terminology
skeletal system
integumentary system
topographical anatomy
muscular system
100

Prone v/s supine 

prone: body face down

supine: body laying face up

100

what are the 5 functions of the skeletal system?

support, protection, movement, storage, hematopoiesis

100

What are the 5 fuctions of the skin?

protection, temperature regulation, sensory organ, excretion, synthesis of vitamin D 

100

Linear guide

imaginary line drawn on the surface of the body which represents the approximate loacation of an underlying structure

100

what are the 3 types of muscle? Are they striated, or nonstriated? Involuntary or voulentary? Where are they located?

cardiac- cross striations, involuentary, (heart)

smooth muscle- nonstriated, involuentary ( small intestines)

skeltal muscle- striated, voulentray (intercostal muscles)

200

Sagital plane

lengthwise plane that divides the body into front and back

200

What are the 4 types of bones?

long, short, flat, irregular

200

Tiny smooth involuntary muscles that contract when we are frighetned or cold


arrector pili 

200
Explain the axillary region

located betweeen the ribs/intercostal muscles and the anterior/posterior axillary folds, contains the axillary artery, axiallary vein, and the brachial plexus (within the axillary sheath)

200

What are the 3 functions of skeletal muscle?

movement, posture, heat production

300

What are the 4 subdivisions in the Ventral Cavity?

thoracic, mediastinum, pleural cavity, abdominal pelvic 

300

What is the difference between cancellous bone & compact bone?

cancellous bone- (spongey bone) porous bone tissue on the insdie of the individual bones 

compact bone- outter layer of bone that is hard and dense

300

what are the two groups of Sudoriferous Glands

eccrine 

apocrine

300

Explain the femoral triangle

based on the ingunal ligament, contains the femoral artery, femoral vein, femoral nerve, located within the femoral sheath

300

What position are your hands in during anatomical position?

supination 

400

The axial skeleton is made up if the...

head, neck, and torso

400

Cartilage structure:

chondrocytes; located in the lacunae

No blood vessles

400

What is the layer between the dermis and epidermis called

dermal-epidermal junction

400

What are the antaomical limits for the anterior cervical triangle?

Right: steroclavicular articulation--> anterior base of the earlobe

Left: second costal cartlidge--> superior border of the thyroid cartlidge

400

what is the. differnece between a muscles origin and inseriton?

origin- muscles attach to the more stationary bone

insertion- attachment to the more moveable bone 

500

What are the levels of orginization? (smallest to largest)

chemical, cellular, tissues, organs, system

500

how many sinues are there? What are they?

frontal sinuses-  frontal bone

maxiallary sinuses- maxilla

sphenoid sinuses- sphenoid

ethmois sinuses- ethmoid 

500

What are the two layers of the dermis?

papillary layer 

reticular layer

500

Explain the Anterior Cervical Triangle

located in the front of the neck, contains the jugular vein, common carotid artery, and vagus nerve (within the carotid sheath)

500

Describe the Sliding filament model

sarcomeres divide into two myofillaments of protein called actin & myosin, actin gets blocked by tropomyosin & troponin, action potential causes calcium to be released, calcium then bind with troponin, tropomyosin pulls away from the actin strand.  Myosin binds to ATP which then breaks down to ADP. Myosin then binds with actin, the sarcomere then shrinks and contracts. ADP unbinds and ATP re-binds with myosin causin myosin to release actin and the muscle relaxes 

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