Answer:
Resting metabolic rate is a measurement of the number of calories that your body burns at rest. Resting metabolic rate is usually measured in the morning before you eat or exercise and after a full night of restful sleep. Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is a measurement of the number of calories needed to perform your body’s most basic ( basal) functions, like breathing, circulation and cell production.
Answer:
The correct answer choice from the list, to answer the question: Which of the following is not an example of generalized seizure?, would be, A: simple partial.
Explanation:
Seizures, which are a symptom of a major brain disorder called epilepsy, are defined as the erratic, and suddenly disorganized, firing of neurons inside the hemispheres of the brain. Some of these electrical impulses may be limited to a specific part of the brain, in only one of the two hemispheres, which is why this type of seizure would be known as focal, or partial. However, in generalized seizures, the disorganized electrical impulses sent by neurons, take both of the hemispheres and can cause a complete collpase of the brain functions, as the brain is incapable of communicating. There is a list of various seizure types within the category of generalized seizures. These are: absence (known as petit mal), tonic-clonic, or convulsive seizures, atonic seizures, clonic seizures, clonic, tonic and myoclonic seizures. Their category depends on how the body reacts to the disorganized firing of the neurons, the region of the brain that is affected and the connected organs and tissue that responds to the disorganized stimulus sent by the neurons.
Answer:
Insulin Basics: How Insulin Helps Control Blood Glucose Levels. Insulin and glucagon are hormones secreted by islet cells within the pancreas. They are both secreted in response to blood sugar levels, but in opposite fashion! Insulin is normally secreted by the beta cells (a type of islet cell) of the pancreas.
Answer:
types 4,8,10
Explanation:
1.
Fibril-forming collagens (I, II, III, V, XI, XXIV, XXVII);
2.
Fibril-associated collagens with interrupted triple helices (FACITs) (IX, XII, XIV, XVI, XIX, XX, XXI, XXII). The FACITs do not form fibrils by themselves but they are associated with the surface of collagen fibrils.
3.
Network-forming collagens (IV, VIII, X) form a pattern in which four molecules assemble via their amino-terminal 7S domain to form tetramers while two molecules assemble via their carboxy-terminal NC1 domain to form NC1 dimers
4.
Membrane collagens (XIII, XVII, XXIII, XXV)