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Rama09 [41]
2 years ago
6

NAME THIS SONG AND ARTIST

Medicine
2 answers:
SOVA2 [1]2 years ago
7 0
It’s karma police by radiohead c:
maksim [4K]2 years ago
4 0
KARMA POLICE BY RADIOOOO HEADDDD
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Sealants for preventing and arresting pit-and-fissure occlusal caries in primary and permanent molars: A systematic review of ra
miss Akunina [59]

Sealants are superior to control without sealants or fluoride varnishes in terms of effectiveness and safety in halting or preventing the progression of non-cavitated carious lesions. To learn more about the relative qualities of the various kinds of sealant materials, more research is required.

Sealants had a lower risk of developing carious lesions in the occlusal surfaces of permanent molars than those who did not (odds ratio [OR], 0.15; 95 percent confidence interval [CI], 0.08-0.27). The authors discovered that sealants decreased the incidence of carious lesions after 7 or more years of follow-up when they reviewed studies whose researchers had compared sealants with fluoride varnishes (OR, 0.19; 95 percent CI, 0.07-0.51); however, this finding was supported by low-quality evidence. The authors were unable to establish a hierarchy of efficacy among the studies whose researchers had made side-by-side comparisons based on the available evidence.

Learn more about Sealants here:-

brainly.com/question/18152038

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8 0
1 year ago
Which statement made by the parent of a child with a physical illness poses a safety risk to the child?1 "I will update my child
Over [174]

Answer:

#3 is the answer

Explanation:

Sending the prescription to school with the child poses a risk of the child overdosing themselves.

8 0
2 years ago
what is the answer ________________effects on the body are become very aggressive, paranoia, hard to sleep, increases heart rate
Tems11 [23]

Answer:

It could be Amphetamines, Ritalin, Alcohol, Parasomnias and/or Hypervigilance

Explanation:

Any of these have all of the following effects you listed. Most of those could result from drug abuse. However, few are just your body's way of telling you something is wrong.

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
The peripheral nervous system consists of
lutik1710 [3]
It includes the cranial nerves, spinal nerves and their roots and branches, peripheral nerves, and neuromuscular junctions.
3 0
3 years ago
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Explain how neurons communicate. Include a description of the action potential and how the action potential is converted into a
suter [353]

Answer:

Action potentials and chemical neurotransmitters.

Explanation:

Neurons communicate with each other via electrical events called ‘action potentials’ and chemical neurotransmitters.  At the junction between two neurons (synapse), an action potential causes neuron A to release a chemical neurotransmitter.  The neurotransmitter can either help (excite) or hinder (inhibit) neuron B from firing its own action potential.

In an intact brain, the balance of hundreds of excitatory and inhibitory inputs to a neuron determines whether an action potential will result.  Neurons are essentially electrical devices. There are many channels sitting in the cell membrane (the boundary between a cell’s inside and outside) that allow positive or negative ions to flow into and out of the cell.  Normally, the inside of the cell is more negative than the outside; neuroscientists say that the inside is around -70 mV with respect to the outside, or that the cell’s resting membrane potential is -70 mV.

This membrane potential isn’t static. It’s constantly going up and down, depending mostly on the inputs coming from the axons of other neurons. Some inputs make the neuron’s membrane potential become more positive (or less negative, e.g. from -70 mV to -65 mV), and others do the opposite.

These are respectively termed excitatory and inhibitory inputs, as they promote or inhibit the generation of action potentials (the reason some inputs are excitatory and others inhibitory is that different types of neuron release different neurotransmitters; the neurotransmitter used by a neuron determines its effect).

Action potentials are the fundamental units of communication between neurons and occur when the sum total of all of the excitatory and inhibitory inputs makes the neuron’s membrane potential reach around -50 mV (see diagram), a value called the action potential threshold.  Neuroscientists often refer to action potentials as ‘spikes’, or say a neuron has ‘fired a spike’ or ‘spiked’. The term is a reference to the shape of an action potential as recorded using sensitive electrical equipment.

Neurons talk to each other across synapses. When an action potential reaches the presynaptic terminal, it causes neurotransmitter to be released from the neuron into the synaptic cleft, a 20–40nm gap between the presynaptic axon terminal and the postsynaptic dendrite (often a spine).

After travelling across the synaptic cleft, the transmitter will attach to neurotransmitter receptors on the postsynaptic side, and depending on the neurotransmitter released (which is dependent on the type of neuron releasing it), particular positive (e.g. Na+, K+, Ca+) or negative ions (e.g. Cl-) will travel through channels that span the membrane.

Synapses can be thought of as converting an electrical signal (the action potential) into a chemical signal in the form of neurotransmitter release, and then, upon binding of the transmitter to the postsynaptic receptor, switching the signal back again into an electrical form, as charged ions flow into or out of the postsynaptic neuron.

4 0
3 years ago
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