Cardiovascular system
Blood vessels and blood pressure
Blood
Respiratory system
Miscellaneous
100

The three parts of the circulatory system ?

Heart, blood, blood vessels 

100

The smallest blood vessels in the circulatory system


capillaries 

100

The percentage of red blood cells in a person's blood.

Hematocrit  


100

The primary function of respiration 

 to obtain O2 for use by the body cells and to eliminate the CO2 the cells produce.

100

The protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen


Hemoglobin 

150

The blood vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood from your lungs to your heart. 

Pulmonary veins

150

The main resistance vessels in the vascular tree because their radius is small enough to offer considerable resistance to flow.

arterioles 

150

The condition in which a blood clot breaks off from its original site and travels through the bloodstream to obstruct a blood vessel, causing tissue ischemia and organ damage.

Thromboembolism

150

The tiny air sacs where gases are exchanged between air and blood

alveoli 

150


The high blood pressure that is multi-factorial and doesn’t have one distinct cause. 


Primary hypertension 

200

The normal pacemaker of the heart

sinoatrial node (SA node)

200

The parts of the vascular tree

▪Arteries

▪Arterioles

▪Capillaries

▪Venules

▪Veins

200

The protein that regulates osmosis between blood and tissues

Albumins 

200

The relaxation of inspiratory muscles

Onset of expiration

200

The total body weight blood makes up

8%

300

The volume of blood pumped by each ventricle per minute

cardiac output 

300

The volume of blood passing through per unit of time

flow rate

300

The process by which red blood cells (RBCs) are produced in the body

Erythropoiesis

300

The sequence of respiratory pathway

nasal cavity →Pharynx → Larynx →Trachea → Bronchi → Bronchioles → Alveoli or air sacs.

300

The part of the brain stem that controls inspiration and expiration 

medulla 

400

The inability of CO to keep pace with the body’s demands for supplies and removal of wastes

Heart failure 

400

A higher blood flow than normal in response to something happening in your body that increases its demand for blood

Hyperemia

400

The large complex molecule that triggers a specific immune response against


Antigen 

400

The cells that are involved in the secretion of surfactant proteins.

Type II alveolar

400

The influence of CO2 and acid on the release of O2

Bohr effect

500

Refers to pathological changes within the coronary artery walls that diminish blood flow through these vessels

coronary artery disease (CAD)

500

The four functions of the lymphatic system 

•Return of excess filtered fluid

•Defense against disease 

•Transport of absorbed fat

•Return of filtered protein

500

The blood type that is a universal donor and the blood type that is a universal receiver 

Type O 

Type AB 

500

The three types of pressure important in respiration 

Atmospheric (barometric) 

Intra-alveolar pressure 

Intrapleural pressure

Atmospheric pressure is the amount of pressure in the air

Intra-alveolar pressure is pressure in the lungs

Intrapleural pressure is the pleural cavity


500

The difference in partial pressure between the capillary blood and the surrounding structures



partial pressure gradient 

550

How does oxygenated blood flow through the heart?

From lungs 🡪 pulmonary veins 🡪 left atrium 🡪 left ventricle 🡪 aorta (to drop off oxygen to rest of body)

550

The movement of solutions across the capillary wall to get from a high-pressure area to a low-pressure area

List one factor that influences it

Bulk flow 

factors: 

Capillary blood pressure, plasma-colloid osmotic pressure, interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure, and interstitial fluid–colloid osmotic pressure

550

The functions of the immune system 

1. defends against invading disease-producing microorganisms 

2. functions as a “cleanup crew” that removes worn out cells (such as aged red blood cells) and tissue debris paving the way for wound healing and tissue repair

3. identifies and destroys cancer cells that arise in the body.

550

A physical and chemical factor of bronchoconstriction 

Chemical: histamine, anaphylaxis

physical: excess mucus, collapse airway, edema of the walls  

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