TB is highly contagious and can be transmitted from an infected person to an uninfected person, mainly when a person with TB coughs, sneezes, speaks, or even sings (known as airborne transmission or airborne disease). Other people who breathe in the aerosolized bacteria can become infected.
Answer:
See the answer below
Explanation:
The sympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems make up the autonomic nervous system, regulating involuntary functions. The first acts in situations of fight or flight, for example in an accident of self-actions such as: increased heart rate, pupil dilation, relaxes airways, among others. Neurotransmitters are released: adrenaline and norepinephrine. The parasympathetic system performs antagonistic functions by activating in relaxation situations: it decreases heart rate, contracts pupils, constricts airways. Acetylcholine is released as a neurotransmitter.
The significance in thickness between the two is due to the different amount of pressure exerted on the walls of the heart. The left ventricle has a thicker wall because the blood must be pumped throughout the entire body (oxygenated blood), unlike the right ventricle, where blood is pumped simply to the lungs to be oxygenated (pulmonary system).