Answer:
B,D,E
Explanation:
Analogous structures do not indicate a common ancestor. Analogous structures have the same function but a different structure. An example of an analogous structure is the wing of a bat and a butterfly.
While palpating the left abdominal quadrant and the patient reports pain in the right lower quadrant is called the Rovsing's sign. As the left illiac fossa is being palpated, it causes pain on the right illiac fossa This sign was named after the the Danish surgeon Niels Thorkild Rovsing.
This suggests that the client may be experiencing appendicitis. Appendicitis is the inflammation of the appendix. Symptoms include abdominal pain in the right and lower part of the abdomen, fever, nausea, decreased appetite and vomiting.
Answer:
The sensory receptors for the kinesthetic sense are the proprioceptors
Explanation:
Proprioceptors are primarily responsible for compiling information about changes in the position and angular velocity of a joint Proprioceptors (kinesthetic senses):
- Vestibular receptors.
-Muscle spindles.
-Cutaneous receptors
Proprioceptors provide information on how movement occurs within the body, and they are located in the inner ear, muscles, tendons, joints, etc.
Answer: Nuetrophils are the most abundant luekocytes (white blood cells).
Explanation: Nuetrophils also known as granulocytes because they have a granule in their cytoplasm, are the most abundant phagocytic white blood cells. They are the first ones to arrive at the site of infection by injury, bacteria or during apoptosis (programmed cell death) in response to chemotaxis and inflammation feedback loops. They bind to bacterial receptors and engulf(digest) them together with any other foreign matter and dead cells.