Answer:
<h2>Increase in Heart beat (tachycardia) and blood flow to muscle is the prime response in case of fight or flight. </h2>
Explanation:
<h3>Increase in Heart beat and blood flow to the muscle make it ready for the fight-flight response as it make body ready fir maximum energy by providing glucose and oxygen to the muscle cells as we know that glucose and oxygen is responsible for energy in each cell of the body. </h3>
Answer:
This question lacks options, options are:
A. increase the synthesis of contractile protein in muscle.
B. promote long bone growth.
C. favor the mobilization of FFA and reduces tissue use of blood glucose.
D. none of the above.
The correct answer is A.
Explanation:
Plasma concentration is the amount of a substance (hormones, glucose, proteins, among others) that circulates in the blood. The main action of growth hormone is to stimulate protein synthesis, through the mobilization of amino acid transporters, in a manner analogous to glucose and insulin transporters. In addition to stimulating protein synthesis, the growth hormone simultaneously mobilizes fat by direct lipolytic action. The processes of muscle protein synthesis and muscle protein breakdown occur simultaneously. This constant turnover of proteins allows the muscle fibers to modify their structure when the demands of loads or food vary. The plasticity of skeletal muscle in responding to changing loads or contraction patterns is evidence of the ability to remodel present in fibers. While resistance exercise significantly stimulates the synthesis of muscle contractile (myofibrillar) proteins, resistance exercise will have a greater impact in stimulating mitochondrial protein synthesis, thus allowing a specific muscle adaptation to exercise.
Answer:
The North American Nursing Diagnosis Association-International (NANDA-I)
Explanation:
NANDA International (formerly the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association) is a professional organization of nurses interested in standardized nursing terminology, that was officially founded in 1982 and develops, researches, disseminates and refines the nomenclature, criteria, and taxonomy of nursing diagnoses.