Skeletal
Muscular
Nervous
Cardiovascular
Respiratory
100

What are the 2 types of osseous tissue?

Compact and spongy

100

Muscle wasting due to disuse or disease.

Atrophy

100

An autoimmune disease that results from break down to myelin sheaths, results in various symptoms that make it difficult to diagnosis



Multipule Sclerosis

100

Small vessels that receive blood from the arteries and pass it to capillaries

Arterioles

100

How long can you survive without oxygen?

4-6 minutes

200

What are the 4 classifications of bones? 

Long, short, flat and irregular

200

Primary muscle for jaw closure and chewing.

Massater

200

The inability to control muscles due to brain damage or brain malformation

Cerebral Palsy

200

Chamber that receives oxygenated blood from the pulmonary veins and eventually pumps it into systemic circulation.

Left Atrium

200

Drain tears from the eyes into the nose to provide additional moisture for air

Lacrimal Ducts

300

Immovable joints that connect the bones of the skull

Sutures

300

Fluid-filled lump near joints or tendons.

Ganglion Cyst

300

Area on left frontal lobe responsible for tongue and lip movements

Broca's area

300

Ventricular contraction phase of the heartbeat; referred to as depolarization

Systole

300

Piece of cartilage that closes the opening into the larynx during swallowing; prevents food and liquids from entering respiratory tract

Epiglottis

400

In embryos, what is the skeleton primarily made of?

Hyaline cartilage

400

• property of responding to stimuli
• caused by electrical signal production

Excitability

400

Build up of plaques and tangles in the brain that block communication and delivery of nutrients, a progressive disease with an unknown cause and cure.

Alzheimer's

400

The occlusion of one or more coronary arteries caused by plaque buildup (heart attack)

Myocardial Infarction

400

Located between visceral and parietal pleura; filled with fluid that lubricates to prevent friction when lungs expand during breathing

Pleural Space

500

What part of the bone is mostly made of fatty cells?

Yellow Bone Marrow

500

• join cardiac cells to one another
• supports to the pumping of blood to your heart

Intercalated disks

500

A pea-sized structure located at the base of the brain, just below the hypothalamus, to which it is attached via nerve fibers. It is part of the endocrine system and produces critical hormones, which are chemical substances that control various bodily functions

Pituitary gland

500

A valve in the heart that guards the opening between the left atrium and the left ventricle; prevents the blood in the ventricle from returning to the atrium. Alternative name is bicuspid valve.

Mitrial Valve

500

Noninfectious chronic respiratory condition; happens when walls of alveoli lose elasticity; carbon dioxide remains trapped in alveoli; poor exchange of gases

Emphysema

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