Bones
Muscles
Joints
Range of Motion
Anatomical Terms
100

What is the rounded end of a long bone called?


What is the epiphysis?

100

Which muscle closes the eyes?



What is the orbicularis oculi?


100

Which type of joint allows movement in all directions, such as the shoulder or hip?



 What is a ball-and-socket joint?

100

What does “passive range-of-motion” mean?


The patient receives assistance to move their joint.

100

Which order correctly shows biological organization from smallest to largest?


Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ System → Organism.

200

Which bone type is the parietal bone classified as?



What is a flat bone?

200

According to the sliding filament theory, what happens when a muscle contracts?


Actin and myosin filaments slide past each other, shortening the sarcomere.

200

A patient injures the ligament connecting two bones. What type of injury is this?



What is a sprain?

200

What type of movement decreases the angle of a joint?


What is flexion?

200

Why is it important to use directional and regional terms in healthcare?


They allow precise communication about patient anatomy and injuries.

300

Which structure in long bones contains yellow marrow that stores fat?


What is the medullary cavity?

300

Which muscle type is striated and involuntary?


What is cardiac muscle?

300

Which ligament is tested by the valgus stress test at 30° knee flexion?



What is the MCL (medial collateral ligament)?

300

What does an EMG showing increased electrical activity but decreased force indicate?


Muscle fatigue.

300

Which pair of directional terms means “closer to” and “farther from” the point of attachment?


Proximal and distal.

400

Which two types of bone cells are responsible for building and breaking down bone tissue?


What are osteoblasts and osteoclasts?

400

What is the role of ATP and calcium in muscle contraction?


ATP provides energy for myosin movement, and calcium exposes binding sites on actin.

400

Which type of cartilage covers the ends of bones and cushions joints?


What is articular (hyaline) cartilage?

400

During a BMX ride, bending the knees and pushing on pedals primarily uses which joints?
 


Ball-and-socket joints at the hips and hinge joints at the knees.

400

Which plane divides the body into anterior and posterior portions?


Coronal (frontal) plane.

500

What is the first step in the bone repair process after a fracture?


What is the formation of a hematoma?

500

Which connective tissue layer surrounds an individual muscle fiber?


 

What is the endomysium?

500

What’s the difference between an intra-articular and an extra-articular fracture?


Intra-articular involves the joint space; extra-articular occurs outside it.

500

Circumduction combines which four movements?


 Flexion, extension, abduction, and adduction.

500

What is the correct anatomical position?


 


Standing upright, arms at sides, palms facing forward.

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