle itself.

what's secreted on the upward side of the loop of henle

na+

Diffusion

net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration

what is the name of the instrument used to determine lung volume?

neumotachometer

Tonic receptors

never get used to stimulus, continually send signals

when p is greater than or equal to 0.05, is there a statistically significant difference?

no

What nutrients are absorbed in the ileum of a person with gall bladder disease?

no digestion, absorption of b12

initially is net movement of sucrose into/out of/or is there no movement in the dialysis bag

no movement

Heart

no nerves which signal the heart to contract heart is influenced by the autonomic nervous system

In the membrane transport lab, originally the net movement of sucrose was where?

no where bc the bag is impermeable to sucrose

The instrument used to find the surface area of a mouse

nomogram

rods

non-color vision; greater perceptive fields

Stomach absorbs

none

What nutrients are absorbed in the ileum of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

none

What nutrients are absorbed in the mouth?

none

esophagus absrobs

none

ileum digests

none

large intestine digests

none

What nutrients are absorbed in the jejunum of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

none because there is no amylase, lipase, or protease

laminar

normal blood flow;flow near the center of the vessel is the fastest and flow near the wall is slower due to friction

air conduction:

normal way of hearing

Ketones in the urine

not an adequate amount of carbs in the diet, defect in carb metabolism so the body begins to use fatty acids, common in diabetes mellitus

Large intestine digests

nothing

What occurs in the the *ileum* of a person with gall bladder disease?

nothing

What occurs in the *L. intestine* of of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

nothing digested absorb water

What occurs in the *jejunum* in a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

nothing digested absorb cholesterol

What occurs in the *ileum* of of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

nothing, digested absorb vitamin B12, bile salts

Heart rate

number of heartbeats per unit of time

if someone has asthma or something causing blockage in the tubes to the lungs, this is called what

obstructive

Adaptation

occurs when sensory receptors change their sensitivity to the stimulus and become adjusted to temp, etc. Ex: fingers in hot/cold water

Tidal Volume (TV)

one normal breath -- peak of normal breath to bottom of normal breath

when performing a t test, do you always do a one tailed or two tailed test?

one tailed

glucosuria

only an extremely small amount of glucose is normally present in urine. When urine contains glucose in amounts greater *indication of diabetes mellitus *lack of insulin

pH graphs enzymes

optimal point at highest & *denaturation* at low & highest pH =

Temperature graph enzymes

optimal point highest and denaturation high temp

Components of the digestive system

oral cavity, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, anus accessory organs: teeth, tongue salivary glands, liver, gallbladder, pancreas

When a subject moves from horizontal to progressively more upright, there is a drop in blood pressure in the upper parts of the body. This is commonly associated with a feeling of dizziness and is termed

orthostatic hypotension

the movement of solvent across the semipermeable membrane down the concentration gradient

osmosis

what's the force moving the water up the capillary tube?

osmotic pressure

In this lab, metabolic rate is measured indirectly using

oxygen consumption

if you are doing an experiment and comparing the same group before and after, is it paired or unpaired?

paired

Normal color of urine

pale yellow

unbiased

parsimonious

Protein in the urine can lead to

pathologic albuminuria when albumin of the urine is due to kidney congestion, toxemia of pregnancy, febrile disease, and anemias

IRV

peak of normal breath to peak of big breath

What occurs in the esophagus?

peristaltic waves

What's the formula for osmotic pressure?

pi = iRT(change inC) in (mmH2O)

R-R interval:

placing M and X on the tops of the two peaks of QRS's (red) *seconds*

inductive reasoning

placing observations about the world into an unbiased framework

What is the name of the instrument used to measure lung volume?

pneumotachometer

bonds that make up water

polar covalent water molecules tend to orient themselves so that the oxygens are closest to the hydrogens of neighboring water molecules

Bonds that make up water

polar covalent, therefore water molecules tend to orient themselves so that the oxygen are closest tot he hydrogens of neighboring water molecules

Proteins break down into

polymers of amino acids

Carbs break down into

polymers of glucose

trendline

polynomial (group 2/3) or linear (if we seen an increase)

Volume of blood & compliance of the vessel walls

pressure is dependent on

vestibular apparatus

primarily responsible for spatial orientation as a way of maintaining balance

if patient can't hear through air conduction but CAN through bone conduction:

problem exists *through outer* or *middle ear* (inflammation) = *middle ear is NOT functioning* but cochlea is functioning*

if patient can't hear through air or bone:

problem exists within the inner ear (*cochlear damage*) =*middle ear is functioning BUT cochlea is NOT functioning*

effectors

produce a response appropriate to the situation

QRS complex

produced by ventricular depolarization; atrial repolarization also occurs during this time, but its contribution is insignificant

Small intestine absorbs

products of carb, protein, fat digestion, electrolytes, vitamins, bile salts

inspiration

provides alveoli with fresh atmospheric air

what are the winding tubes called right before the loop of henle in the kidneys?

proximal convoluted tube

a measure of arterial stiffness, or the rate at which pressure waves move down the vessel.

pulse wave velocity

Milky color

pus, bacteria, fat or chyle

Milky urine indicates

pus, bacteria, fat, or chyle

How do you measure the force of tetany?

put the m on the beginning of tetany and the x on the top when it flattens out

How do you measure latency of a twitch on lab tutor?

put the m on the beginning of the force hill and the x on the stimulus on the lower part of the screen

How do you measure the force of a single muscle twitch on lab tutor?

put the m on the bottom of the hill and the x on the top

How do you measure FEV1 on the spirogram?

put the m on the flat part right while they were holding their breath and the x on the bottom

How do you measure the relaxation of a single muscle twitch on lab tutor?

put the m on the top of the hill and the x on the bottom

when measuring the latent period of an involuntary reflex, how do you do it?

put the marker on the point right before the first up movement on the top graph and the cursor on the point at the end of the flat line before the first drop on the bottom

*phasic* receptors

rapid adapt; cold pool

amount of oxygen consumed is directly related to:

rate of ATP production

when is *Glucose* seen in urine

reabsorbed in bloodstream, usually b/c sugar is in the blood = increased blood sugar (related to diabetes b/c insufficient insulin)

Thermoreceptors

react to hot and cold

Thermoreceptors

react to hot or cold

What color is the compliment of green?

red

when a person's elbow is immersed in cold water for a period of time, the person's fingers feel the pain. what's the pain in the fingers called?

referred pain

Dermatome

referred pain areas on skin that supply nerves from a single spinal root; "false pain"

The tool used to measure the specific gravity of urine

refractometer

what do you use to measure the specific gravity of urine?

refractometer

What statistical analysis is associated with a scatter plot?

regression

tonicity

relative solute concentration

Water's surface tension

relativel high

what's the right/declining side of a twitch called?

relaxation time

expiration

removes stale air

Photoreceptors

respond to visible wavelengths fo light

Photoreceptors

respond to visible wavelengths of light

if someone has tumors in their lungs, this is called what?

restrictive

dicrotic notch

s caused by the inertia of blood flowing back toward the heart against the closed aortic valve

isotonic

same solvent concentration

type 1 error

saying there is a difference when there isn't

type 2 error

saying there isn't a difference when there is

diastolic BP

second sound, bottom number, rests b/w beats, refilling

latent periods are measured in what unit?

seconds

motor neurons

send info to effectors

sensory neurons

send the information to the central nervous system

Mechanoreceptors

sensitive to stretching & pulling

Mechanoreceptors

sensitive to stretching and pulling

Nociceptors

sensitive to tissue damage

What does exercise do to the AV nodal delay?

shortens it

In comparing the control reflex and the control reaction, the latency of the reflex was

shorter because reflexes are monosynaptic while reactions are polysynaptic . In other words, reflexes send impulses across one synapse(s) while reactions cross multiple synapse(s). Because crossing a synapse involves converting the electrical signal (via a(n) action potential ) to a chemical signal (via a(n) neurotransmitter ) and back to an electrical signal (via a(n) action potential ), more time will elapse with an increasing number of synapses to cross

Is the cardiac cycle as a whole shorter or longer after exercise? Which shorten more the intervals/segments or the waves?

shorter; the intervals/segments

Active transport

similar to facilitated diffusion except that energy is required. Active transport is used to move particles against a concentration gradient, or from lower concentrations to higher concentrations.

Osmosis

simply a specialized type of diffusion with two restrictions: 1) diffusing particles are limited to solvent molecules (usually water); and 2) these solvent molecules must pass through a selectively permeable membrane.

reflex

single synapse on spinal cord monosynaptic (*fewer* number of synapses involved) = faster & involuntary

Reaction times can be influenced by factors

sleepiness, emotional distress or consumption of alcohol

The greater the molecular weight of a substance, the ______ the rate of diffusion

slower

The greater the thickness of the cell membrane, the ______ the rate of diffusion

slower

The more compliant/stretchy someone's blood vessels are, the ______ their pulse wave velocity

slower

What's more helpful in identifying flavor? Taste or smell?

smell

Membrane is *permeable* to solute

solute moves from *high to low* concentrations

Osmosis

specialized type of diffusion restricted by diffusing particles limited to solvent molecules and these solvent molecules moving through a selectively permeable membrane

esophagus digests

starch

Stomach digests

starch & start proteins

duodenum digests

starch, protein, start lipids

What occurs in the *stomach* of of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

starch, start protein, NO absorptions

What occurs in the the *mouth & esophagus* of a person with pancreatic insufficiency?

start digestion of starch, NO absoption

Anthropomorphisms

statements that attribute human characteristics to things that are not human "needs (to)" "wants (to)" 1. Heart rate slows after exercise because the body needs to return to normal. 2. The heart beats faster after exercise because the body needs oxygen. 3. Metabolism increases after exercise because the body wants to increase oxygen.

.05 or smaller

statistically significant

inference

statistically significant difference between the means of the tow groups

Referred Pain

stimulation in one part of the body gives rise to sensations localized in other parts of the body Ex: elbow immersed in cold water, causing pain in pinky & heart attacks

Ion-Dipole

strongest intermolecular forces

What was the IV and DV in the mouse metabolism lab?

subject; metabolic rate

the substance on which an enzyme acts

substrate

repeated stimuli that produce a response in the nerve without letting the muscle return to optimal relaxation

summation

Name one factor that contributes to the difference in metabolic rate of mice and humans.

surface area

name one factor that contributes to the difference in the metabolic rate of mice and humans?

surface area to volume ratio

how do you calculate pulse pressure?

systolic - diastolic

the formula for pulse pressure

systolic - diastolic

the formula for mean arterial pressure

systolic BP + 2(diastolic BP) / 3

pulse pressure

systolic-diastolic

blood pressure is measured how?

systolic/diastolic

*Tonic* receptors

takes awhile to adjust

in order to explain why something is happening

teleologic

What's another name for tetany?

temporal summation

Bile salts are absorbed in

terminal ileum

Digestion of *protein* begins in

the *stomach* (pepsin) continues in the *duodenum* (pancreatic proteolytic enzymes), further continues in *jejunum* (amino peptidases)

In order to measure the rotation angle of a reflex or reaction on LabStation

the Marker should be placed at the beginning of the response and the Point Selector should be placed at the peak of the response curve .

In order to measure the latency of a reflex or reaction on LabStation

the Marker should be placed at the beginning of the stimulus and the Point Selector should be placed at the beginning of the response

Residual volume

the air that remains in the lungs after a maximum exhale. A spirometry measures the flow of air out of the lungs, so it it impossible to determine the amount that remains within the lungs since a spirometry only measures exhaled air.

Stroke volume

the amount of blood ejected by the left ventricle in one contraction

why some body parts are less discriminatory than others

the amount of mechanoreceptors in the specific part of the body

what happens to a reaction when there is a constant amount of enzyme and increasing H2O2

the amount of oxygen produced rises and then levels out

Properties of liquids and solids are determined by

the attraction/repulsion between molecules, determined by the bonds that hold the molecules together

How do allosteric inhibitors cause the enzyme to not work as well?

the bind to the allosteric site and change the shape of the active site and the cell so the enzyme can't bind anymore

For a single twitch...

the contraction time is *shorter* than relaxation time

Osmotic pressure

the driving force for the influx of water into the dialysis bag and, by extension, the force that drives the sucrose solution up the tube

In comparing the hypothermia and the control reflexes, the latency of the hypothermia reflex was longer because

the drop in temperature lowered the kinetic energy which slows ion movement across the muscle cell membrane, thus decreasing the speed of action potential generation in the muscle cells.

In comparing the hypothermia and control reflexes, the rotation angle of the hypothermia reflex was less because

the drop in temperature reduces the ATPase enzyme activity of the muscle cells, which reduces the potential force of the quadriceps muscle contraction.

What is uric acid?

the end product of the oxidation of purine in the body

What depicts a cell's isotonic state?

the first molarity that it doesn't lyse at

In the formula for osmotic pressure, R = ?

the gas constant, 848

What happens when a salt is dissolved into the water

the ionic bond between K+ and CL= is disrupted because the dipole of the oxygen in the water molecule is significantly strong to disrup the ionic bond

what was the DV in the lab measuring the metabolic rate of humans and mice?

the metabolic rate measured by oxygen consumption

When a hearing aid is placed against the mastoid process of the skull allowing for bone conduction, this shows that what isn't working properly and what is?

the middle ear isn't and the cochlea is

Filtration

the movement of particles due to an applied force. For example, blood pressure can force fluids through capillary walls.

Diffusion

the net movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration

diffusion

the net random movement of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. As long as temperature is above absolute zero, molecules will move randomly (i.e. they have kinetic energy) favoring movement toward an area of lower concentration.

In the formula for osmotic pressure, i = ?

the number of osmotically active particles (glucose- 1, NaCl- 2)

The effect of pH on reaction rate

the overall trend showed a steady increase in the reaction rate followed by a steady decline *pH of too low (acidic) or too high (basic) would denature the protein, optimal pH is 7

Systolic

the peak pressure exerted during ventricular systole (contracting and ejecting)

Metabolic rate measures

the rate at which the body utilizes energy

The amount of oxygen consumed is directly related to

the rate of ATP production

Tonicity

the relative solute concentration

what does it mean when there is equal amounts of water inside and outside the cell

the solution is isotonic to the red blood cell OR the red blood cell is isotonic to the solution

State the independent variable of the scientific method lab experiment.

the solutions

Digestion of protein begins in

the stomach (pepsin) continues in the duodenum (pancreatic proteolytic enzymes), further continues in jejunum (amino peptidases)

what was the IV in the lab measuring the metabolic rate of humans and mice?

the subjects (mice and humans)

hypotonic

the system with the lower solute concentration is ________ to system with higher solute concentration.

Relaxation is always slower than contraction because

the uptake of calcium during relaxation is a lot slower than the intake of calcium during contraction

To measure expiratory reserve volume (ERV), the Point Selector should be placed at the valley of a tidal expiration and the Marker should be placed at

the valley of the maximal expiration .

Cardiac output

the volume of blood pumped per min. (stroke volume x heart rate)

what does it mean when a solution is hypertonic to the red blood cell?

the water moves from inside the cell to outside the cell

what does it mean when a solution is hypotonic to the red blood cell?

the water moves from outside the cell to inside the cell

If the molecular weight is high

then the rate of diffusion is low

If the liquid has strong intermolecular forces

then the surface tension of the liquid will be strong, and the size of the drop will be smaller

what does an isotonic solution mean?

there are equal amounts of water inside and outside of the cell

p > 0.05

there is NO significant difference

p < 0.05

there is a significant difference

if a solution is hypotonic, what does it mean?

there is less solute, water rushes in to the cell so it bursts

what's the unit for magnitude or force?

there isn't one

what kind of receptors were used when we stuck our finger in hot water until it was no longer comfortable?

thermoreceptors or phasic receptors

the smallest current required to produce a contraction

threshold current

how is respiration controlled?

through the central chemoreceptors in the medulla

rate of oxygen consumption (mL/sec)

time required for the soap film to traverse a given distance of the tube is a measure of

unpaired t-test

to compare average measurements for two separate, independent groups (for example, seeing if there is a difference between the white blood cell count in men and women)

*Protein* in urine

too large to be filter at glomerulus

Vital capacity

total volume of air to be moved in and out of the lungs

What is left after digestion in a person with normal conditions?

toxins

duodenum absorbs

toxins, water

Positive regression

trend line increases

Fats break down into

trigylcerides

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are quite common in cases of glycosuria because bacteria, especially e-coli, survive by fermenting the residual sugar left behind in the urinary tract.

true

t/f: don't put in a trend line unless you are asked for it

true

The sounds of Korotkoff are produced by

turbulent blood flow

what's the unit for frequency at which summation occurs?

twitch/sec

The calculated value above is much larger than the height your solution actually rose during the time allotted in the lab because

under ideal conditions, gravity (hydrostatic pressure) doesn't exist and therefore there is no opposing force to mitigate the osmotic pressure and stop the solution from rising up the tube.

if you are doing an experiment and comparing different groups, is it paired or unpaired?

unpaired

TYPE 2

unpaired t-test

do metabolic rate and calories used go up or down after exercise?

up

What are the most important organic substances found in urine?

urea, uric acid, creatinine

What's a possible reason for someone having hemoglobin in their urine?

urinary tract infection

High alkalinity (very basic, higher than 7.5)

urine retention in bladder, chronic cystitis, anemia, obstructing gastric ulcers

Reddish amber urine indicates

urobilinogen or porphyrin, evidence of liver cirrhosis, jaundice, or Addison's disease

reddish amber color

urobilinogen or porphyrin. Urobilinogen is produced in the intestine by the action of bacteria on bile pigment. Porphyrin may be evidence of liver cirrhosis, jaundice, Addison's disease and other conditions.

IV that are discrete (categories)

use a column (bar) graph

IV that are continuous (numbers)

use a scatter plot

anabolism

use energy to synthesize food

specific gravity

use refractor to measure, look where colors line up between 1.001-1.03 is normal (odd numbers) *NO UNITS*

*Frequency* of a twitch

used to increase or decrease *multiple twitches*

*Voltage* of a twitch

used to increase or decrease a *single twitch*

pneumotachometer

used to measure airflow directly

scatter plot

used w/ *continuous numbers* x-axis= numerical

bar graph:

used w/ *discrete categories* x-axis= categorical

Glucose in the urine

usually an indication of diabetes mellitus

when is *Hemoglobin* seen in urine

usually with women who are menstruating

what occurs in the QRS wave on an ECG?

ventricular depolarization

The QRS complex indicates

ventricular depolarization (ventricles are contracting)

T wave

ventricular repolarization

The T- wave indicates

ventricular repolarization

what occurs in the T wave on an ECG?

ventricular repolarization

What lung volume should not change after exercise?

vital capacity

in the lungs, our ________ never changes

vital capacity

the strength of the twitch a muscle experiences

voltage

to increase the magnitude of a twitch, what should be increased? frequency or voltage?

voltage

Inspiratory reserve volume

volume of air in lungs that can be held above that of tidal volume

Tidal volume

volume of air inspired during one normal breath

Expiratory reserve volume

volume of air left in lungs follow normal exhalation that can be expired

Residual volume

volume of air remaining in lungs and trachea following expiration of ERV

reactions

voluntary responses to a stimulus from the environment

homeothermic

warm-blooded animals

Normal constituents of urine

waste products of cellular metabolism

Normal constituents of urine

waste products of cellular metabolism or products derived directly from certain foods that are eaten

large intestine absorbs

water

what does it mean when the red blood cell is hypotonic to the solution?

water moves from inside the cell to outside the cell

what does it mean when the red blood cell is hypertonic to the solution?

water moves from outside the cell to inside the cell

Temperature adaptation

when I placed my second finger in the water it felt a lot hotter than the first finger. This is due to the phasic receptors present in our fingers. These phasic receptors are rapidly adapting to stimuli, resulting in a reduced number of action potentials being fired. When the first finger was placed in the hot water, it was hot, but adapted quickly to the hot water, and then when the second finger was put in the hot water, it felt a very hot sensation since it did not have time to adapt yet

when can you read letters through the blood

when hemolysis has occurred

when does tetany occur on a graph?

when it levels out at the top after increasing summation

when can you not read letters through the blood

when it's isotonic

Auditory fatigue

when the phasic receptors hair cells become damaged

When are the central chemoreceptors activated? What do they do?

when they detect acid (produced as a result of co2); increase breathing

Referred pain

when two signals are sent to the brain and the brain has to make a decision between the two because both signals are synapsing on the same neuron brain in some cases will make a mistake

central nervous system

where the information is processed

Glucose

will not disassociate when put into water and therefore needs a larger molar concentration.

conclusion

would say that mean A is significantly larger/smaller than mean B, following by an explanation of the mechanism resulting in the difference.

IV

x-axis

independent variable

x-axis

DV

y-axis

dependent variable

y-axis

Higher Specific gravity

yellow, dark yellow 1.02-1.03 = *dehydration*

when p is less than or equal to 0.05, is there a statistically significant difference?

yes

Explain the mechanism (process) by which blood pressure and heart rate change in response to exercise.

~When metabolism takes place in the body, one of the byproducts is carbon dioxide. During exercise, the body's metabolic activity increases and carbon dioxide is produced at a higher rate. Carbon dioxide elevates in the body, and has to be released from the body by exhalation. As carbon dioxide increases in the blood, it stimulates the sympathetic nervous system to send signals throughout the body. The sympathetic signals increase the heart rate to create a greater cardiac output and increase the rate that carbon dioxide is taken out of the body. When more blood is being expelled from the increased cardiac output from the heart, this also raises the pressure that blood exerts on the vessel walls, otherwise known as increased blood pressure.

π = iRT(ΔC)

π = osmotic pressure (mm H2O) i = number of osmotically active particles resulting from dissociation of each molecule in solution (refer to Appendix A, page A8 in Sherwood). R = gas constant (848 L-mm H2O/mol-degree) T = temperature (K) ΔC = sucrose concentration difference of solute on the two sides of the membrane (Cinside - Coutside)


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