Inhaling aerosols of dried bodily fluids from infected animals may result in
A) tularemia.
B) salmonellosis.
C) Q fever.
D) hemolytic uremic syndrome.
E) both tularemia and Q fever.
E
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The action of two hormones working together to accomplish the same result is called:
A. synergism. B. antagonism. C. stimulation. D. inhibition.
The pulmonary veins:
A. carry oxygenated blood from the lungs to the left atrium. B. carry deoxygenated blood from the lungs to the left atrium. C. carry oxygenated blood from the lungs to the right atrium. D. carry deoxygenated blood from the lungs to the right atrium. E. carry deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs.
The human body's arterial blood pH is tightly maintained around 7.4 by buffering agents that bind hydrogen ions to stop any change in pH. If an acid-base imbalance overcomes the buffer system, the body changes the ventilation rate, or the rate at which gas enters or leaves the lungs. Changing the ventilation rate changes the concentration of CO2 in the blood, which alters the pH of the blood. In this case, pH 7.4 is the:
A. homeostatic challenge. B. sensor. C. effector. D. integrator. E. set point.
AZT and Valaciclovir are antiviral nucleoside analogs that interfere with
A. protein synthesis. B. cell wall synthesis. C. cell membrane component synthesis. D. nucleic acid synthesis. E. viral attachment.