This is the standard reference position where the body is standing erect with palms facing forward.
What is the anatomical position?
The smallest unit of matter.
What is an atom?
The pH value considered neutral.
What is pH 7?
The outer boundary of the cell composed of a phospholipid bilayer.
What is the plasma membrane?
Movement of substances from high to low concentration without energy.
What is diffusion?
This directional term describes a structure closer to the body surface.
What is superficial?
A substance that shifts the H⁺/OH⁻ balance in favor of hydrogen ions.
What is an acid?
This ion increases in concentration when a solution becomes more acidic.
What is the hydrogen ion (H⁺)?
The organelle known as the “protein factory” of the cell.
What are ribosomes?
Diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane.
What is osmosis?
This plane divides the body into left and right sections.
What is the sagittal plane?
The type of chemical bond formed when atoms share electrons.
What is a covalent bond?
The process where water is used to break chemical bonds.
What is hydrolysis?
This organelle produces ATP for cellular energy.
What are mitochondria?
The transport process defective in cystic fibrosis.
What is active transport of chloride ions?
Mixing an acid and a base results in the formation of this substance.
What is the right lower quadrant?
A blood pH of 7.28 indicates this condition.
What is acidosis?
Mixing an acid and a base results in the formation of this substance.
What is a salt?
The stack of flattened sacs that modifies and packages proteins.
What is the Golgi apparatus?
Increase in muscle cell size due to exercise is called this.
What is hypertrophy?
Blood maintains its pH through this type of chemical regulation system.
What is the abdominopelvic cavity?
These chemical systems prevent drastic changes in blood pH.
What are buffers?
Blood maintains its pH through this type of chemical regulation system.
What is a buffer system?
The organelle that contains digestive enzymes and helps destroy bacteria.
What are lysosomes?
This cellular process requires ATP to move substances against a concentration gradient.
What is active transport?