This abundant tissue binds structures together while providing support, protection, storage and reparation.
What is Connective Tissue
This is the muscle group that has voluntary control.
What is the Skeletal Muscle group?
True or false, a greenstick fracture is when the bone completely breaks and detaches.
What is false?
Events that cause reactions.
What are Stimuli?
The glands that release sweat.
What are Ecrine Glands?
This specialized cell produces the protein that provides water-tightness for our hair, skin, and nails.
What is Keratinocytes?
The smallest functional contractile unit of striated muscle tissue.
What is a Sarcomere?
Cartilaginous is to Amphiarthrosis as Synovial is to this.
What is Diarthrosis?
Communication of the peripheral nervous system is by way of this.
What is Spinal Cord?
The 4 main functions of skin.
What are Protection, Keeps water in body, Temperature Regulation, and Sensory Perception?
This connective tissue connects muscle to bone, while what connects bone to bone.
What are Tendons and Ligaments?
Cramps occurring in muscles is due to a build-up of this.
What is Lactic Acid?
This type of synovial joint allows us to rotate our heads.
What is Pivot Joint?
If someone suddenly stops being able to understand speech or express thought, they most likely have damage to this lobe of the brain.
What is the Parietal Lobe?
You would expect to find the healthiest cells in this layer of the epidermis.
What is the Stratum Basale?
What is Simple Cells
"When a muscle contracts, the thin filament (actin) is pulled/slide over the thick filament (myosin)" is the condition of this theory.
What is the Sliding Filament Hypothesis of Muscle Contraction?
The 2 bones inside the pelvis.
What are the Cocyx and the Sacrum?
The five lobes of the brain.
What are Frontal, Temporal, Parietal, Occipital, and Insular?
In order for a wound to repair itself it needs to initiate this first infection-reducing stage?
What is Hemostasis? the clotting of blood.
Osteoblasts, the bone forming cell, are necessary in the process of osteogenesis to produce these mature bone cells.
What are Osteocytes?
Where the smallest muscles on the human body are found.
What is Eyelids?
In the process of Endochondral Ossification, bone is formed from this type of cartilage.
What is Hyaline Cartilage?
This carries impulses from skin, skeletal muscles, and joints to the brain.
What are Sensory Neurons?
Sally is cooking and accidentally burns her hand on the hot pan. She is in excruciating pain and sees blistering so she decides to go to the doctor. They tell her that the burn entered the lower epidermis and dermis levels of her skin which has the most nerve endings, causing her this much pain. Sally has what degree of burn?
What is 2nd Degree Burn?