II. HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS Three days prior to admission, the patient suffered from fever, cough, and colds. He didn’t receive any medications or even consulted a physician. One day prior to admission, he suffered difficulty of breathing which triggered his parents to bring him to the hospital. They went first in the OPD and he was assessed with (+) head hobbing, (+) nasal flaring, and (+) rales. He was admitted at the PICU ward for further evaluation. Through the diagnosis
The eyelids are made up of four layers, the skin, muscle, connective tissue and conjunctiva. The process of vision occurs when light waves from an object, enter through the iris. Light then passes through the lens of the eye, a double convex structure that is used to focus the light, and then reaches the
Instructor’s Manual for the Laboratory Manual to Accompany Hole’s Essentials of Human Anatomy and Physiology Eighth Edition Terry R. Martin Kishwaukee College Instructor’s Manual for the Laboratory Manual to Accompany Hole’s essentials of human anatomy and physiology, eighth edition David shier, jackie butler, and ricki lewis Published by McGraw-Hill Higher Education, an imprint
What is Bt-corn? Historically, growing corn involved use of insecticides applied to soil to manage pests. Figure 1 illustrates that with the use of Bt corn, application of great amounts of insecticides has been greatly reduced. Bt-corn is a type of genetically modified organism (GMO). A GMO is a plant or animal that has been genetically modified by taking a small amount of genetic material from one organism and implanting that genetic material into a host that is the target of modification. GMOs
we open up and relax, we can make deep, low pitch sounds. So whenever we talk, we're just pushing air through those vocal folds and the vocal folds are vibrating and that's what causes our voice. So muscles of the neck and pharynx will position and stabilize the larynx. When you swallow, these muscles will elevate the larynx and bend the
Chapter One: Introduction Over the past fifteen to twenty years women's fastpitch softball popularity has continued to grow and spread internationally. By the mid-1990s it was played in more than 85 countries under the eye of the International Softball Federation (ISF). It has become increasingly popular among women at the youth and collegiate levels. More than 630 National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) member institutions sponsor women's softball programs,