The thigh region.
What is femoral?
The skin is _____ to the muscles.
What is superficial?
A negatively charged ion.
What is an anion?
The "heart healthy" fatty acids of plant and fish oils.
What is unsaturated?
Division of the cytoplasm during a cell's life cycle.
What is cytokinesis?
The ankle region.
What is tarsal?
A plane that cuts a body into anterior and posterior halves.
What is coronal or frontal?
An inert element will have this many electrons in its third, valence shell.
What is 8?
Acts as a proton acceptor, decreasing the concentration of H+.
What is a base?
Cells placed in a solution with this tonicity will swell and burst.
What is hypotonic?
The point of the shoulder region.
What is acromial?
The pathway leading from the receptor organ to the control center.
What is the afferent pathway?
Changing the number of neutrons in an atom creates this.
What is an isotope?
Water's ability to absorb and release heat with little temperature change.
What is a high heat capacity?
Primary location of detoxification and lipid synthesis in the cell.
What is the smooth endoplasmic reticulum?
The calf region.
What is sural?
The upper middle abdominopelvic region.
What is epigastric?
A difference in electronegativity when sharing electrons can lead to this specific chemical bond.
What is a polar covalent bond?
The buffer system that helps to maintain a pH of 7.4 in human blood.
What is bicarbonate?
The muscle cells of the heart, with the great stress of constantly contracting, would have many of these cellular junctions.
What are desmosomes?
The back of the head region.
What is occipital?
A membrane lining the wall of a body cavity.
What is parietal serosa?
This type of chemical reaction involves both the breaking and building of chemical bonds.
What is an exchange reaction?
Proteins that are water-insoluble, stable, and provide mechanical support.
What are fibrous proteins?
This dark staining body is involved in rRNA synthesis and ribosome subunit assembly.
What is the nucleolus?