![]() Abduction is to abduct away from the body’s midline, and absorption is to take up something. Adduction is to add to the body, adsorption is to add charcoal to medication. So we have adsorption occurring by not absorbing the medication, but adding the charcoal to the medication. The charcoal does not absorb it, the medication rather has charcoal added to it. ![]() In this case, the charcoal will bind to the drug and help prevent digestion by coating the pill and taking it to the toilet with the charcoal. Ankylosis is an alteration of the normal architecture of the joint, causing partial or total. Charcoal’s property of passing through the gastrointestinal tract is good if we want other things in the stomach to also pass through the GI tract and not absorbed into the body, like a large, fatal dose of some medications. Joints are structures that facilitate the union of two bones through ligaments, cartilage, and tendons. Activated charcoal is as it sounds: a very finely ground mixture of charcoal that has a tendency to be passed from the stomach to the toilet without being absorbed through your intestines in the process. Most commonly in EMS we find the term in the drug activated charcoal. AdsorptionĪdsorption is the opposite property. In essence, you abducted the liquid from the surface of your textbook and put it in your paper towel space ship so you could… throw it away. ![]() If you spill a liquid on your textbook cover, use the paper towel to remove the fluid from the shiny cover and transfer it to the paper towel. It’s likely that you use a paper towel known for its absorptive properties. Absorption is the most common term of the four. (e) Abduction and adduction are motions of the limbs, hand, fingers, or toes in the coronal (mediallateral) plane of movement. We added the arms to the torso, so we adductedĪdsorption and absorption can be memorized in a similar fashion. In another example, if you started with your arms outstretched along the side of your body, you would add your arms to the sides of your body, moving from the outstretched position back to your sides, or toward the midline. This is the opposite of the last movement and added the left leg to the right leg at the midline. To adduct is to take that left leg that we had previously abducted and move it toward the midline, toward which the left and right legs were previously touching. adduction movementsĪdduction is the opposite movement.
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