Alcohol Abuse

Alcohol Abuse. BIO 1015 Week 4 Assignment 1 Discussion Question (***** Both Questions Answered + APA Format + Original Work + References ******)

 

Question 1

 

Alcohol Abuse

 

 

Mr. Wilko is a 40-year-old salesperson with a wife and three teenage children. He has recently begun to have a beer at lunch and a few drinks after work to reduce his work-related stress. An economic downturn in the housing industry has reduced the need for new home appliances and his income and sales record has been affected. Several other salespeople have been laid off at his firm. He has been told that if his sales and attendance records do not improve he will be fired. He and his wife are constantly arguing about finances and the children’s increasing demands for money. His drinking has increased to several beers at lunch and continued drinking after dinner. When he returns to work with alcohol on his breath, he is dismissed from his job. He continues to consume alcohol during the day as he attempts a job search. His wife is very concerned, as are his teenage children.

  • Mr. Wilko states he is a social drinker and “can stop at any time.” How accurate is his self-assessment? his self -assessment is not accurate for the simple fact that he considers himself a social drinker he is in denial that depression has set in.
  • What stressors are present in Mr. Wilko’s case? anxiety,depression
  • Why does Mr. Wilko continue to increase his alcohol intake? to surpress the feelings on depression or fear of losing his job he feels as if he continues to increase his drinking it will subside the feelings that he is having
  • What changes in liver function can Mr. Wilko expect if he continues to drink large amounts of alcohol? his liver function
  • Mr. Wilko complains to his wife that all the stress is causing “indigestion.” How do stress and alcohol consumption affect GI function?
  • Why is Mr. Wilko at greater risk of trauma? because he is consuming way too much alcohol at an increasing rate above normal which can lead to gastritis as well as pancreatitis

 

 

Question 2

 

Gastrointestinal Disorders Case

 

A 50-year-old man has been suffering from substernal pain for the last 5 months, particularly on waking up in the morning. He lost his job a year ago and was suffering from depression. He consumes about 12–16 cans of beer every day. He has lost his appetite too and says that eating aggravates pain.

  • Is this acute or chronic gastritis?  Chronic gastritis
  • What factors may lead to the development of gastritis? Loss of appetite black or tarry stools upset stomach depression
  • What investigation should be performed?
  • How can the patient be treated?

 

BIO 1015 Week 4

Week 4 assignments pathophysiology

 

 

Alcohol Abuse

 
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A karyotype

A karyotype. Question 1 (5 points)

 

Question 1 Saved

 

A karyotype ______.

 

Question 1 options:

 

compares one set of chromosomes to another.
of a normal human cell shows 48 chromosomes.
is a photograph of cells undergoing mitosis during anaphase.
cannot be used to identify individual chromosomes beyond the fact that two chromosomes are homologues.
is a visual display of chromosomes arranged according to size.

 


 

Question 2 (5 points)

 

Question 2 Saved

 

At which stage of mitosis are distinct chromatids visible and moving towards the opposite poles of the cell?

 

Question 2 options:

 

Metaphase
Telophase
Interphase
Anaphase
Prophase

 

Question 3 (5 points)

 

Question 3 Saved

 

Mitosis in humans usually results in the formation of _____.

 

 

 

Question 3 options:

 

2 diploid cells

 

4 diploid cells

 

2 haploid cells

 

4 haploid cells

 

Sperm or egg cells

 

Page 1 of 7

 

All of the following are characteristics of cancer cells EXCEPT _____.

 

Question 4 options:

 

angiogenesis
unregulated mitosis
unmutated DNA
ability to metastasize
no apoptosis

 

Question 5 (5 points)

 

Question 5 Unsaved

 

What stage does cytokinesis generally overlap with in the typical cell cycle?

 

Question 5 options:

 

S phase
prophase
telophase
anaphase
metaphase

 


 

Question 6 (5 points)

 

Question 6 Unsaved

 

An important result of meiosis is that _____.

 

Question 6 options:

 

each gamete receives one member of each pair of homologous chromosomes and gametes are formed that are haploid.
each gamete receives one member of each pair of homologous chromosomes.
gametes are formed that are diploid.
gametes receive one copy of each member of each pair of homologous chromosomes.
gametes are formed that are haploid.

 

Question 5 (5 points)

 

Question 5 Unsaved

 

What stage does cytokinesis generally overlap with in the typical cell cycle?

 

Question 5 options:

 

S phase
prophase
telophase
anaphase
metaphase

 


 

Question 6 (5 points)

 

Question 6 Unsaved

 

An important result of meiosis is that _____.

 

Question 6 options:

 

each gamete receives one member of each pair of homologous chromosomes and gametes are formed that are haploid.
each gamete receives one member of each pair of homologous chromosomes.
gametes are formed that are diploid.
gametes receive one copy of each member of each pair of homologous chromosomes.
gametes are formed that are haploid.

 

Question 10 (5 points)

 

Question 10 Unsaved

 

For anaphase to begin, which of the following must occur?

 

Question 10 options:

 

Chromatids must lose their kinetochores.
Cohesin must attach the sister chromatids to each other.
Cohesin must be cleaved enzymatically.
Kinetochores must attach to the metaphase plate.
Spindle microtubules must begin to depolymerize.

 

Question 11 (5 points)

 

Question 11 Unsaved

 

Spindle microtubules attach to kinetochores during this phase of mitosis.

 

Question 11 options:

 

metaphase
prometaphase
anaphase
prohase
telophase

 

Question 12 (5 points)

 

Question 12 Unsaved

 

Four of the five answers listed below are related by a common phase of mitosis. Select the exception.

 

Question 12 options:

 

chromosomes separate
chromosomes decondense
spindle microtubules disappear
nuclear envelope re-forms
nucleolus reappears

 

Question 13 (5 points)

 

Question 13 Unsaved

 

A woman is found to have 47 chromosomes, including three X chromosomes. Which of the following describes her expected phenotype?

 

Question 13 options:

 

A) masculine characteristics such as facial hair
B) enlarged genital structures
C) excessive emotional instability
D) normal female
E) sterile female

 

Question 14 (5 points)

 

Question 14 Unsaved

 

Which of the following is an example of polygenic inheritance?

 

Question 14 options:

 

A) pink flowers in snapdragons
B) the ABO blood group in humans
C) Huntington’s disease in humans
D) white and purple flower color in peas
E) skin pigmentation in humans

 

Question 15 (5 points)

 

Question 15 Unsaved

 

Why did the F1 offspring of Mendel’s classic pea cross always look like one of the two parental varieties?

 

Question 15 options:

 

A) No genes interacted to produce the parental phenotype.
B) Each allele affected phenotypic expression.
C) The traits blended together during fertilization.
D) One phenotype was completely dominant over another.
E) Different genes interacted to produce the parental phenotype.

 

Page 5 of 7

 

Page 6 of 7

 

Note: It is recommended that you save your response as you complete each question.

 


 

Question 16 (5 points)

 

Question 16 Unsaved

 

Use the following information to answer the questions below.

 

Tallness (T) in snapdragons is dominant to dwarfness (t), while red (R) flower color is dominant to white (r). The heterozygous condition results in pink (Rr) flower color.

 

A dwarf, red snapdragon is crossed with a plant homozygous for tallness and white flowers. What are the genotype and phenotype of the F1 individuals?

 

Question 16 options:

 

A) ttRr—dwarf and pink
B) ttrr—dwarf and white
C) TtRr—tall and red
D) TtRr—tall and pink
E) TTRR—tall and red

 

Question 17 (5 points)

 

Question 17 Unsaved

 

National Basketball Association (NBA) scientists have identified the gene for superior athletic ability.  The allele “A” represents the dominant form of the gene, while the allele “a” represents the recessive form of the gene.  The scientists find that the superior athletic ability gene is optimally expressed in individuals who possess the homozygous dominant form.

 

If Michael Jordan, who has the Aa genotype, has a child with a woman who has the aa genotype, what are the chances that his child will inherit the optimal superior athletic ability genotype?

 

Question 17 options:

 

0%
25%
50%
75%
100%

 

Question 18 (5 points)

 

Question 18 Unsaved

 

There is evidence that a certain color in cats is sex-linked. Yellow is recessive to black.
A heterozygous condition results in tortoise shell or calico color. A calico cat has a litter
of 8 kittens: 1 yellow male, 2 black males, 2 yellow females, and 3 calico females. What
was the male parents probable color?

 

Question 18 options:

 

yellow
black
calico
yellow and black
albino

 

Page 6 of 7

 

Page 7 of 7

 

Note: It is recommended that you save your response as you complete each question.

 


 

Question 19 (5 points)

 

Question 19 Unsaved

 

Imagine you are performing a cross involving seed color in garden plants.  What F1 offspring would you expect if you cross true-breeding parents with green seeds with true-breeding parents with yellow seeds?

 

Question 19 options:

 

25% white seeds, 25% yellow seeds, and 50% green seeds
25% green seeds, and 75% yellow seeds
50% yellow seeds, and 50% green seeds
100% yellow seeds
100% yellow-green seeds

 

Question 20 (5 points)

 

Question 20 Unsaved

 

All of the genes located on a given chromosome constitute a

 

Question 20 options:

 

linkage group.
karyotype.
none of these
wild-type allele.
bridging cross.

 

Page 7 of 7

A karyotype

 
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Microbiology 4

Microbiology 4. SUMMARY

Many interventions, protocols, and prevention methods are used to maintain or improve overall human health. The aim of some is to improve quality of life, while others specifically reduce, remove, or eradicate microbial pathogens which would otherwise cause disease.

Many such processes may also result in, or cause, unintended consequences to humans, pathogens, and/or the environment that were not predicted. The most well-known example is that of the rise of multiple antibiotic resistant bacteria following the use (and overuse) of antibiotics.

Each of the papers in this discussion provides an example of interventions originally intended to improve health and prevent disease. The first paper by Alharbi et al concerns restroom electric hand dryers. The second by Nettleton et al discusses artificial sweeteners and their impact on the gut bacteria. The third is a review of the latest findings that trehalose, an artificial sweetener, may have contributed to the current disease epidemic of Clostridium difficile. Finally, McNamara and Levy discuss the current status of triclosan which was first introduced in the 1970s. A background paper which defines and reviews the Hygiene Hypothesis, by Roduit et al, is also provided.

DISCUSSION PROMPTS

· What was the specific original intent of the intervention or procedure described in each of the papers and what was their unintended consequence(s)?

· Can you offer a solution or remediation for any or all of the resulting consequences from these interventions?

· What is the Hygiene Hypothesis (described in the Roduit paper) and how is it related to this discussion?

· Follow the APA format

· 1.5 page paper

 

Reading:

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646280_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/Antibacterial%20Consumer%20Products%20- %20How%20Reliable%20Are%20They%202017.pdf

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646282_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/Assessment%20of%20the%20bacterial%20contamination%20of%20hand%20air%20dryer%20in%20washroom.pdf

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646338_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/Pathogens%20boosted%20by%20food%20additive%202018.pdf

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646339_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/Reshaping%20the%20gut%20microbiota%20-%20Impact%20of%20low%20calorie%20sweeteners%20and%20the%20link%20to%20insulin%20resistance%202016.pdf

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646346_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/The%20Hygiene%20Hypothesis%20%20Roduit%20et%20al%202016.pdf

 

· https://elearn.une.edu/bbcswebdav/pid-236273-dt-forum-rid-15646348_1/courses/1015-201900-BIOL-1020L-06N/Triclosan%20-%20An%20Instructive%20Tale%202016.pdf

Microbiology 4

 
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Hematology and Circulation

Hematology and Circulation. Bio 102 Lab 03: Hematology and Circulation

Bio 102 Lab 03: Hematology and Circulation

By Jill Caporale and Christopher Eninger

To submit, print this document, complete all lab activities and answer all questions. Scan your lab pages using the free phone app AdobeScan, and upload your PDF to Canvas.

Overview

Animals too large to accomplish internal transport by diffusion are equipped with a system of branching vessels filled with blood, which is usually propelled through the system by the muscular contractions of the heart. Vertebrates have a closed circulatory system—a circuit of continuous vessels. Other animals, such as arthropods and annelids, have an open circulatory system: blood flows from vessels to open spaces in the tissues and then to vessels again. A pump is used to move the blood throughout the vessels of the circulatory system.

Many organisms couple the circulatory system with a respiratory surface such as lungs or gills, where gases can be exchanged between the blood and the environment. In vertebrates other than birds and mammals, a serial circuit delivers blood directly from the respiratory surface to the tissues. The parallel circuitry (pulmonary and systemic systems) present in birds and mammals is more efficient.

Blood traveling in the circulatory system is made up of a fluid matrix called plasma, which carries cells, oxygen, nutrients, wastes, and other materials from one region of the body to another. Blood often contains special respiratory pigments that deliver the oxygen throughout the body. The rate at which the blood is pumped by the heart can be measured as one’s pulse. Blood pressure is a measure of the force exerted by blood against the walls of the blood vessels. Both pulse and blood pressure can be influenced by a variety of factors, including diet, exercise, hormones, age, smoking, alcohol intake, and a number of other environmental factors.

During this laboratory, you will investigate the properties of blood cells, learn the path taken by blood through the heart and lungs, take your pulse, and learn what blood lab values mean.

Section A – Hematology

Part 1 – Hematology – Blood cells

Blood contains white cells (leukocytes) and red cells (erythrocytes). Mature mammalian erythrocytes are biconcave disks that lack a nucleus and contain hemoglobin for the transport of oxygen. Leukocytes are nucleated cells. Granulocytes and monocytes, types of leukocytes, transform into macrophages that migrate to infected areas, where they perform a clean-up function. Lymphocytes, another type of leukocyte, are responsible for immune reactions. Many infections are characterized by an increase in the white blood cell count.

1. Observe the photograph of a prepared slide of human blood. Use Figure below to help identify cell types.

Human Blood Slide

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© Carolina Biological

a. On this slide, which type(s) of blood cells lack(s) nuclei?

b. On your slide, which cell type is most abundant?

c. Which type of white blood cell (leukocyte) is most abundant?

d. Granulocytes are characterized by nuclei of many different shapes and by the granules in their cytoplasm. What color are these granules? Why do the granules have this color?

2. Examine the slide of blood from a carrier of sickle-cell anemia in low-oxygen crisis.

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a. Make a sketch of several abnormal red blood cells.

b. Healthy red blood cells are round. Are all the red blood cells on your slide round?

c. How do you think the abnormal shape of some of the red blood cell would interfere with circulation?

The hemoglobin of an individual who carries the recessive sickle-cell allele in the heterozygous condition is less soluble than normal hemoglobin. When the oxygen supply is inadequate or when the carbon dioxide concentration increases, sickle-cell hemoglobin molecules tend to crystallize to form hair-like rods that pile up and transform the cell into a sickle shape. The cells then clump and clog the blood vessels and cannot carry out their function of transporting oxygen. To determine whether a person is a carrier of the sickle-cell allele, blood is subjected to a low-oxygen atmosphere and examined with a microscope. In an individual who is homozygous for the sickle-cell allele (that is, has sickle-cell anemia), hemoglobin is abnormal even at normal oxygen and carbon dioxide concentrations.

3. Mononucleosis is a disease characterized by fever, headache, scratchy throat, easy fatigue after minimal exertion, and enlargement of the lymph glands.

Examine the blood slide from a person with mononucleosis.

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Do some of the white blood cells look abnormal? How?

4. Examine a prepared slide of frog blood.

BFrog blood slide, smear

How do frog erythrocytes differ from those of humans?

Part 2 – HEMATOLOGY – Analysis of Complete blood counts WHAT ELSE CAN YOUR BLOOD TELL YOU ABOUT YOUR HEALTH?

Blood has many compounds and enzymes that provide a window into a person’s health.

As part of a full checkup a complete blood count (CBC) is often conducted. Typical tests included in a CBC are shown below in the chart from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (a part of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland). In addition to these standards, additional tests may be carried out depending upon your risk factors or symptoms. A second blood test may be ordered to further investigate abnormal results of an initial blood test.

Test

Normal Range Results*

Red blood cell (varies with altitude)

Male: 5 to 6 million cells/mcL

Female: 4 to 5 million cells/mcL

White blood cell

4,500 to 10,000 cells/mcL

Platelets

140,000 to 450,000 cells/mcL

Hemoglobin (varies with altitude)

Male: 14 to 17 gm/dL

Female: 12 to 15 gm/dL

Hematocrit (varies with altitude)

Male: 41% to 50%

Female: 36% to 44%

Mean corpuscular volume

80 to 95 femtoliter†

* Cells/mcL = cells per microliter; gm/dL = grams per deciliter.
† A femtoliter is a measure of volume.

Blood Glucose

This table shows the ranges for blood glucose levels after 8 to 12 hours of fasting (not eating). It shows the normal range and the abnormal ranges that are a sign of prediabetes or diabetes.

Plasma Glucose Results (mg/dL)*

Diagnosis

70 to 99

Normal

100 to 125

Prediabetes

126 and above

Diabetes†

* mg/dL = milligrams per deciliter.
† The test is repeated on another day to confirm the results.

Lipoprotein Panel

The table below shows ranges for total cholesterol, LDL (“bad”) cholesterol, and HDL (“good”) cholesterol levels after 9 to 12 hours of fasting. A high LDL/HDL cholesterol ratio is a risk factor for coronary heart disease.

Total Cholesterol Level

Total Cholesterol Category

Less than 200 mg/dL

Desirable

200–239 mg/dL

Borderline high

240 mg/dL and above

High

LDL Cholesterol Level

LDL Cholesterol Category

Less than 100 mg/dL

Optimal

100–129 mg/dL

Near optimal/above optimal

130–159 mg/dL

Borderline high

160–189 mg/dL

High

190 mg/dL and above

Very high

HDL Cholesterol Level

HDL Cholesterol Category

Less than 40 mg/dL

A major risk factor for heart disease

40–59 mg/dL

The higher, the better

60 mg/dL and above

Considered protective against heart disease

· The table above is from The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health.

LDL (low density lipoproteins) and HDL (high density lipoproteins) both carry cholesterol in your body. LDLs carry cholesterol to the cells of your body but can cause a buildup of plaque within your blood vessels, hence LDLs are referred to as your “bad” cholesterol. HDLs carry cholesterol to your liver for processing and removal from your body and are thus referred to as “good” cholesterol. Therefore, it is important to look not only at the total cholesterol but the ratio of “bad” LDL to “good” HDL. The higher the number the higher the risk for heart disease.

Use the charts above and information learned in the lab to answer the following questions concerning tests found in a complete blood count.

1. Why do you think hemoglobin levels vary with altitude?

2. High levels of what substance found in the blood can determine diabetes and

prediabetes?

3. High cholesterol and triglycerides may indicate cardiovascular disease. What happens when cholesterol and other lipids are deposited in artery walls? When this happens, what is the process called?

SECTION B – Circulation

Part 1 – Evolutionary Circulation

The circulatory system is responsible for the movement of nutrients within the bodies of many animals. It takes many forms across the animal kingdom, but most contain at least one heart, which pumps the fluid keeping it moving. The first big distinction is an open versus a closed system.

In an open circulatory system the blood or hemolymph is not contained in vessels but bathes the organs & the heart’s job is just to keep it moving, preventing “dead spaces” from occurring where the fluid sits in one place too long becoming nutrient depleted resulting in local tissue death. Many animals with open circulatory systems also have multiple hearts and most don’t use their hemolymph to transport oxygen or carbon dioxide. Many invertebrates have open circulatory systems, including insects, crustaceans, & arachnids.

In a closed circulatory system the fluid is contained inside of blood vessels at all times. The heart is used to pump the fluid in a distinct pathway. Closed systems have 3 distinct vessel types. Arteries, which are thick walled that take the blood away from the heart. Veins, which have thin walls and often have valves to prevent back-flow as they return the blood to the heart. Connecting arteries and veins far from the heart are capillaries, which are very thin walled (often a single layer of cells) and are designed for nutrient exchange. Animals with closed circulatory systems also use their fluid to deliver oxygen & remove carbon dioxide. Examples include birds, mammals, fish, cephalopods (squids & octopuses), amphibians, reptiles, & annelids (earthworms).

The next division of types of circulatory systems is found within the vertebrates, who all have closed systems. They are divided up by the number of chambers they have in their hearts & if the heart completely separates oxygenated & deoxygenated blood. Allowing mixing of the oxygenated & deoxygenated blood makes for an inefficient system, however, if the system isn’t organized correctly, there can be problems with systems that do separate oxygenated & deoxygenated blood.

Reptiles & amphibians both have 3 chambered hearts. They have 2 upper filling chambers, called atria, which pump blood into a single ventricle (larger, pumping chamber). One atrium collects blood that is returning from the body, thus low in oxygen, & the other collects blood that has just gone to the lungs and is thus oxygen rich. This ventricle pumps both to the lungs & to the rest of the body. As the atria empty into the ventricle together, this blood mixes, meaning some of the blood goes to the lungs when it is oxygenated, & some that is deoxygenated goes to the body again. Naturally, this creates a problem with efficiency.

Fish, birds, & mammals all have complete separation of oxygenated & deoxygenated blood. However, the fish have another problem. Their 2 chambered heart (1 atrium & 1 ventricle) pumps to the gills & then the blood continues onto the rest of the body, without having a second pump. As the gills have capillaries, with their very thin walls, they can’t have a high blood pressure or the gill capillaries would rupture. This means the blood, under very low pressure, has to go from the gills to the rest of the body & back to the heart again. This creates a problem with oxygen delivery & makes it hard for fish to get large quantities of oxygen to their bodies swiftly.

Birds & mammals both have 4 chambered hearts (2 atria & 2 ventricles). The heart is divided into a left & right side, each with one upper filling atria & one lower pumping ventricle. The right side collects blood from the body & sends it to the lungs to get oxygenated, returning the blood to the left side, while the left side pumps to the body, returning the blood to the right side. The right side is often called the pulmonary circuit & the left side is often called the system circuit. Effectively this makes the heart into a double pump, one side pumping blood to get oxygenated & the other side pumping nutrients to the body.

The cardiac cycle is the rhythm of how the heart beats. In one cardiac cycle, the heart will have one emptying phase, called systole, & one filling phase called diastole. The amount of blood the heart pumps in a single cycle is the stroke volume. While the heart can change the stroke volume rapidly between cycles, doctors are often interested in how much blood the heart pumps in a minute, called the cardiac output. The other variable that can change your cardiac output is the heart rate, or how many times your heart beats in a minute.

Exercise 1 – Identifying the structures of the human heart

Use the drawing of the human heart below. Refer to your textbook, or online sources, for alternate angles to view the heart. You may have to compare multiple drawings/photos to properly orient yourself.

Exercise 2 – Changes in heart rate

Supplies

Timer, stopwatch, or clock

Procedure

1. Find your pulse, either in your neck or in your wrist. If you have not found your pulse before, use the internet to find a video describing where to take your neck or wrist pulse. Practice measuring your heart rate for 15 seconds a few times until you feel comfortable locating your pulse and with the timing.

2. Lay down, on your back for 3 minutes. After 3 minutes have passed, take your heart rate for 15 seconds. Measure your pulse for 15 seconds, 2 more times (3 total 15 second measurements). Record the results in the table below without standing or sitting up!

3. Sit up and immediately measure your heart rate for 15 seconds. Record the results

4. Sit still for about 1 minute and take your heart rate for 15 seconds.

5. Again sit still for 1 more minute and take your heart rate over 15 seconds Record the sitting heart rates again in the table below.

6. Stand up and immediately take your heart rate for 15 seconds. Stand still for 1 minute. Repeat this 2 more times.

7. Run in place for 2 minutes (make it a strenuous effort, as if you were working out). Immediately after stopping, take your heart rate. Wait 1 minute & repeat. Do this 2 times.

8. Answer the questions on the answers page.

Exercise 3 – The Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)

Procedure

1. Watch the following video from the start to 1:20 on the basics of the electrocardiogram. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Q8YSpMcO-8

Exercise 4 – Blood vessels of the human body.

1. Use the pictures below to compare the structure of an artery to a vein.

2. Answer the questions on the answer sheet about the arteries & veins (Exercise 4, below).

Questions & Tables

Label the parts of the heart below

Exercise 2 Table

Body Position

HR #1

15 seconds

HR #2

15 seconds

HR #3

15 seconds

Average

Average *4

(Seconds–>Minutes)

Laying Flat

Sitting

Standing

Post exercise

1. What effect did standing up have on the heart rate?

2. Was there a difference between laying & sitting? Explain why that might be?

3. How did the standing heart rate compare to the laying & sitting heart rates? Why would you expect to see a difference?

4. What effect did the exercise have on the heart rate, when compared to the standing heart rate?

Exercise 3: Refer to a diagram of an EKG in your textbook.

For an EKG explain what is happening at (& between) each peak in your own words.

P-wave:____________________________________________________________________________

P-Q Interval:________________________________________________________________________

QRS Complex:______________________________________________________________________

__________________________________________________________________________________

S-T Interval:________________________________________________________________________

T wave:____________________________________________________________________________

T-P Interval:_________________________________________________________________________

1. If the P peak was really missing, how would this affect a person’s heart beat?

_______________________________________________________________

Exercise 4. Answer the following questions.

1. What is the difference in terms of function & structure for arteries & veins?

2. Does the difference in structure for arteries & veins make sense given then functions? Explain.

3. Which artery carries deoxygenated blood in adult humans? Where is this artery traveling (both to and from)?

1

Bio 102 Lab 03: Hematology and Circulation

Hematology and Circulation

 
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