Nervous System
Senses
Cardiovascular System
Digestive System
Respiratory System
100

What is the difference between the PNS and CNS

CNS = brain and spinal cord, PNS = everything else

100

This is a specialized sensory receptor that detects and responds to specific chemical stimuli in the environment or within the body. They detect airborne chemicals and chemicals dissolved in saliva.

Chemoreceptor

100

What are the atria and ventricles of the heart?

Atria- upper chambers

Ventricle - Lower chambers

100

This organ uses wave-like muscular contractions (peristalsis) to move food from the mouth to the stomach.

What is the esophagus?

100

The muscular, dome-shaped partition that separates the thoracic and abdominal cavities and is the primary muscle for breathing.

What is the diaphragm?

200

Why can myelinated axons send an impulse faster than unmyelinated?

The pulse jumps from node of ranvier to node of ranvier (ex. Frog jumping on lily pads)

200

What is the blind spot?

Area of the eye where the optic nerve exits the retina, does not have any photoreceptors

200

The smallest vessels in the body where exchange happens. 

What are capillaries

200

This enzyme, found in saliva, begins the breakdown of carbohydrates in the mouth.

What is amylase?

200

The physical process through which gas exchange occurs across the respiratory membrane.

What is diffusion?

300

What is the time right after an action potential fires, when a neuron must rest and repolarize before firing again?

The refractory period

300

This transparent tissue sits behind the iris and changes shape to help you focus on near or far objects.

What is the lens
300

The natural pacemaker of the heart.

What is the SA node?

300

This organ produces a mix of enzymes (lipase, protease, amylase) and releases them into the small intestine.

What is the pancreas?

300

Explain the importance of capillaries in the alveoli.

talks about gas exchange, diffusion

400

What region of the brainstem directs essential, involuntary activities like heart rate, breathing, and body temperature?

Medulla or brainstem

400

These three tiny bones in the middle ear are responsible for amplifying sound vibrations: the malleus, incus, and stapes.

What are the auditory ossicles?

400

The relaxation phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart chambers fill with blood.

 What is diastole?

400

This structure in the small intestine increases surface area to maximize nutrient absorption into the blood.

What are villi?

400

Air travels from the pharynx to the ________ to the _____ and finally to the ______ where oxygen is exchanged with the blood stream.

trachea, bronchi, alveoli

500

What neurons carry information from receptors in your senses toward the brain and spinal cord

Sensory (afferent) neurons

500

This narrow tube connects the middle ear to the throat and allows you to equalize pressure on both sides of your eardrum (like when flying).

What is the Eustachian tube

500

Discussion based: Briefly explain to me how the heart pumps blood throughout the body.

Needs to include the chambers and valves, also include veins and arteries

500

What is the enzyme that breaks down the proteins in the stomach? What is it released as?

Pepsin; released as pepsinogen and turns into pepsin when it comes in contact with hydrochloric acid

500

Explain what happens to the diaphragm and ribs during inhalation and Exhalation

Needs to explain that diaphragm contracts and moves down and ribs expand and then diaphragm relaxes and moves back up and ribs move back into position

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