Heart
Circulation (Art. & Cap.)
Circulation (Veins & Misc.)
Lymphatics
Immune
100

What is situs inversus

When organs are on the opposite side of the body than normal.

100

What are the types of arteries?

Conducting, Distriuting, Resistance, Metarterioles, Arterioles


100

What are the types of veins?

Postcapillary, Muscular, Medium, Venous sinus, Large

100

Types of lymphatic vessels

Capillaries

Collecting vessels (lymph nodes)

Trunks

Collecting Ducts

100

What are the lymphatic cells

neutrophils

natural killers

b cells

T cells

Macrophages

Dendritic cells

Recticular cells

200

Why must the heart use different fuels?

To prevent it from fatiguing

200

What is the purpose of a metarteriole

short

links arterioles to venoules

200

Compare and contast the 3 types of capillaires

Continous: Tight junctions, pericytes, incellular clefts

Fenstrated: Rapid asorption/filtration, fenstrations, small molecules

Sinusoids: Large fenstratations, proteins & clotting factors 

200

What region of the body lacks the lymphatic system

coronas

200

What are the 3 lines of defense in the ody? Which are innate and which are adaptive.

Physical arrier --> skin & mucus

Innate defenses --> Fever, monocyte, nK, marcophage, neutrophil

Adapative immunity --> Memory b, Memory helper T, 

300

What was Charlotte's problem? Explain it.

She had an SVT which caused a racing heart. They fixed it through ablation.

300

what are the atrial sense organs? How do they work?

Chemoreceptor: Measures lood pH through dissolved CO2. changes resp. rate to correct the pH, Carotid & Aortic odies.

aroreceptor: Stretch receptor opens wall to ions, action potential Achieved, monitor bp, PIEZO channels are an example, carotid sinus & aortic arch. 

300

What are the 3 ways to control vasomotion? Give an example of each.

Local: 

Hormonal: 

neural: 

300

How do the skeletal muscle pump and thoracic pump contriute to lymphatic flow?

Skeletal: pushes up

Thoracic: Pulls up

300

Compare and contrast MHC-I ad MHC-II

MHC-I: normal host recognition

MHC-II: Antigen presenting

400

Explain what happens if either of the ventricles do not fire entirely.

If the right does not fire than the body backs up with blood


If the left does not fire than the lungs fill with blood. 

400

What is an aneurysm?

When a weak part in the heartwall/ artery bursts.

400

Explain the types of venous return shock.

Hypovolemic

Ostructed venous return

Venous pooling

Anaphalatic

Septic

bonus 100: Explain G suits for astronauts

400

What is lymph & what changes its colour

intercellular fluid collected from intracellular space.

Lipids

400

What is systemic lupus

Fatigue, rashes, fever, pain & swelling

autoimmune disease

500

Explain the risk factors, development of, and treatments for CAD.

Risks: hereditary, age, male, diet, stress, exercising, smoking, and obesity.

Treatments: Coronary bypass

Any constricting of coronary arteries.

500

Filtration, asorption, edema, osmotic pressure, hydrostatic pressue

Filtration: atrial end of cap. moves into tissue

Asorption: Venous end,  moves out of tissue

Osmostic pressure  pressure from solutes in blood (stuff wants in)

Hydrostatic: pressure of liquid against surface (Stuff wants out)

Edema: filtration low, asorption high, lymphatic drainage low. Tissues swell.      

500

What are ionotropic & chronotropic agents, how do they work? What do they effect?

Ionotropic: contraction

Chronotropic: heart rate; norepinephrine 

500

Compare and contrast veins and lymphatic vessels

both have valves, slow steady flow, and low pressure

Lymphatic carries lymph

Veins carry blood.

500

What is the order of innate immune response, include complement system.

monocyte --> marcophage

neutrohils: degranulate, nets

Cytokines, histamines, prostagladinins, bradykinin --vasomotor & chemotactic

Inflammation: flood

Eosinophils: 

asophils & Mast cells: chemicals & aid motility 

natural Killer: perforins (tumour/ virus)

complement:  see model

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