Web Application Basics
| Institution | University |
| Course | BACHELOR OF COMPUTER... |
| Year | 1st Year |
| Semester | Unknown |
| Posted By | stephen oyake rabilo |
| File Type | |
| Pages | 98 Pages |
| File Size | 1.17 MB |
| Views | 1870 |
| Downloads | 0 |
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Description
Web applications evolved from Web sites or Web systems. The first Web sites, created
by Tim Berners-Lee while at CERN (the European Laboratory for Particle Physics),
formed a distributed hypermedia system that enabled researchers to have access to
documents and information published by fellow researchers, directly from their computers. Documents were accessed and viewed with a piece of software called a
browser, a software application that runs on a client computer. With a browser, the user
can request documents from other computers on the network and render those documents
on the user’s display. To view a document, the user must start the browser and enter
the name of the document and the name of the host computer where it can be found.
The browser sends a request for the document to the host computer. The request is
handled by a software application called a Web server, an application usually run as a
service, or daemon, that monitors network activity on a special port, usually port 80.
The browser sends a specially formatted request for a document (Web page) to the
Web server through this network port. The Web server receives the request, locates the
document on its local file system, and sends it back to the browser; see Figure 2-1.
This Web system is a hypermedia system because the resources in the system are
linked to one another. The term Web comes from looking at the system as a set of
nodes with interconnecting links. From one viewpoint, it looks like a spider’s web.
The links provide a means to navigate the resources of the system. Most of the links
connect textual documents, but the system can be used to distribute audio, video, and
custom data as well. Links make navigation to other documents easy. The user simply
clicks a link in the document, and the browser interprets that as a request to load the
referenced document or resource in its place.
Below is the document preview.
AGE AND DRUG DISPOSITION
Rational use of medications in neonates depends on an appreciation of the physiologic
immaturity and developmental maturation that influence neonatal drug disposition. Have altered body composition, weight, size and physiologic parameters.
37 Pages
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429.18 KB
Analgesics
Inflammation is mediated by prostaglandins
• The treatment of inflammation involves two
primary goals: First, the relief of symptoms and
the maintenance of function; and second, the
slowing or arrest of the tissue-damaging process.
• Salicylates and other similar agents share the
capacity to suppress the signs and symptoms of inflammation.
• They also exert antipyretic and analgesic effects.
42 Pages
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821.32 KB
Anti- infective agents
Anti-infective agents are drugs designed to target foreign organisms that have invaded and infected the body of a human host. The goal of anti-infective agents is to interfere with the normal function of the invading organism to prevent it from reproducing and to cause cell death without affecting host cells
15 Pages
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447.88 KB
Antineoplastic agents
All cancers start with a single cell that is genetically different (mutated). This cell divides, eventually producing a tumor or neoplasm that has characteristics quite different from those of the original tissue.
• Cancer cells lose their normal function (anaplasia), develop characteristics that allow them to grow in an uninhibited way (autonomy), and have the ability to travel to other sites in the body that are conducive to their growth (metastasis).
44 Pages
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859.09 KB
Antidiabetics
Insulin is the hormone produced by the pancreatic beta cells of the islets of Langerhans.
• The hormone is released into circulation when the levels of glucose around these cells rise
• Insulin is released from pancreatic beta cells at a low basal rate and at a much higher stimulated rate in response to a variety of stimuli, especially glucose.
• The liver and kidney are the two main organs that remove insulin from the circulation
32 Pages
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751.35 KB
Anti-Fungal Agents
An antifungal agent is a drug that selectively eliminates fungal pathogens from a host with minimal toxicity to the host. Fungi can be found throughout the world in all kinds of environments. Most fungi don’t cause disease in people. However, some species can infect humans and cause illness. While most fungal infections affect areas such as the skin and nails, some can lead to more serious and potentially life threatening conditions like meningitis or pneumonia. There are several types of antifungal drugs available to fight fungal infections.
27 Pages
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686.84 KB
ANTI-MALARIAL DRUGS
Malaria is transmitted by the bite of infected female anopheles mosquitoes. During feeding, mosquitoes inject sporozoites, which circulate to the liver, and rapidly infect hepatocytes, causing asymptomatic liver infection (hepatic phase)(absent in falciparum; malariae) . Merozoites released from the liver, rapidly infect erythrocytes to begin the asexual erythrocytic stage of infection that is responsible for human disease. Multiple rounds of erythrocytic development, with production of merozoites that invade additional erythrocytes, lead to large numbers of circulating parasites and clinical illness
34 Pages
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ANTI-PARKINSONIAN DRUGS
It is a common movement disorder that involves dysfunction in the basal ganglia and associated brain structures.
• It is a progressive neurological disorder of muscle
movement characterized by:
Tremors
Muscle rigidity
Bradykinesias =slowness in initiating and carrying out
voluntary movements.
Postural and gait abnormalities
33 Pages
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Anti-Protozoal Drugs
Protozoa are a diverse group of unicellular
eukaryotic organisms, many of which are
motile.
• Parasitic protozoa are transmitted by insects or by fecal-oral route.
• In human.s protozoa mainly reside in blood or
intestine .
• Protozoa of medical importance include
plasmodium, amoeba, trypanosomes
leishmania etc
68 Pages
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ANTIRETROVIRAL AGENTS
Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites; their replication depends primarily on synthetic processes of the host cell. Therefore, to be effective, antiviral agents must either block viral entry into or exit from the cell or be active inside the host cell.
44 Pages
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844.75 KB