





Today advances in modern medicine have brought us many different technologies that can not only help extend the life expectancy of patients but also allow them to live a relatively normal life with a disease that a few decades prior would have been a death sentence. This ranges from new …
For my STEAM project I’ll be addressing the objective #46 analyzing the effects of disease on the function and structure of the respiratory system for emphysema. For this I’ll explain the origin, effects, how it disturbs the general function and regulation of our respiratory system. Emphysema, is a debilitating lung …
My project is going to look at how the heart translates an electrical signal to a contraction, and what happens when it does not fire correctly. In a normal, healthy individual, the electrical activity of the heart is straightforward. First, an excitation signal is sent from your autonomous nervous system …
For my STEAM project, I’ll be addressing two objectives “Comparing and contrasting organelles and their functions” and “Describing the functions of the integumentary system.” Within these objectives, I’ll explain the process of necrosis in eukaryotic cells and its association with severe frostbite. Frostbite is a medical condition that occurs when …
For this project I chose to advertise hormone replacement therapy for postmenopausal women. This projects connects the objective, how bone development is hormonally regulated, to the development of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. This project sparked a lot of passion for me because I found the concept so wild and felt …
Here’s my brief comic about how hormones can effect the body. We all have a slightly exasperated individual sitting in the office of our mind wondering how they got in this situation to begin with. (If the text is too hard to read then I would suggest either clicking on the image or right clicking on the image to view and then zooming there. I didn’t plan out my comic spacing before hand.)
2 CommentsMy submission for the STEAM project about bone cells and bone fractures. -Claire Ketzler