A. proteins
B. amino acids
The path of an egg cell after ovulation is from the ovary to the fallopian tube, then to the uterus, and if fertilized, it implants in the endometrium.
After an egg cell is released from the ovarian wall during ovulation, it first moves into the fallopian tube that sits adjacent to each ovary. The egg cell then travels down the fallopian tube towards the uterus - also known as the womb. If the egg gets fertilized by a sperm cell during its journey, it will implant itself in the endometrium, which is the inner lining of the uterus and supports the growing embryo in early pregnancy. Hence, the correct fill-in the blanks for this question is: fallopian tube; uterus; endometrium.
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B) the random nature of the fertilization of ova by sperm.
C) the random distribution of the sister chromatids to the two daughter cells during anaphase II.
D) the relatively small degree of homology shared by the X and Y chromosomes.
E) the random and independent way in which each pair of homologous chromosomes lines up at the metaphase plate during meiosis I, the random nature of the fertilization of ova by sperm, the random distribution of the sister chromatids to the two daughter cells during anaphase II, and the relatively small degree of homology shared by the X and Y chromosomes.
The drug prescribed to a 24-year-old woman pregnant presents with UTI symptoms is Cephalexin. This drug is safe with no risk in pregnant women.
UTI or urinary tract infection is an infection of the kidneys, bladder, urethra, or any other component of the urinary system. Women are more prone to urinary tract infections. Mostly they affect the bladder or urethra. It causes pelvic pain, urges to urinate, and blood in the urine.
Ciprofloxacin and Bactrim are quinolone antibiotics that are most commonly prescribed to treat UTIs but these drugs are harmful to pregnant women. Therefore, Cephalexin 500 mg QID for 7 days is prescribed because this is categorized by FDA as a Pregnancy Category B drug. These drugs are safe and have proven no risk in humans. These drugs will kill the bacteria that cause UTI infections.
Therefore, option A will be a suitable treatment.
The complete question is -
A 24-year-old woman presents with URI symptoms. She is 34 weeks pregnant. As part of her work-up, you order a urinalysis, which shows 2+ bacteria with no WBCs or squamous epithelial cells. Two days later, the lab calls you and informs you that the urine culture is positive. You call the patient back and she denies symptoms of a urinary tract infection. With regards to the urine culture results, what treatment is indicated?
A) Cephalexin B) Bactrim C) no treatment D)Ciprofloxacin
To know more about urinary tract infections:
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