Answer:
"I need to shake the inhaler well before taking the medication."
Explanation:
One of the main recommendations for using an inhaler is to shake it before use. So this sentence is the one that indicates that <u>the client has understood the indications given by the nurse.</u>
As for the other options, it is advisable to wait 1 minute before another inhalation, <u>not 30 minutes.</u>
And taking <u>a deep breath before inhalingit is also not correct</u>, because it is advisable to exhale (empty the lungs) before using the inhaler so that the medication fills the lungs
Survival I think (sorry if im wrong)
According to endosymbiosis theory, the mitochondria was once free-living prokaryotic cell. The cell was engulfed by other cell (host cell) via the process of phagocytosis.
The “eaten” cell survived inside the host. The host cell provided a nutrition and safe environment to live and the future mitochondria produced energy that the host cell can use. Over time the organelle and the host cell have evolved together.
Answer:
C. parvum takes energy from glucose which is present in the digestive tract after the process of glycolysis.
Lactate dehydrogenase which is responsible for the conversion of lactate into pyruvate molecule.
Explanation:
C. parvum is a protozoa that lives as a parasite in the digestive tract of animals. They take nutrients from the cell which are present in the form of glucose. C. parvum uses a specific type of enzyme i. e. lactate dehydrogenase which is responsible for the conversion of lactate into pyruvate and also helps in the production of ATP through glycolysis process. In this process, the glucose molecule is broken down into two molecules of pyruvate, two molecules of ATP, two molecules of NADH, and two molecules of water. So C. parvum takes ATP from that way from the host cells.
Answer:
The semilunar valves prevent backflow of blood into the ventricles.
Explanation:
The semilunar valves are valves found at the junction between the left ventricle and the aorta and also between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery. They are cup-like in shape and prevent blood from flowing back into the ventricles which are the pumping chambers.
There are two types of semilunar valves. The aortic semilunar valves and the pulmonary semilunar valves. They are made up of the endocardial and connective tissue.
The closure of the semilunar valves causes the second heart sound detected on the stethoscope.
Diseases that arise from the semilunar valves are caused by its stenosis which is the narrowing of the valves and regurgitation where the heart valves can no longer hold firm enough to prevent the backflow of blood.