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    Sunburn Research Paper

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    included in the wavelengths of the sun light. UV-A, UV-B and UV-C. These are different types of UV rays. UV-A occupies about 95% among all ultraviolet rays reaching the surface of the earth and it damages fibroblast cells. Fibroblast cells create the collagen, elastin and hyaluronic acids so if these are damaged, people lose elasticity in their skin, and this cause wrinkles and slack. Good information, but where did it come from? UV-C is the strongest of the three but, UV-C does not arrive to…

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    Fairway's Disease

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    This is known as a genetic disease that usually occurs in 1 out of 10000. This disease is known to affect the growing ends of bones. This disease will prevent ossification which is a process in which bones elongate because of the deposition of cartilage. This disease is also known by the name Fairbank’s disease. Introduction During the whole course of the report we will see all the major causes of Fairbanks disease. We will explore how the disease actually works in the body and look into all…

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    bodies are acidophilic and lobular inflammation is usually mild which consists of a mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate composing lymphocytes, some neutrophils and eosinophils (Brunt and Tiniakos, 2010). Similar to other liver diseases, sinusoidal collagen formation can also be observed in NASH (Brunt and Tiniakos, 2010). Brunt and Tiniakos (2010) noted that other histological…

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    Burns: The Anatomic Effects Burns have a very dramatic effect on the body. Even the slightest of burns causes profound events to occur that most of us are completely unaware of. We know that they hurt, but in minor cases, such as slight sunburns or scalds, we never stop and think about what is happening to the largest organ of the human body. To gain a better understanding of what happens to the skin in the case of a burn, we must look at the depth of the injury. The skin is the human body’s…

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    The Salter-Harris classification is a radiologic classification system, developed in the 1960s, to describe fractures involving the growth plate in pediatric patients.1 It divides the fractures into five categories based on the extent of damage to the growth plate based on the mnemonic SALTER; type I: Slip or Separation of the growth plate, type II: Above the growth plate, type III: Lower than the growth plate, type IV: Through the growth plate, and type V: Raised epiphysis. Children have open…

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    etiopathogenesis of osteoarthritis has been divided into three stages. Stage one is a proteolytic breakdown of the cartilage matrix occurs, stage two fibrillation and erosion of the cartilage surface develop, with subsequent release of proteoglycan and collagen fragments into the synovial fluid and stage three breakdown products of cartilage induce a chronic inflammatory response in the synovium, which in turn contributes to further cartilage breakdown.” Currently, There is no cure or therapy…

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    • Muscle tissue: Cardiac and skeletal muscle Cardiac and skeletal muscles have very few similarities and many differences. Firstly cardiac muscles location is found in the heart and the skeletal muscle location is found all over the body in every single bone present in humans. The similarities of cardiac and skeletal to start with is that they are both striated muscle structured, but cardiac is lightly striated and skeletal is heavily striated. Now to describe the differences, initially…

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    genetics, and even diseases. In fact, the human body is composed of 65% Oxygen, 18% Carbon, 10% Hydrogen, 3% Nitrogen, 1.5% Calcium, and in smaller amounts of several other elements. Bones make up the skeleton of the human body. They are composed of a collagen rich mixture of calcium and phosphate, which are both elements located on the periodic table, along with other minerals as well. If the body is in low supply of these elements, then it will absorb them from the bones and distribute them…

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    Nerve Cell Thrombocytes

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    relatively a consistently high number of white blood cells are a symptom of leukemia. Leukemia is a cancer of the blood where the patient has about 50,000 white blood cells in a single drop of blood. Normally, a drop of a blood can contain anywhere from 7,000 to 25,000 white blood cells at a time. The blood platelet or thrombocytes are the smallest blood cells. Their number ranges from 20,000 to 500,000 per cubic millimeter of blood. Platelets are useful to the body because they contain…

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    Worksheet 1 1. How would you explain the cell cycle to your patient? (20 points) Scenario: A 21-yearl-old lady came into the primary care network clinic to avail of health teachings and resources for first time mothers. After graduation from nursing school, Alisha Marston got married to her former classmate and now expecting a baby due in 7 months. After being given instructions for the blood work and necessary health teachings, I offered to further discuss how the fertilized egg in her body…

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