Explanation:
There are options in your question but there is not a concrete question that can match those options.
Since there are options, I can only connect them with ''drugs'' so I would answer it like the real question is about it.
Drugs can be avoided, and all people must avoid them because they are very harmful and illegal.
They can cause death.
They can cause blackouts. That is correct.
They are really dangerous because people can die from them.
Correct answers are that they are commonly used at parties, they can cause confusion and dizziness and they are commonly used at clubs and concerts.
To prevent the risk of injury from slips, trips and falls due to clutter, you should organize storage areas and secure cords and cables.
Both of the things would need to be safely maintained to prevent injuries. Storage areas would need to be kept clean and tidy so that no potential hazard is created, and this can occur if the storage area is disorganized. Cords and cables would need to be secure in order to not trip over them. They should be kept out of the way and mainly placed together in an area where it's less likely to cause an accident.
Answer:
As part of the development of the neural tube, by the sixth week of embryonic development, the brain vesicles are already formed.
Explanation:
The encephalic vesicles correspond to a group of dilations that will give rise to the brain and its related structures.
Around the 4th week of embryonic development, the primary encephalic vesicles are formed, and by the 6th week there will also be secondary encephalic vesicles, for a total of five divisions.
The five encephalic vesicles formed in week 6 of embryonic development are the myelencephalon, metencephalon, midbrain, diencephalon and telencephalon.
- <em><u>myelencephalon
</u></em>: It is the structure that is organized to form the spinal bulb, in addition to the motor nuclei of the cranial nerves (pairs) IX to XII.
- <u><em>Metencephalon</em></u>
: It gives rise to the cerebellum and the protrusion.
- <em><u>Midbrain</u></em>
: It forms important structures such as the Edinger-Westphal nucleus, the wing plates, the tegment - together with the nuclei of the cranial nerves III and IV - and the upper cerebellar pedicles.
- <u><em>Diencephalon</em></u>: gives rise to the Thalamus, hypothalamus and pituitary gland.
- <em><u>Telencephalon</u></em>: originates the structure of each cerebral hemisphere, besides the striated body and its respective divisions in caudate and lenticular nuclei.