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Human Development
Human Development
19
Health Care
Graduate
08/18/2011

Additional Health Care Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
[image]
Definition
[image]
Term

The Male Genitals During Sexual Excitement

Definition
  1. Excitement
Meatus dilates, testicles begin to rise, scrotum begins to thicken, vasocongestion results in erect penis
 
2.     Plateau
 
Testes complete elevation, scrotal sac thickens even more, corona becomes red and swells, Cowper's gland will release fluid
 
3.   Orgasm
 
Prostate expels fluid into urethra, seminal vesicle and VD contract to expel sperm and semen into the urethra, rhythmic contractions of the urethra expel sperm and semen, rhytmic contractions of the rectal
sphincter
 
4.   Resolution (with Refractory Period)
 
Erection subsides, testes descend, scrotum thins
Term
[image]
Definition
Remember the body, angle, glans, and crus
Term
Female Response to Sexual excitement
Definition
[image]
Term
Weeks 3-8 of Embryonic development
Definition

3. the neural tube develops

4. Arm and leg buds, heart starts beating

5. Hand and foot plates, head much larger than body, lens pits and optic cups

6. digit rays form, oral and nasal cavaties confluent, elbows bent

7. nose bud, genital tubercle, body strengthens and lengthens

8. beginnings of all essential external and internal structures present

Term
Fetal Period (9wks and on)
Definition

Growth and Fat development is primary, head still larger than body

But slowing of head growth, last six to eight weeks is fat, and differentiation and growth of tissues and structures

Term
When is the fetus viable?
Definition
May be viable 50-50 after 23 weeks
Term
Examples of teratogenicity
Definition

Thalidomide induced phocomelia

FAS (leading cause of retardation)

Term
Teratogen
Definition

Any factor that alters normal intrauterine development (of embryo) can be considered a teratogen. This includes drugs and environmental exposures, maternal medical conditions, infectious agents and genetic factors. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


First two weeks of development all or nothing effect, during organogenesis, the organs affected are those which developing, after orgo, it might create cell apoptosis and retardation of proliferation


dose and duration important, threshold effect of drugs


 

 

 

2-3% have malformations

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Term
How does newborn circulation differ from fetal?
Definition
  1. Ductus venosus
  2. Ductus arteriosus
  3. Foramen ovale
  4. placenta as primary oxygenating organ
Term
How do the fetal lungs change to the new born lungs?
Definition
  1. Fetus takes huge 40mmHg breath to push out the alveolar fluid (4-5x greater than our breath)
  2. stop producing Cl fluid and instead absorb Na and fluid, upon contractions and release of catecholamines
  3. Thoracic squeeze
  4. the addition of oxygen to the lungs vasodilates the pulmonary veins, decreasing resistence and so blood starts flowing to the lungs instead of going through the ductus arteriosus
  5. clamp cord, internal bp increases
Term
Tansient Tachypnea of Newborn (TTN)
Definition
Not all fluid out
Term
APGAR scores
Definition

90% of babies need little or no assistance with respiration or transitioning to newborn circulation (APGAR of 7 to 10, and need no intervention)

 

Given at 1 and 5 minutes of age

 

Appearance (color)   pale        pink w cyanosis    pink

Pulse                     0             <100                  >100

Grimace (reflex irritability) none    grimace    cough, sneeze cry

Activity                 limp    some flexion    active motion

Respiration            0              slow, irreg   good, cry

 

Term

Routine Management of the Newborn (VENH)

Definition
  1. Vitamin K: given to prevent vitamen K deficient hemorrhaging
    1. clotting factos 2,7, 9, 10 use it
    2. don't produce bacteria that produce it for 7-10 days
  2. Eye Prophylaxis
    1. siver nitrate 2%, or erythromycin to prevent chlamydia and gonorrhea conjunctivitis
  3. New born screening (PKU), through heel stick, sickle cell, HEARING SCREENING (ABR)
  4. HepB Vaccine

 

 

Term
Endocrine changes in mom during pregnancy
Definition
  1. bHCG (until 8-9 wks where placental prog kicks in)
  2. ACTH
  3. Calcitonin
  4. Relaxin
  5. Placental Lactogen
  6. Prog
  7. Est > stimulates TBG > total T3T4 (lasts longer) and bHCG = TSH...this increases metabolism
Term
Other than hormones, what changes in mom?
Definition
  1. Urinary: increased GFR, angiotensin (higher bp)
  2. Blood: increased BP, plasma up 20%, become anemic (ratio of plasma to RBC decreases), vasodilation, increased CO, caridac murmur due to plasma increase
  3. Clotting factors, coagulation increases, anticoagulation decreases
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