AI Summary
[DOCUMENT_TYPE: study_guide]
**What This Document Is**
This document is a completed lab report for Activity 4 of Exercise 3 in a Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI) Anatomy and Physiology (BIOL 2202) course. The activity focuses on the neurophysiology of nerve impulses, specifically examining the role of voltage-gated sodium channels in the action potential. It details a student’s work using the PhysioEx software to simulate experiments and analyze data related to action potential propagation.
**Why This Document Matters**
This report is valuable for students enrolled in BIOL 2202 at CCRI who are completing the same PhysioEx lab. It serves as a model answer, demonstrating a successful completion of the exercise. Students can use it to check their own understanding, review experimental procedures, and verify their results. It’s particularly useful for understanding how different substances (TTX and lidocaine) affect nerve impulse transmission.
**Common Limitations or Challenges**
This document represents *one* student’s experience and results. While it demonstrates correct answers and understanding, it shouldn’t be used as a substitute for independent work and critical thinking. It doesn’t explain the underlying physiological principles in detail – it assumes prior knowledge from the course material. It also doesn’t provide a comprehensive guide to using the PhysioEx software itself.
**What This Document Provides**
This completed lab report includes:
* A perfect score on the pre-lab and post-lab quizzes, with the questions and answers provided.
* Predictions made regarding the effects of TTX and lidocaine on action potential propagation.
* Experimental data showing the peak values of responses at different recording electrodes under control conditions, with TTX applied, and with lidocaine applied.
* Graphs visualizing the voltage changes at R1 and R2 under each condition.
* Answers to “Stop & Think” questions, including an explanation of why TTX isn’t used in dental procedures.
* A student’s answer to the review sheet question regarding the mechanism of TTX action.
This preview *does not* include access to the PhysioEx simulation itself, detailed explanations of the underlying neurophysiology, or a step-by-step guide to completing the activity. It is a record of completion, not a teaching tool.