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Garcia. P. Milagros D´J. CI. 28.097.

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Bleeding: Consists of blood loss. It can occur externally or within the person's body.

Ear: Organ that is responsible for transmitting sounds from the outside to the brain through its three
sections: the outer ear, the middle ear and the inner ear.

Epithelial: Relating to or denoting the thin tissue forming the outer layer of a body's surface and
lining the alimentary canal and other hollow structures.

Esophagus: A muscular tube through which food passes from the throat to the stomach.

Feet: Extremities of the legs, formed by a structure of bones, joints, muscles and other components.
Thanks to the feet, people can stand and walk.

Flagellum: Is a whip-shaped mobile appendage present in many unicellular organisms and in some
cells of multicellular organisms.

Funnel: Instrument to transfer liquids to narrow-mouthed containers without spilling them; It


consists of a hollow plastic, glass, porcelain, or metal cone with a protruding tube-shaped apex.

Gallbladder: The gallbladder is a pear-shaped organ below the liver that collects and stores bile.

Heart: It is an organ about the size of a fist which is made up of muscle tissue and pumps blood
throughout the body through blood vessels, tubes called arteries and veins.

Hematology: Part of medicine that studies the immunological elements of the blood and the
diseases that are manifested by the alteration of these elements; it is also about the organs that
produce blood.

Immunology: Medical specialty that focuses on the study, diagnosis and treatment of diseases
related to the immune system and, as a consequence, of the organs, tissues and cells that modulate
the body's response to the presence of external pathogens.

Kidneys: Consists of a pair of organs in the abdomen responsible for removing waste from the
blood and excess water (in the form of urine) and help maintain the balance of chemicals (such as
sodium, potassium and calcium) in the body.

Linings: Cover or layer of a generally flexible material with which the interior or exterior of an
object is covered.

Measles: Infectious and contagious disease, caused by a virus, characterized by the appearance of
small red spots on the skin, high fever and catarrhal symptoms which are generally suffered during
childhood.

Microbiology: Science that studies microorganisms, bacteria, fungi, protists and parasites and other
agents such as viruses, viroids and prions.
Muscle: Whitish fiber or bundle of fibers that transmits impulses of sensation to the brain or spinal
cord, and impulses from these to the muscles and organs.

Myosin: Fibrous protein that forms (together with actin) the contractile filaments of muscle cells
and is also involved in motion in other types of cells.

Nerve: A whitish fiber or bundle of fibers that transmits impulses of sensation to the brain or spinal
cord, and impulses from these to the muscles and organs.

Oxygen: Chemical element with atomic number 8, atomic mass 15.99 and symbol O; It is a
colorless and odorless gas that is found in the air, in water, in living beings and in most organic and
inorganic compounds.

Ovums: Female reproductive cell that forms in the ovary of female mammals and that, once
fertilized by the sperm, gives rise to the embryo; in the human species, it is a round cell 0.1
millimeters in diameter.

Pregnancy: Period between conception (fertilization of an egg by a sperm) and delivery; during this
period the fertilized egg develops in the uterus.

Results: Is the effect or consequence of an action, process or situation.

Ring Clamp: A clamp is a device used to clamp cylindrical parts through a ring-shaped band. Some
of the models incorporate a screw that is responsible for closing the band to exert the necessary
pressure on the cylinder.

Sample: Part or small quantity of a thing that is considered representative of the whole and that is
taken or separated from it with certain methods to subject it to study, analysis or experimentation.

Serum: It refers to the aqueous substance that separates from an organic liquid when it is outside
the body and has coagulated.

Shem: Orderly presentation of the essential points or questions of a matter or matter; especially the
writing in which these points are related to lines, numbers or other graphic signs to indicate their
interdependence.

Sodium: Is a silvery-white alkaline metal, soft, light and explosive in contact with water that is
found very abundantly in nature, always combined to form salts, and is used in photoelectric cells,
lamps and in the synthesis of chemical products.

Stethoscope: A medical instrument used to explore the sounds produced by the organs in the
cavities of the chest and abdomen.

Strands: Thread or filament of variable length that form the viscous matters that have a certain
degree of concentration.

Throat: The inner part of the neck of a person or an animal that goes from the soft palate to the
beginning of the esophagus.
Tissues: The way in which the fibers of a tissue are intertwined, which produces a tactile or visual
sensation such as a group or layer of cells that work together to fulfill a specific function.

Transverse: Placed or directed across.

Upest: Establishes a superiority relationship between several terms, which can be explicit or
implicit; It is used to compare a quality, and also to contrast situations, actions, etc; that are
considered good or preferable.

Urine: Yellow liquid secretion that is secreted by the kidneys as a result of the purification and
filtering of the blood; it accumulates in the bladder and is expelled through the urethra.

Ultrasound: A device which uses sound waves to produce pictures of structures inside the body.

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