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justryn justryn
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Posts: 2
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12 years ago
Please help, I can not figure some of the questions, I have posted the ones I need help with below, the most of them are in exercise 1, and few in exercise 2, and several in exercise 3......Thanks in advance

Exercise 1: Measuring Respiratory Volumes and Calculating Capacities

4.   The changing of the airway radius in this lab simulation represents changing the size of the

a.   Nose and mouth
b.   Pharynx       
c.   Trachea
d.   Primary bronchi, secondary bronchi, other bronchi and bronchioles

5.   When the airway radius was decreased to 4.00 mm, the airflow changed to _______ L/minute and the FEV1 changed to ________ ml.

6.   If the TV of a person’s lungs is 600ml, the ERV is 1200ml, the RV is 1200ml, and the IRV is 3000 ml, the total lung capacity (TLC) is _______ ml.

7.   What would be an example of an everyday respiratory event the ERV simulates?

8.   What additional skeletal muscles are utilized in an ERV activity?

9.   What was the FEV1 (in %) at the original radius of 5.00 mm?

10.   What happened to the FEV1 (in %) as the radius of the airways decreased?

11.   Explain why the results from the experiment suggest that there is an obstructive, rather than a restrictive, lung problem?


Exercise  2::  Comparative Spirometry

19.   How is having an acute asthma attack similar to having emphysema? How is it different?

21.   How much of an increase in FEV1 do you think is required for it to be considered significantly improved by the medication?

23.   Compare the breathing rates during normal breathing, moderate exercise, and heavy exercise.


Exercise 3:  Effect of Surfactant and Intrapleural Pressure on Respiration

24.   True or False:  Surfactant is often added to the lungs of a very premature infant in a hospital in order for her/him to be able to breathe better.

25.   If a person suffers a severe chest injury such as a gunshot or explosion or auto accident, the pressure in the intrapleural cavity becomes the same as the atmospheric pressure.  The patient then is said to have developed a _____________.

26.   In this lab simulation, when the valve on the left side of the glass bell jar was opened, the total airflow decreased to about ________ ml/minute.

27.   If a chest tube is placed into the pleural cavity of the patient in question 2 and the opposite end is placed to suction or to an “underwater” seal, we are trying to

a.   remove any blood that might be present in the thoracic cavity.
b.   re-expand the lung.
c.   decrease the pressure in the intrapleural cavity.      
d.            accomplish all of the above.

28.   What effect does the addition of surfactant have on the airflow?

29.   Why does surfactant affect airflow in this manner?

30.   What effect did opening the valve have on the left lung?

31.   What effect on the collapsed lung in the left side of the glass bell jar did you observe when you closed the valve?

32.   What is the name of the emergency medical condition that opening the left valve simulates?

33.   When you clicked the “Reset” button, the air was drawn out of the intrapleural space and the lung returned to its normal condition.  What emergency procedure would be used to achieve this result if these were the lungs in a living person?

34.   What do you think would happen when the valve is opened if the two lungs were in a single large cavity rather than separate cavities
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Staff Member
12 years ago
Exercise  2::  Comparative Spirometry

19.   How is having an acute asthma attack similar to having emphysema? How is it different?

21.   How much of an increase in FEV1 do you think is required for it to be considered significantly improved by the medication?

23.   Compare the breathing rates during normal breathing, moderate exercise, and heavy exercise.

This blurb may answer your question:

During an asthma attack, bronchiole smooth muscle will spasm and constrict, and bronchioles clogged with mucous secretions cause increased airway resistance. The effect of an asthma attack is similar to emphysema in that both result in reductions in FVC and FEV1. The cause of asthma is different from emphysema; asthma is caused by an increased airway resistance due to airway constriction, while emphysema is caused by lungs that no longer have the ability to passively recoil and deflate.
- Master of Science in Biology
- Bachelor of Science
Answer accepted by topic starter
bionicmanbionicman
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Posts: 20
12 years ago
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Educator
12 years ago
I'm going to mark this as solved.
wrote...
12 years ago
Exercise Questions:
ACTIVITY 1:  Metabolism and Thyroid Hormones – Part 1
1.   The baseline metabolic rate (BMR) of the normal rat was approximately ________ ml O2/kg/hr.
2.   True or False:  The BMR of all three rats was approximately the same before treatment with thyroxine, TSH, or propylthiouracil.     
3.   Which rat had the fastest basal metabolic rate (BMR)?
4.    Why did the BMR’s differ between the normal rat and the surgically altered rats?
5.   If an animal had been thyroidectomized, what hormone(s) would be missing in its blood?
6.   If an animal had been hypophysectomized, what effect(s) would you expect to see in the hormone levels in its blood and in its BMR?
ACTIVITY 1:  Metabolism and Thyroid Hormones – Part 2
7.   True or False:  The thyroxine injections caused a goiter in the normal rat.
8.   After the thyroxine injection, the BMR (in ml O2/kg/hr) of the thyroidectomized rat was approximately
a.   1700
b.   1800
c.   1900      
d.   2000
9.   True or False:  The term euthyroid means that the amount of thyroid hormone present in that specific animal is within the normal range.   
10.   What was the effect of thyroxine injections on the normal rat’s BMR?
11.   What was the effect of thyroxine injections on the thyroidectomized rat’s BMR? 
How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?
Was the dose of thyroxine in the syringe too large, too small, or just right?
12.   What was the effect of thyroxine injections on the hypophysectomized rat’s BMR?  How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?  Was the dose of thyroxine in the syringe too large, too small, or just right?
ACTIVITY 1:  Metabolism and Thyroid Hormones – Part 3
13.   The hormone TSH is synthesized in and secreted from
a.   the hypothalamus.
b.   the anterior pituitary gland.         
c.   the posterior pituitary gland.
d.   the thyroid gland.
14.   The letter “S” in TSH stand for the word ____________________.
15.   What was the effect of TSH injections on the normal rat’s BMR?
16.   What was the effect of TSH injections on the thyroidectomized rat’s BMR?  How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?  Why did this happen?
17.   What was the effect of TSH injections on the hypophysectomized rat’s BMR?  How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?  Why did this happen?
ACTIVITY 1:  Metabolism and Thyroid Hormones – Part 4
18.   The hypophysectomized rat, before receiving any injections, was
a.   hypothyroid.
b.   euthyroid.         
c.   hyperthyroid.
d.   none of the above.
19.   True or False:  The effect of the chemical propylthiouracil (PTU) is to inhibit the production of thyroxine in the thyroid gland.
20.   What was the effect of PTU injections on the normal rat’s BMR?
21.   What was the effect of PTU injections on the thyroidectomized rat’s BMR?  How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?  Why did this happen?
22.   What was the effect of PTU injections on the hypophysectomized rat’s BMR?  How does the BMR in this case compare with the normal rat’s BMR?  Why did this happen?
ACTIVITY 2:  Plasma Glucose, Insulin, and Diabetes Mellitus
23.   True or False:  The hormone insulin is secreted from the pancreas into the small intestine in order to help the digestion of starch into glucose.      
24.   The primary difference(s) between type 1 diabetes mellitus and type 2 diabetes mellitus is the following:
a.   A person with type 1 diabetes suffers from a lack of insulin.
b.   A person with type 2 diabetes usually has a sufficient amount of insulin but the cells of the body do not respond appropriately to it.
c.   The medicine primarily used to treat the two forms of diabetes are quite different.
d.   All of the above are correct.
25.   A fasting plasma glucose (FPG) of approximately _____ mg/dl or less is considered normal.
26.   If the FPG levels of a patient, on three successive days, are 114, 125, and 120, the healthcare provider will inform that patient that she/he appears to
a.   be normal.
b.   have impaired or borderline impaired insulin-mediated glucose uptake by cells.
c.   have diabetes mellitus
d.   need several more FPG levels determined.
27.   What is a glucose standard curve, and why did you need to obtain one for this experiment? 
28.   Which patient(s) had glucose reading(s) in the diabetic range? 
Can you say with certainty whether each of these patients has type 1 or type 2 diabetes?   Why or why not?
29.   Describe the diagnosis for patient 3, who was also pregnant at the time of this assay.
30.   Which patient(s) had normal plasma glucose reading(s)?
31.   What are the lifestyle changes these patients with normal plasma glucose readings might recommend to the borderline impaired patients?
ACTIVITY 3:  Hormone Replacement Therapy
32.   Hormone replacement therapy refers, in this lab simulation, to
a.   the administration of estrogen.
b.   the administration of calcitonin.   
c.   the administration of both estrogen or calcitonin.
33.   In this lab simulation, the T-score of the rat treated with estrogen for 7 days was _______.
34.   True or False:  A woman after she goes through menopause should discuss hormone replacement therapy with her healthcare provider.     
35.   A person with osteoporosis
a.   has a reduced quantity of bone.
b.   has a decreased bone mass.   
c.   has an increased susceptibility to bone fractures.
d.   all the above are correct.
36.   Why were ovariectomized rats used in this experiment? 
How does the fact that the rats are ovariectomized explain their baseline T-scores?
37.   What effect did the administration of saline injections have on the control rat?
38.   What effect did the administration of estrogen injections have on the estrogen-treated rat?  What effect did it have on bone density?
39.   What effect did the administration of calcitonin injections have on the calcitonin-treated rat?  What effect did it have on bone density?
40.   What are some health risks that postmenopausal women must consider when contemplating estrogen hormone replacement therapy? 
ACTIVITY 4:  Measuring Cortisol and Adrenocorticotropic (ACTH) Hormones
41.   The hormone cortisol is
a.   synthesized in and secreted from the adrenal gland.
b.   very important in the body’s response to stress.   
c.   influenced by the amount of ACTH in the blood stream.
d.   All the above are correct.
42.   The cortisol level of patient 3 was ________ mcg/dl.
43.   The ACTH level of patient 4 was ________ pg/ml.
44.   True or False:  The hormone CRH is a tropic hormone that comes from the pituitary gland and affects the adrenal gland.   
45.   Which of the patients would most likely be diagnosed with Cushing’s disease?  Why?
46.   Which two patients have hormone levels characteristic of Cushing’s syndrome?  Why?
47.   Patient 2 is being treated for rheumatoid arthritis with high doses of prednisone.  How does this information change the diagnosis?
48.   Which patient would most likely be diagnosed with Addison’s disease?   Why?
wrote...
12 years ago
what is the answer to activity 9 fev1/fvc x 100%=
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