The number of bones in the human body.
What is 206?
The formal name of the muscle on one's "backside".
The two great vessels bring deoxygenated blood back to the heart
What are Superior and Inferior Vena Cava?
The lobe of the brain that sits above the ears.
What is the temporal lobe?
The second part of your small intestine.
What is the jejunum?
The number of cervical vertebrae.
What is 7?
Most common sign or symptom of a muscular disorder.
What is weakness?
The tissue that forms a loose-fitting sac around the heart.
What is the pericardium?
The name of the biggest part of the human brain.
What is the cerebrum?
The wave-like motion that moves food through the esophagus to the stomach.
What is peristalsis?
The process by which bones form.
What is ossification?
The specialized tissue that is attached to bones and allows movement.
What is skeletal muscle?
The top number of a blood pressure reading.
What is systolic?
The colored part of the human eye that controls how much light passes through the pupil.
What is the iris?
Increased surface area for absorption of nutrients in the small intestine.
What is villi?
The number of types of bones in the human body.
What is four?
The neurotransmitter for muscle contraction.
Vessels where the exchange of gases, nutrients, and waste takes place.
What are capillaries?
This is released at the gap to signal the next neuron.
What is a neurotransmitter?
Organs of the Biliary System.
What is liver, gallbladder, and ducts?
Bone cells that develop new bone.
What are osteoclast cells?
A fibrous protein that forms (together with actin) the contractile filaments of muscle cells and is also involved in motion in other types of cells.
What is myocin?
Comes after the left atrium in the path of blood.
What is the bicuspid valve?
What is a synapse?
The most important digestive enzyme for breaking down food.
What is pepsin?