What is the scientific name for platelets?
Thrombocytes
What type of blood vessel facilitates gas exchange?
Capillaries
What structure prevents blood from moving back into the left ventricle?
The aortic semilunar valve
What causes the “lub-dub” sound heard at the chest wall?
Lub - closure of AV valves (ventricles contract)
Dub - closure of semilunar valves (ventricles relax)
What 3 blood vessels are present in an umbilical cord?
1 umbilical vein, 2 umbilical arteries
What is the name of the Fe component on RBCs?
Heme
What blood type has A antigens and anti‑B antibodies?
Type A
Which type of blood vessel has a 'pulse'?
An artery
What is the name of the cardiac muscle that makes up most of the heart?
The myocardium
What is the name of the second blood pressure reading indicating the pressure against the artery walls when the ventricles relax?
Diastolic pressure
What structure provides oxygen and nutrients to the fetus instead of the lungs?
The placenta
What is the purpose of structure E?
The septum, separates the oxygenated and deoxygenated blood in the heart
What are formed elements?
The solids that make up 45% of blood (RBCs, WBCs, platelets)
What is the name of the one artery that carries deoxygenated blood in humans?
Pulmonary artery
Which letter indicates when ventricular systole is occurring?
Which letter indicates when ventricular systole is occurring?
What is the part of the heart is known as the natural pacemaker?
The SA (sinoatrial) node
What is the purpose of the ductus venosus?
To direct oxygen-rich blood from the placenta to the fetus, bypassing the liver
What kind of blood vessel is pictured here?

Vein
What is agglutination?
Clumping, occurs when matching antibodies and antigens interact
What is the name of the structure that helps regulate blood flow into capillaries?
Pre-capillary sphincters
Where are the Purkinje fibers located and what is their function?
Purkinje fibers are located in walls of the ventricles. They function to carry the electrical signal to the muscles of the ventricles to cause them to contract.
How does blood pressure compare to osmotic pressure on the arterial side? What is the result?
BP > OP, water leaves blood for ISF and cells/tissues
What structure(s) help fetal hearts bypass lungs?
What is the name of the sac of lubricating fluid that the heart sits in?
The pericardium
What is the name of the structure that taps blood cells to clot at an injured site?
Fibrin threads
Name and describe this condition: 
Artherosclerosis, when plaque narrows arteries reducing blood flow
Describe how blood flows from the aorta to the legs and back to the aorta
Aorta → iliac arteries → iliac arterioles → iliac capillaries → iliac venules → iliac veins → inferior vena cava → right atrium → tricuspid valve → right ventricle → pulmonary semilunar valve → pulmonary trunk→ pulmonary arteries → pulmonary arterioles → pulmonary capillaries → pulmonary venules → pulmonary veins → left atrium → bicuspid valve → left ventricle → aortic semilunar valve → aorta
How does the medulla oblongata control heartbeat?
Medulla oblongata (in brain) sends electrical impulse to the SA node in the right atrium --> both atria contract simultaneously --> signal goes to AV node --> down the Purkinje fibers --> both ventricles simultaneously contract --> heart rests --> repeat
What is the most common cardiac defect in newborns?
When the foramen ovale doesn't close correctly, may lead to "blue babies"
What large blood vessel carries nutrient-rich blood from the digestive organs directly to the liver?
The hepatic portal vein