RWD 4
Aug 19, 2008 in Play
Play is the section filled with work distractions, random useless/useful facts, helpful hints on how to keep your partner sweet whilst you revert to "Grumpy Exam Revision Mode" and things not associated with anything else on the site.
Aug 08, 2008 in Play

So firstly I guess you are wondering why I am the ex girlfriend?
Well it had nothing to do with exam stress, although there were times when I thought that the idea of another…however many months…of our lives revolving around viva books and chipping my pink toe nail varnish tripping over yet another MCQ book would get me!! (Thinking about it now though, how many books does one doctor need on MCQ’s, or pharmacology, or drugs used in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care?)
So yes I am the ex, it wasn’t the exams and that’s all I am going to divulge.
Someone once remarked on the fact that doctors are all geeks, I thought “my boyfriend never, he‘s no geek”. Want to know something…..he is, he’s no different to all the rest! As a true girl, I have often come under attack for loving pink and having loads of tubes of lipgloss. I can’t see the problem now I have witnessed first hand the number of books one doctor can have for one exam. Furthermore my lip gloss (all nice makes of course) always cost less than his study books.
Being an Intensive Care Nurse I thought I had the heads up on going out with a doctor, and working in ICU I thought I knew what anaesthetists were like.
Oh….how naïve was I? We met six months before the exams so I was lulled into a false sense of security. On the lead up to the exams my ex-boyfriends colleagues warned me that things were about to change and not to expect him to be able to talk about anything else other than the effects of propofol on P2X4 receptors in Xenopus carnivorous frogs, or possibly even GABA-A receptors. I decided that I ought to discuss this with him, so that I could prepare myself. Our colleagues were right, he said that he would turn into a walking talking study book, where I and our relationship would take second place to on-line tutorials and hours and hours of reading…. Hours and hours of reading, as far as I could tell the same page AND GUESS WHAT ON…..PROPOFOL!!!
You think I am joking, I tell you I am not, it’s still something I tease him about frequently. Its white, it puts patients to sleep and it can cause hypotension, what else do you need to know about it to use it?!
On the subject of preparing myself, had I taken all the warnings and jibes a little more seriously, I would have made serious efforts to SKY+ as much as I could.
To survive exam stress, one of the things you need to be able to enjoy is being on your own and being able to immerse yourself in Greys Anatomy, Americas Next Top Model, Big Brother, House…..you get the idea.
The L shaped sofa soon became my new best friend! My boyfriend, well I kind of forgot what he looked like and I am sure he did me too, despite several attempts to distract him by lying over his books and pleading for a bit of relationship time. This seldom worked, unless of course he was on a study break.
I’m serious but of course I don’t need to tell you that because you know you’re all the same. Study breaks mapped into the study timetable.
Which brings me onto the Study Timetable; I haven’t had one of those since I was about thirteen! I could hardly understand the timetable, let alone the content of the books….
In the next instalment of the ex girlfriend’s guide to surviving exam stress, finding time in the timetable for each other, how not to let it wind you up and how to keep smiling!
EI has relations with a Street Style blog over at Stitsh.com, and recently a little vid caught our attention over there. Click here and scroll down to 28.06.08.
It reminded us of a little law that the examiners sometimes like to question, that is Henry’s Law:
At a constant temperature, the amount of a given gas dissolved in a given type and volume of liquid is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas in equilibrium with that liquid.
Okay, so what does that mean.
Most of the time we refer to Henry’s law by the formula p=kc (that’s one way of looking at it - Ed).
Another way is to say:

where:
is approximately 2.718, the base of the natural logarithm
is the partial pressure of the solute (the gas being dissolved) above the liquid in which is being dissolved.
is the concentration of the solute in the solution
is the Henry’s Law constant, which has units such as L·atm/mol, atm/(mol fraction) or Pa·m3/mol (this is so that the dimensions all work out correctly - the funny thing about constants is that they usually can be expressed in many different units, depending on what units the rest of the equation is being calculated in….more on that another time).(In other words, most of the time, we take the natural logarithms of both sides).
The pressure above a solution dictates how many collisions occur between the gas and the liquid. So if you increase the pressure above the solution, the partial pressure of the gas increases, the number of collisions increases, and more gas is dissolved. What will then happen is that an equillibrium will be achieved, where the number of molecules of gas crashing into the surface of the liquid will be the same as the number of molecules leaving the surface of the liquid.
The more observant amongst you will have realised that temperature hasn’t been mentioned yet except in the definition….
So what effect does temperature have?
Well, think of a can of “fizzy pop” (you’re showing your age there - Ed). When it comes out of the fridge, it’s not that fizzy, is it? However, the longer you leave it standing around, the closer it’s temperature comes to room temperature, and then when you go back to the can, first it will seem quite gassy, and then eventually it will go flat. This is because the gas in the drink is coming out of solution. The gas solubility relationship with temperature is very similar to the reason that vapor pressure increases with temperature. (This is Gay-Lussac’s Law: The pressure of a given number of moles (given amount) of gas, is directly proportional to its temperature in Kelvin (absolute temperature scale), when the volume is kept constant. Better known as P/T=k).
Increased temperature causes an increase in kinetic energy, which in a gas causes either expansion or an increase in pressure, or in this instance, more movement of the molecules, which break free of the surface of the solution! (The surface could be the gas side of a small bubble of gas trapped within the solution, which is one reason we get bubbles!)
If you want to see another demonstration of Henry’s law in action, look at a pan of water. As you warm the pan, small bubbles start to form, well before the pan reaches 100°C (373K). Those bubbles are air coming out of solution.
So why do the examiners like this concept: the Bends.
Decompression Sickness occurs when gas (specifically nitrogen) is breathed at higher than atmospheric pressure, and the diver then returns to atmospheric pressure without allowing the gas to come out of solution slowly, resulting in gas bubble formation, and hence, “the bends” (gas in the joints) and “the staggers” (gas bubbles in the brain causing confusion and ataxia) and “the chokes” (probably PE).
It is also a concept that comes into play when talking about Ostwald and Bunsen coefficients….(more on that another time).
(Equations courtesy of Wikipedia)