Homeostasis & Anatomical Terms
Tissues & Histology
Nervous Tissue & Action Potentials
Bones & Muscles
Central Nervous System & Integument
100

The overall process the body uses to maintain internal balance

What is homeostasis?

100

This tissue type contracts to produce movement

What is muscle tissue?

100

The voltage difference across a cell membrane

What is membrane potential?

100

The dense bone tissue designed for strength and weight‑bearing

What is compact bone?

100

The tough outer meningeal layer

What is the dura mater?

200

This homeostatic component receives information from receptors and makes decisions

What is the control center?

200

An epithelium classified by having a single layer of cells

What is simple epithelium?

200

The membrane voltage that exists when the neuron is not firing

What is the resting membrane potential?

200

Bone cells responsible for breaking down bone matrix

What are osteoclasts?

200

The autonomic division responsible for “rest and digest”

What is the parasympathetic division?

300

This homeostatic component carries out the response directed by the control center

What is the effector?

300

Flat epithelial cells shaped like floor tiles

What is squamous epithelium?

300

The phase where Na⁺ channels open and the membrane becomes positive

What is depolarization?

300

The type of bone growth that increases length at the epiphyseal plate

What is interstitial growth?

300

The brain region responsible for balance and coordination

What is the cerebellum?

400
The anatomical term meaning closer to the point of attachment

What is proximal?

400

The large amount of nonliving material found between connective tissue cells

What is the matrix?

400

The phase caused by K⁺ channels staying open too long

What is hyperpolarization?

400

Calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum occurs during this process

What is excitation-contraction coupling?

400

The skin layer composed mainly of dense irregular connective tissue

What is the reticular layer?

500

A body plane that divides the body into anterior and posterior portions

What is the frontal (coronal) plane?

500

Adipose tissue, tendons, and ligaments belong to this category

What is connective tissue proper?

500

The refractory period where no stimulus can trigger another action potential

What is the absolute refractory period?

500

The step where myosin pulls actin toward the M line

What is the power stroke?

500

The gland type that secretes watery sweat for cooling

What are eccrine sweat glands?

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