Anatomy and Physiology B/C

MaanMaan
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by MaanMaan »

Ahhh didnt mean to assume gender
I'm Sryyy
Avg Resting Heart Rate 80 bpm
As athletes mature they begin to have a greater Stroke per Volume (Oxygen per Beat), hence they need fewer beats to maintain their resting heart rate because the Stroke per volume remains the same.
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by Anomaly »

MaanMaan wrote:
Avg Resting Heart Rate 80 bpm
As athletes mature they begin to have a greater Stroke per Volume (Oxygen per Beat), hence they need fewer beats to maintain their resting heart rate because the Stroke per volume remains the same.
Looks good to me, though I thought I read somewhere that the average resting heart rate for an adult is about 72bpm Your turn!
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by MaanMaan »

Well personally I just average the two most seen rates
60 and 100 bpm averaged to 80 idek lol

Anyways Questions:

What tool do you use to measure systolic and diastolic pressure?
How do you find each?
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by linzhiyan »

MaanMaan wrote:Well personally I just average the two most seen rates
60 and 100 bpm averaged to 80 idek lol

Anyways Questions:

What tool do you use to measure systolic and diastolic pressure?
How do you find each?
1) sphygmomanometer 
2) Wrap sphygmomanometer on a person's upper arm and place a stethoscope where you can hear their pulse. Inflate the sphygmomanometer until you cannot hear the pulse. Deflate slowly. The number that is shown on the sphygmomanometer when you can hear the pulse again is the systolic pressure. Keep on deflating until you cannot hear the pulse again. That number on the sphygmomanometer is their diastolic pressure.
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MaanMaan
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by MaanMaan »

Yep that is right

You're turn
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by linzhiyan »

What is the primary function of the lymphatic system?
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by jxxu20 »

The primary function of the lymphatic system is to transport lymph, a fluid containing leukocytes and lymphocytes (cells that fight infection) throughout the body. It also absorbs interstitial fluid and transports it back to the circulatory system, and helps with fat absorption in the small intestine (fatty lymph = chyle).
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by linzhiyan »

jxxu20 wrote:The primary function of the lymphatic system is to transport lymph, a fluid containing leukocytes and lymphocytes (cells that fight infection) throughout the body. It also absorbs interstitial fluid and transports it back to the circulatory system, and helps with fat absorption in the small intestine (fatty lymph = chyle).
Yep, ya got it!
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by jxxu20 »

Questions:
1. A man with a blood type genotype of iBi marries a woman with a genotype of iAiA. The man does not have the Rh factor whereas the woman is heterozygous for the Rh factor. What percent of their children will have type A blood and be Rh positive?

2. Explain RAG1 and RAG2's roles in T cell development.

3. Where does the thoracic duct empty lymph into?

4. What is the difference between a centroblast and a centrocyte?
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Re: Anatomy and Physiology B/C

Post by ZGMFX10AFreedom »

Sorry, don't mind this. Accident.
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