It's the movement of ions and other atomic or molecular substances across cell membranes without utilization of energy.
What is Passive transport
It is a cellular change that frequently precedes cancer.
What is dysplasia?
It is responsible for thermoregulation via a negative feedback loop.
What is the hypothalamus?
It is a specialized primary lymphoid organ of the immune system that plays a major role in the adaptive immune system.
What is the thymus?
It is a common organism in bacterial UTI.
What is Escherichia Coli?
It usually results in local or atopic reactions such as urticaria and Rhinitis that consist of a primary and secondary response.
What is Type I Hypersensitivity?
It has a lipid bi layer impermeable to non-lipid substances and controls transport into the cell.
What is the plasma membrane?
It is unregulated death caused by injuries to cells leading to cells swelling and rupturing.
What is Necrosis?
This type of exudate occurs when there is severe tissue injury that causes damage to blood vessels or when there is significant leakage of red cells from the capillaries.
What is hemorrhagic?
It is responsible for mounting the immune response during a subsequent invasion of a virus.
What is B Lympocytes?
The nurse knows it is important to do this when in dealing with all body fluids.
What is wear personal protective equipment?
It is a reaction that starts with itching, hives, and skin erythema followed by bronchospasm, dyspnea, laryngeal edema and obstruction.
What is Anaphylaxis?
This happens to uterine tissue cells during pregnancy.
What is Hyperplasia?
It involves local dilation of blood vessels as well as increased vessel permeability to improve blood flow to the injured area.
What is acute inflammation?
It is a cardinal sign of systemic infection?
This antibody is likely to be present in a person with severe seasonal allergies recently exposed to an allergen.
Self-tolerance breaks down and the immune system attacks self-antigens and destroys body tissues.
What is Autoimmune diseases?
It activates the release of preformed contents such as histamine, proteases, and cytokines and play a role in inflammation and hypersensitivity responses.
What are mast cells?
What are Ribosomes
Is programmed cell death that can be physiologic or pathologic.
They are expected laboratory findings during systemic infection (not sepsis).
What is leukocytosis with bandemia, increased ESR, increased CRP
The CDC recommends TDaP vaccination for pregnant women during their third trimester of pregnancy to provide the fetus with this type of immunity due to this immunoglobulin.
What is passive immunity and IgG?
Y-shaped proteins produced by B cells of the immune system in response to exposure to antigens. It plays a large role in Adaptive immunity.
What is a antibody?
When a muscle is not it use, this reversibly happens to the cells.
atrophy
During this event aerobic metabolism stops, anaerobic metabolism is used leading to an increase in lactic acid production and subsequent tissue injury and death.
What is a Hypoxia?
During this stage of the febrile response patients usually experience, chills, increased desire to cover up and will have pale skin and goose bumps.
What is second stage?
They are the organs and tissues apart of immunity.
What are the thymus, spleen, lymph nodes, tonsils, lymphoid tissue, peyer patches, bone marrow?
Memory B and T lymphocytes and circulating antibodies respond to subsequent exposures are apart of this type of immunity.
What is Active Immunity?