<h2>C) option is correct </h2>
Explanation:
- The spinal cord has numerous groups of nerve fibers going towards and coming from the brain
- These have been collectively called the ascending and descending tracts of the spinal cord, respectively, these tracts are responsible for carrying sensory and motor stimuli to and from the periphery (respectively)
- The ascending tracts transmit sensory information from the sensory receptors to higher levels of the CNS
- The descending tracts originate from different cortical areas and from brain stem nuclei
- The descending pathway carry information associated with maintenance of motor activities such as posture, balance, muscle tone, and visceral and somatic reflex activity
Answer:
Contraction is prevented
Explanation:
The sarcomere is the basic contratile unit of muscle i.e the unit responsible for contraction in the muscle and it consist of two main protein actin; which forms filaments involved in contraction and myosin; a motor protein responsible for contraction. Calcium interacts with these protein and in the absence of Ca, contraction is inhibited (sacromere with not be able to undergo contraction)
If you look up “quill bot” you can copy sentences from the internet, paste it in there, then press paraphrase and it’ll change the words
Answer:
Abstract American photographer Catherine Opie combines portraiture and documentary photography in her photographic series titled Domestic. At the center of this series lies the idea of community and the question of how community is constructed, a theme which unites Opie’s seemingly disparate bodies of work.
Explanation:
The answer is Vaccination.
Acquired or adaptive immunity is the body's third line of defense. This is protection against specific types of pathogens. Acquired immunity may be either natural or artificial in nature. Both natural and artificial immunity have passive and active components. Active immunity results from an infection or an immunization, while passive immunity comes from naturally or artificially gaining antibodies.