1. The right answer is A.
High LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, blood pressure and blood glucose levels are cardiovascular risk factors.
Apart from heredity, sex and age, it is possible to act on many cardiovascular risk factors such as:
*The tobacco
*High blood pressure
*Diabetes
* Excess cholesterol
* Obesity and overweight.
*Physical inactivity.
*The alcohol.
The risk factors do not add up, they potentiate each other, that is, they aggravate each other.
2. The right answer is Body fat percentage.
Measurement of body composition now plays a major role in any fitness assessment.
The percentage of body fat is your fat percentage relative to your body weight. For example, a 70 kg person with a 20% body fat percentage has 14 kg body fat. The ideal body fat varies by sex and also depends on age.
I believe the answer is: C. A healthy high school wrestler is using anabolic steroids to build muscle mass.
It is indeed true that anabolic steroid would increase both the strength and the speed for the athletes. But in the long run, those athletes would face various side effects, such as baldness, decreasing size of testicles, impotency , or in some cases it might lead to stroke.
Answer:
ExplanatioThe oculomotor nerve is the third cranial nerve (CN III). It allows movement of the eye muscles, constriction of the pupil, focusing the eyes and the position of the upper eyelid. Cranial nerve III works with other cranial nerves to control eye movements and support sensory functioning.
Answer:
if a nurse who provides weekly care in a homeless shelter has unknowingly inhaled airborne Mycobacterium tuberculosis and has subsequently developed latent tuberculosis infection then it is TRUE that "The nurse is likely asymptomatic."
Explanation:
for us to be able to understand this question we need to know what the key terms are such as;
Mycobacterium tuberculosis(M. tb) this is a species of pathogenic bacteria in the family Mycobacteriaceae and it causes tuberculosis. It was First discovered by Robert Koch, M. tuberculosis in 1882.
Latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) this is a state of persistent immune response to stimulation by Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens without evidence of clinically manifested active TB. this is a state where someone is infected but the symptoms do not show.
Asymptomatic
: this simply means showing no symptoms of the disease.
so by all the basis above we can conclude that the nurse is likely asymptomatic.