Answer: The rigth answer is: A. Severe swelling and redness at a midshaft femur
Explanation: There are some contraindications for the use of a traction splint among them are: -Injuries near the knee and injuries of the hips and / or pelvis and amputation of some part of the limb, therefore option B and D are incorrect. The traction splint firmly grabs the ankle, if there is an injury that interferes with the hitch, it cannot be placed, so option C is incorrect. If there is a femur fracture, it is very common to find severe swelling and redness in the femur of the middle axis and there is no problem with placing the traction splint because the purpose of this is to stabilize the fracture.
During contraction, the filaments slide past he thick filaments, shortening the sarcomere. The thick and thin filaments do the actual work of a muscle, and the way they do this is pretty cool. Thick filaments are made of a protein called myosin. At the molecular level, a thick filament is a shaft of myosin molecules arranged in a cylinder. Thin filaments are made of another protein called actin. The thin filaments look like two strands of pearls twisted around each other.
They can constrict or dilate because their walls are muscular.
Answer:
1 second
Explanation:
When the body comes in contact with a threat or something that it interprets as being stressful, the stress response of the body (located in the hypothalamus) is activated.
The stress hormone adrenaline is released into the blood immediately to cause the body to be agile and ready to deal with the problem. This takes about one second or less.
4.a
5.d
those are the only ones i'm 100% sure about.