
3. Classify each saline solution as isotonic, hypotonic, or hypertonic (compared with the inside of blood...
5. Fill in the blanks below with these terms. (hypertonic, hypotonic, isotonic, outside, inside) Under normal circumstances intracellular fluid is ____________ compared to extracellular fluid. Addition of salt crystals (NaCl) to the cucumber creates _______________ conditions on the outside of cells which causes water to move from the __________ to the ___________ of cells. Adding a ___________ solution to red blood cells will cause them to shrink in volume, while adding a __________ solution to red blood cells will cause...
16.a is the saturated NaCl solution isotonic, hypertonic or hypotonic with blood? Explain. b. If a patient was administered an intravenous dose of this solution, what would happen to their red blood cells? What would be a likely initial symptom of high levels of Na* and CI? C. Read the label on the 0.9 % Sodium Chloride IV solution bag. 1. What is the osmolarity of this solution? Is this solution isotonic, hypertonic or hypotonic? Explain. 2. Is the stated...
Hemolysis of red blood cells occurs when the cells are placed in ain) isotonic solution hypertonic solution hypotonic solution physiological saline solution
1) Draw (using dots to represent solute) a hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic relationship across a membrane. Which way is water moving in each relationship? 2) Draw plant cells in hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic solutions. What happens to each plant cell when placed in each solution? 3) Draw animal red blood cells in hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic solutions. What happens to each plant cell when placed in each solution? Thank You!
Choose to put a red blood cell in a hypotonic, hypertonic, or isotonic solution, what is the effect on the RBC? Why is tonicity important in clinical practice?
IS THE CELL (A) ISOTONIC, (B) HYPOTONIC, (C) HYPERTONIC, TO THE SOLUTION? 35% sugar in a cell in 25% NaCl solution 20% NaCl in a cell, in pure water 10% salt in a cell in 90% water 10% salt in a cell in 15% sugar solution
1. Describe the changes in your potato sample when placed in distilled water. Based on these changes, was the water hypertonic, isotonic, or hypotonic compared to the cells of the potato? Explain your reasoning in terms of the flow of water into or out of the potato cells. 2, Describe the changes in your potato sample when placed in 0.9% NaCl solution. Based on these changes, was the 0.9% NaCl hypertonic, isotonic, or hypotonic compared to the cells of the...
3. Using your book, what concentrations of saline and glucose are isotonic in cells? What happens if the cell is put into a beaker with a hypertonic solution? What about a Hypotonic Solution? What property explains this behavior?
Describe what will occur in each of the following situations, include what the cell will look like, and state which way the water moves (into cell, out of cell, both in and out, or neither): An animal cell is placed in a solution that is 10 times more concentrated than an isotonic solution (is this solution hypotonic, isotonic, or hypertonic compared to inside the cell?). An animal cell is placed in a solution that is 10 times more dilute than...
Post-Lab Questions For each of the tubing pieces, identify whether the solution inside was hypotonic, hypertonic, or isotonic in comparison to the beaker solution in which it was placed. Which tubing increased the most in volume? Explain why this happened. What do the results of this experiment this tell you about the relative tonicity between the contents of the tubing and the solution in the beaker? What would happen if the tubing with the yellow band was placed in a...