Almost there! Just a few clicks from the resource you need.

You can either checkout with the notes in your basket now, or find more notes. The choice is yours!

My Basket

My Basket

Mammalian Physiology Muscles

Mammalian Physiology Muscles

£1.50 Preview Remove

Dermatoglyphics

Dermatoglyphics

£0.51 Preview Remove

The Endocrine System

Full notes about what is the endocrine system, what does it contain from hormones and glands. Definition of endocrine and exocrine glands. And what is prostaglandin. And these notes describe how steroid and non-steroid hormones act

£3.13 Preview Remove

AQA GCSE B1 Revision Notes

This is a document which covers the AQA GCSE B1 content for the A*-G Specification.

£3.11 Preview Remove

The evolution and diversity of Fungi

These are notes from the University of Bristol, first year Biology. Lecturer Dr Andy Bailey The notes cover a wide range of Fungi, including their life cycles. Handwritten but very neat, coloured and highlighted. 10 PAGES worth of notes

£2.50 Preview Remove

Nervous System

overview of the nervous system and action potentials. Some senses but mainly action potentials.

£3.75 Preview Remove

Microbiology Chapter 5

Grand Valley State University, BMS 212 class notes. These notes follow the book: Microbiology with Diseases by Taxonomy, 4th Edition Author - Robert W. Bauman Ph.D.

£2.25 Preview Remove

BTEC Applied Science Unit 11 Assignment 1

Unit 11: Physiology of Human Body Systems – Assignment 1 The Structure and Function of the Cardiovascular System *HAS A PICTURE OF A REAL HEART* Task 1 Describe how to measure pulse rate at the radial artery. Describe how to measure blood pressure using both a digital and an analogue sphygmomanometer. This provides evidence for P3 Task 2 Record the heart rate of one person: at rest during exercise (eg after 2minutes) during recovery from exercise (eg every 2 minutes for 10 minutes) Present this information as tables and graphs. Compare their heart rate at rest to the normal, expected heart rate. Record the blood pressure of one person: at rest immediately after a period of 2 minutes exercise Present this information as tables and graphs. Compare their blood pressure at rest to the normal, expected blood pressure. This provides evidence for P3 Task 3 Explain why single-celled organisms such as amoeba do not need a transport system. You should refer to surface area: volume ratio. Explain why as multi-cellular organisms get bigger an increasingly more complicated transport system is needed. In your answer you should refer to open, closed, single and double circulation systems, giving examples of organisms with each type of system. This provides evidence for M2 Task 4 The delivery of materials at the tissues requires that blood arrives at the capillaries under high pressure. This task is about explaining how this high pressure is created Carry out a dissection of a mammalian heart. Produce a rough sketch or photo of the dissected heart. Provide a labelled diagram of an external view of the heart. Provide a labelled diagram of a section through the heart. Describe the flow of blood through the vessels and chambers of the heart Explain the pressure and volume changes that take place during the cardiac cycle Explain electrical activity within the heart that co-ordinates the cardiac cycle This provides evidence for M2 Task 5 Explain how the structure of capillaries is designed for efficient exchange of materials between the blood and the cells of tissues. Explain how tissue fluid is formed Explain how the tissue fluid is returned to the main circulation system This provides evidence for M2 Exam board is Pearson ALL ASSIGNMENTS I HAVE UPLOADED ARE DISTINCTION GRADED.

£4.38 Preview Remove

New Therapies

This is a lecture that is part of the St. Georges University Biomedical Science course in the Human Cardiovascular and Respiratory Pharmacology module.

£6.25 Preview Remove

My Basket