Ch 1 & 2
Ch 3 & 24
Ch 4-8
Mucles
Nervous System
100
The 5 essentials for humans to stay alive.
What are nutrients, non-nutrients, oxygen, water, atmopheric pressure, and body temperature?
100
A movement of molecules (and ions) from an area of greater concentration to one of lesser concentration over time.
What is diffusion?
100
Living cells surrounded by a non-living matrix.
What is connective tissue?
100
This connective tissue surrounds the fascicles.
What is perimysium?
100
The thalamus, hypothalamus, epithalamus plus the retina.
What is the diencephalon?
200
The location in which metabolism takes place.
What is the cell.
200
The metabolism of glucose to produce energy.
What is glycolysis?
200
A dense layer of very delicate hairs that appears hen the fetus is about five to six months old.
What is the lanugo coat?
200
This type of muscle moves the ligament back into normal position.
What is an antagonist?
200
The conducting region, or modified, protein-pump-rich plasma membrane, of the axon.
What is the axolemma?
300
Hydrolysis is a type of ________.
What is condensation reaction?
300
Sensory proteins that bind directly to the membrane to produce a response within the cell.
What are ligands?
300
A type of fibrous joint where two bones are held together by ligaments and usually some movement can occur, but it is restricted.
What is a syndesmosis?
300
This is the laughing muscle.
What is the risorius?
300
A series of tracts and gyri centered at and above the hippocampus area.
What is the limbic system or limbic association area?
400
This type of solution has more solute outside of the cell than inside of the cell.
What is a hypertonic solution?
400
The number of ATP harvested at the end of cellular metabolism.
What is 36?
400
Bones that develop from calcium deposits inside tendons or joint capsules.
What are sesamoid bones?
400
This term means that the muscle has two bellies.
What is digastric?
400
A specialized ending of an axon terminal that allows information to be transmitted from neuron to neuron or from neuron to a muscle or gland
What is a synapse?
500
The 4 different types of protein structure and how they are defined.
What are primary (long straight C chains), secondary (coils of pleated sheets of C chains), tertiary (coils of coils or sheets of sheets of C atoms), quaternary (2+ polypeptide chains bound together)?
500
These scientists determined the structure of DNA.
Who are Watson and Crick?
500
The soft spots are areas where there is no bone at all over the membranous coverings of the brain, just a thin cartilage plate.
What is a fontanel?
500
This is another name for connective tissue that connects muscle to bone and is wide and thin.
What is aponeurosis?
500
The most widely known neurotransmitter.
What is acetylcholine?
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