<span>A patient is admitted with lower abdominal pain and nausea. the nurse performing the initial assessment notes that the patient's abdomen is distended and firm, and hypoactive bowel sounds are present. the patient has not had a stool for 3 days. the nurse will contact the provider, who will most likely perform diagnostic tests.</span>
Which sense does not go through the thalamus?<span>One, this is the only sense that does not travel to the thalamus before accessing the fore brain. The thalamus, if you remember, is the relay center for all sensory signals. Nearly all receptors send signals through the thalamus first, which then sends the signals to the proper areas of the brain for perception</span>
A eukaryotic chromosome consists of histones.
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Properties of eukaryotic chromosome</h3>
Eukaryotes posses pairs of linear of chromosomes and they are all contained in the nucleus of the cell, possessing characteristic forms.
Eukaryotic chromosomes consists of histones which are condensed and DNA surrounding nuclear proteins.
Therefore, a eukaryotic chromosome consists of histones.
Learn more about eukaryotic chromsomes here:
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For the answer tot he questions above, the answer is "paleoanthropology"
It is also called human paleontology. It is a <span>branch of anthropology that is concerned with the origins and development of the early humans.
I hope my answer helped you.
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The correct answer is: A checkpoint will be activated if the spindle does not attach to a kinetochore.
Prokaryotes, do not undergo mitosis (like eukaryotes) and therefore have no need for a mitotic spindle. Prokaryotes also don’ t have checkpoints foor the regulation of cell division.
Normal eukaryotic cells (unlike cancer cells), move through the cell cycle in a regulated way in order to make sure that cells don't divide under conditions that are unfavorable for them. Information about their own internal state (nutrients, signal molecules, DNA integrity) is signal to go or not to go through the cell division. Because of that there are few checkpoints in the cell cycle at which the cell examines the signals and makes a “decision”. The major checkpoints are:
• The G1- the first point at which it must choose, once it passes the G1 checkpoint the cell enters S phase
• The G2-the cell checks DNA integrity and checks if replication is done well.
• The spindle checkpoint-at the transition from metaphase to anaphase.