To relieve airway obstruction in infants, lay the baby face down along your forearm using your laps for support. Apply five quick, forceful blows at the baby's back with the palm of your hand.
If the object did not come out, turn the baby face up and give five quick down thrusts. Continue the back slaps and the chest thrust cycle until the baby recovers.
The photoreceptors would be your eyes, chemoreceptors skin, olfactory for nose and mechanoreceptors for obviously tongue hope this helps.
Answer:
C. Yes, the results of his experiment were probably inaccurate the
first time.
Answer:
I think the height of the ramp affects the distance that the ball can go, but the size doesn't affect it
and as you decrease th height of the ramp it will look like straight thing, when it look like that the ball might need a little force in order to get speed also to go far
but in this condition the size can affect the ball distance it also depends on how much you give to it
Thank you !
Answer:
No changes occur to the K1 value, its concentration remains higher than the concentration of the inhibitor and enzyme inhibitor complex
Explanation:
Uncompetitive inhibition is an example of a reversible inhibition. Reversible inhibitors bind to enzymes by weak non-covalent bonding. Thus the formation and dissociation of this association is rapid. uncompetitve inhibition lowers the Vmax and Km.