Digestive
Circulatory
Respiratory
Urinary
Lymphatic & Immune
100

This organ creates bile and helps to detoxify chemicals in the body

What is the liver?

100

This blood vessel pumps oxygen-poor blood from the heart to the lungs

What is the pulmonary artery?

100

These tiny pockets are responsible for most gas exchange in humans

What are the alveoli
100

These tubes carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder

What are the ureters

100

These cells are the primary defenders of the immune system, destroying antigens and foreign bodies

What are lymphocytes

200

When the pancreas is not functioning correctly, a person might experience difficulty regulating this aspect of homeostasis.

What is blood glucose level

200

A person with anemia may experience a deficiency in this vital oxygen-carrying protein

What is hemoglobin?

200

These are the three functions that the nose performs when breathing in air

What is warming, filtering, and moistening the air?

200

These microscopic structures are the main functional units of the kidneys, and allow the kidneys to filter blood

What are nephrons
200

This organ helps to filter blood and fight pathogens but is not essential to survival

What is the spleen?

300

These are the sections of the small intestine in order

What is the duodenum, the jejunum, and the ileum?

300

When coronary arteries are blocked, this medical emergency may occur

What is a myocardial infarction?

300

When breathing, these muscles expand and contract the thoracic cavity

What are the intercostal muscles?

300

This structure acts as the primary filter of the nephron, utilizing blood pressure to force waste out of the blood

What is the glomerulus?

300

The swelling of these organs is a sign that the body is fighting off a pathogen

What are the lymph nodes

400

Heartburn is the result when stomach acid moves into this essential part of the alimentary canal

What is the esophagus

400

When blood pressure is low, the kidneys release this chemical in order to maintain filtering efficiency

What is renin?

400

A person has bradycardia (slow heart rate), this would affect alveolus gas exchange by

What is decreased gas exchange due to lowered cardiac output and lower pulmonary blood pressure?

400

A patient is severely dehydrated, this is how the body uses the nephrons and hormones to retain water while removing waste

What is the excretion of antidiuretic hormone and nephron concentration gradient causing increased water retention while producing more concentrated urine?

400

A patient with HIV experiences dramatically less immune efficiency due to the destruction of this crucial coordinating cell

What are the helper T cells that activate toxic T cells and B cells?

500

If the liver stopped producing bile, this process would most directly be affected

What is the emulsification and digestion of lipids?

500

A patient has severe hemorrhaging (blood loss) and yet their blood pressure remains normal for some time due to these mechanisms

What is the activation of the sympathetic system and RAAS causing vasoconstriction and fluid retention?

500

A patient with emphysema (destruction of alveoli) has trouble breathing regardless of the fact that their airways remain open and functional, this is why the mechanic of breathing are changed by alveolar destruction

What is the loss of surface area and alveolar elasticity causing trapping of air and lack of passive exhalation?

500

A patient with severe kidney damage also experiences difficulty with cardiac function due to this 

What is the decreased excretion of water and salt leading to high blood pressure and more workload on the heart?

500

A patient has their axillary lymph nodes removed during a surgery, but experiences swelling in their arms due to this 

What is the buildup of interstitial fluid due to a lack of lymph vessels that absorb molecules that capillaries cannot efficiently?

M
e
n
u