Difference between revisions of "Nutrients Quiz 3"
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(Created page with "<WikiQuiz questionnumber="3" question="Which of the following is not a short chain soluble carbohydrate?" choice4="Amylose" choice1="Galactose" choice2="Sucrose" choice5="Fruc...") |
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questionnumber="3" | questionnumber="3" | ||
− | question="Which of the following is | + | question="A dog presents with hyperkeratotic, necrotic foot pad lesions. Which of the following is a likely cause?" |
− | choice4=" | + | choice4="Lysine deficiency " |
− | choice1=" | + | choice1="Methionine toxicity" |
− | choice2=" | + | choice2="Cysteine toxicity with methionine deficiency" |
− | choice5=" | + | choice5="Lysine toxicity " |
− | choice3=" | + | choice3="Cysteine deficiency" |
− | correctchoice=" | + | correctchoice="2" |
− | + | feedback2="'''Correct!''' Cysteine toxicity with methionine deficiency has been reported to cause necrotic foot pad lesions in puppies. [[Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition|WikiVet Article: Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition]]" | |
− | feedback3="'''Incorrect.''' | + | feedback3="'''Incorrect.''' Cysteine deficiency is unlikely to cause foot pad lesions in dogs. [[Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition|WikiVet Article: Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition]]" |
− | + | feedback5="'''Incorrect.''' Lysine excess is unlikely to cause foot pad lesions in dogs. [[Lysine - Nutrition|WikiVet Article: Lysine - Nutrition]]" | |
− | + | feedback1="'''Incorrect.''' Methionine excess is unlikely to cause foot pad lesions in dogs. [[Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition|WikiVet Article: Methionine and Cysteine - Nutrition]]" | |
− | + | feedback4="'''Incorrect.''' Lysine deficency is unlikely to cause foot pad lesions in dogs.[[Lysine - Nutrition|WikiVet Article: Lysine - Nutrition]]" | |
image= ""> | image= ""> |
Latest revision as of 11:54, 7 October 2015
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A dog presents with hyperkeratotic, necrotic foot pad lesions. Which of the following is a likely cause? |