Analyze vital signs
Mon, Oct 12, 2026 · Week 8 · Principles of Biomedical Technology (Principles of Biomedical Science)
Today's goal: Interpret collected vital signs against normal ranges with a CER and assess limitations.
What a finished product looks like
This is a model of the work you should turn in today. Use it to check your own: match the structure and the level of detail, do not copy it. Your data and wording should be your own.
Claim: Patient B's single blood glucose reading suggests homeostasis is being maintained.\n\nEvidence: The fingerstick taken during morning lab read 92 mg/dL. A fasting blood glucose in a healthy person is generally about 70 to 99 mg/dL, and Patient B reported eating breakfast about two hours earlier, which normally keeps a reading below 140 mg/dL. The recorded value of 92 mg/dL sits inside both of those ranges.\n\nReasoning: A glucose value inside its normal range means the body's negative feedback loop for blood sugar is working. After a meal, rising glucose signals the pancreas to release insulin, which moves sugar into cells and brings the level back down; if that loop were failing, the reading would drift high and stay there. So a value near 92 mg/dL is what you would expect when insulin and glucagon are balancing each other. A limitation is that this is a single-time-point reading, so it shows a snapshot, not a trend. The exact timing of the last meal, recent exercise, or stress could each shift a one-time number, so a firm conclusion would need repeated readings across the day rather than one measurement.
Also due today: Upload the CER to the tracker or hand in the written copy by end of class.
WebXam problem for today's skill
One exam-style question that uses exactly what you practiced today. Try it before you reveal the answer, then read why each choice is right or wrong.
Tap an answer to see the full explanation. Nothing is recorded or graded.

