The question offers an image containing information regarding the patient by the name of Anita and her actions prior to arriving at the hospital.
We can describe the patient and her timeline up to her hospital visit by mentioning information about her:
- <em>Name </em>
- <em>Occupation</em>
- <em>Weight</em>
- <em>Age</em>
- <em>Actions prior to her hospital visit</em>
The patient in question is a 108 pound, 36-year-old female by the name of Anita Martin. The patient is indicated to be a security guard. As per the information given, the patient seems to have been working a night shift in a building in the vicinity of a recent train wreck that seems to have released chlorine gas. On her way to her car, Anita was exposed to chlorine gas, due to which she decided to drive to the hospital.
With this information, we will have properly described the patient in question so that the medical professionals at the hospital will have all the information necessary to proceed with an effective treatment plan for Anita's condition.
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Answer:
<em>Exceptions to Mendel's principles:
</em>
Does exceptions mean that Mendel was "wrong"? The answer is "NO". It means that we know more today about diseases, genes, and heredity than compared to what he expalined 150 years ago. Here I have summerized the exceptions with examples:
<em>Incomplete dominance</em>: When an organism is heterozygous for a trait and both genes are expressed but not completely.
<em>Example</em><em>:</em> SnapDragon Flowers
<em>Codominance</em>: When 2 different alleles are present and both alleles are expressed.
<em>Example</em>: Black Feathers + Whites feathers --> Black and white speckled feathers
<em>Multiple alleles</em>: Three or more alternative forms of a gene (alleles) that can occupy the same locus.
Example: Bloodtype
<em>Polygenic traits</em>: more than one gene controls a particular phenotype
Example: human height, Hair color, weight, and eye, hair and skin color.
The hormone testosterone promotes sexual desires in both males and females
Answer:
The proportions of nucleotides in the newly formed complimentary strand will be:
14% Thymine (T), 33% Adenine (A), 21% Guanine (G), 32% Cytosine (C).
Explanation:
In a double stranded DNA, the nucleotides of one strand binds with nucleotides of another strand through hydrogen bonds.
Adenine binds with thymine by two hydrogen bonds (A=T) and guanine binds with cytosine by three hydrogen bonds (G≡C).
So, the complimentary strand must have
- thymine equal to the amount of adenine in template strand.
- adenine equal to the amount of thymine in template strand.
- guanine equal to the amount of cytosine in template strand.
- cytosine equal to the amount of guanine in template strand.