Blood
Respiratory System
Lymphatic System
Tissue Biology
Musculoskeletal System
100

What is the term used to describe red blood cells that are a deeper hue of red than normal?

Hyperchromic

100

What are the 3 main types of respiratory pressures?

Intrapulmonary, intrapleural and transpulmonary

100

What are the types of lymphocytes?

Natural killer cells, B cells and T cells

100

Describe the 3 modes of secretion.

Holocrine = entire cell becomes secreted

Apocrine = partial loss of cell during secretion

Merocrine = secretion without loss of cell material

100

What are the terms used to describe bone growth in length and width?

Length = interstitial

Width = appositional

200

What are the 3 main types of plasma proteins?

Albumin, globulins, fibrinogen

200

What are the main laws involved in respiration and their definitions?

Boyle’s Law = At a constant temperature, the pressure exerted by a gas is inversely proportional to its volume.

Dalton’s Law = The total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases = the sum of the pressures exerted by each individual gas.

Henry’s Law = When a mixture of gases is in contact with a liquid, each gas will dissolve in proportion.

200

Where do B and T cells form and mature?

B cells form and mature in bone marrow. 

T cells form in bone marrow but travel to the thymus to mature.

200

Describe the 5 reversible cellular adaptations

Atrophy = decrease in cell size and number

Hypertrophy = increase in cell size

Hyperplasia = increase in cell number

Metaplasia = change in cell type

Dysplasia = abnormal growth and development of cells


200

What are the classifications of bone shape?

Long, short, flat, irregular, sesamoid, pneumatised

400

What are the 3 steps involved in haemostasis?

1. Vascular spasm

2. Platelet plug formation

3. Blood clotting

400

What are the labelled sections of the following spirogram and what can they be used to calculate?

FEV1 = volume of air expelled in 1 second

FVC (forced vital capacity) = volume expelled following deep breath and forceful expiration

FEV1/FVC = FEV (forced expiratory volume)

400

What are the primary and secondary lymphoid organs and the main difference between their functions?

Primary = red bone marrow, thymus gland; function = produce and mature lymphocytes

Secondary = lymph nodes, spleen, tonsils, Peyer’s patches; function = activate immune responses

400

What product type classification is the following gland?

Mixed (serous and mucus)

400

What is the difference between intramembranous and endochondral ossification and what bone shapes are made from each?

Intramembranous ossification = bone develops from fibrous membrane, results in flat bones

Endochondral ossification = bone develops by hyaline cartilage model, results in all other bone shapes

800

What is the function of factor X and what does it require to complete this function?

Function: activates prothrombin (factor II) into thrombin (factor IIa)

requires factor V, vitamin K and calcium ions

800

What are the sequence of events during inspiration?

Diaphragm and external intercostal muscles contract.

Rib cage rises.

Thoracic cavity volume increases, therefore intrapulmonary pressure drops below atmospheric pressure.

Air flows into lungs down pressure gradient until intrapulmonary pressure = atmospheric pressure.


800

What are the types of lymph nodes?

Cervical, mediastinal, axillary, cubital, lumbar, iliac, inguinal, popliteal

800

What structure classification is the following gland?

Simple branched acinar

800

What is bone matrix (organic vs inorganic) made from?

Organic = collagen, proteoglycans, glycoproteins

Inorganic = calcium, phosphate

1000

When do each of the two clotting cascades get activated?

Intrinsic = damage inside the blood vessel leading to exposure of collagen from the vessel wall, triggered by contact of blood with a negatively charged surface

Extrinsic = external damage that impacts the tissue outside the blood vessel, initiated with tissue factor is exposed to blood

1000

What the locations of the two sets of receptors that monitor CO2 levels and what are their respective functions?

Central chemoreceptors = located in medulla oblongata, regulates breathing by indirectly detecting changes in CO2 levels using pH changes in CSF

Peripheral chemoreceptors = located in carotid and aortic bodies, detect O2, CO2 and pH and provide rapid feedback to respiratory control centre

1000

How are dietary fats absorbed into the lymphatic system?

Dietary fats (typically triglycerides) are broken down in the small intestine into fatty acids and monoglycerides. They enter the simple columnar epithelial cells of the intestinal villi (enterocytes). Inside the enterocytes the FAs and monoglycerides recombine to form triglycerides. The triglycerides get coated and packaged with proteins and cholesterol to form chylomicrons. The chylomicrons are too large to enter blood capillaries and are therefore absorbed into lymphatic vessels.

1000

What are the differences in appearance of the types of necrosis and what is the common location for each?

Coagulative 

- firm and pale, architecture of dead tissue preserved for some days

- occurs in solid organs (eg. heart, kidneys, spleen)

Liquefactive

- dead cells completely digested, transformed into viscous liquid, area may contain pus

- most commonly occurs in the brain

Caseous

- “cheese-like” (yellow-white appearance), crumbly texture

- most commonly occurs in the lungs


1000

What are the different types of bone cells and their functions?

Osteoprogenitor cells = maintain ability to undergo mitosis to differentiate into osteoblasts

Osteoblasts = secrete new bone matrix, synthesis and release proteins and organic components

Osteocytes (mature bone cells) = maintain matrix, recycle calcium salts and assist in repairing damaged bone

Osteoclasts = remove bone matrix, regulate calcium and phosphate

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