Muscles
Terminology
Bones
Injury and Training
Cardiovascular
100

Identify the type of contraction when there is no change in muscle length

Isometric

100

A hinge joint allows what 2 types of movement?

Flexion and extension

100

Tough bands of tissue that attach bone to bone are called:

Ligaments

100

What does PRICER stand for

Protect, Rest, Ice, Compress, Elevate, Referral

100

Identify the two circuits that create the cardiovascular system

Pulmonary and Systemic

200

Provide 3 characteristics of slow twitch fibres

Any of: Red, High capillary density, Small size, Low force, Slow seep, High fatigue resistance

200

What is the anatomical term where a body part is further away from the trunk of the body

Distal

200

Strong flexible tissue that covers the surface of bones so they don't move against each other is called:

Cartilage

200

What does No HARM stand for:

No: Heat, Alcohol, Running, Massage

200

Diffusion takes place at these blood vessles:

Capillaries 

300

As the required force increases, the size and number of motor units increase. This is know as:

Motor Unit Recruitment or Size Principle 

300

This joint action combines flexion, extension, abduction and adduction where the movement is circular. 

Circumduction

300

Ribs, scapular, sternum and skull are all which type of bone?

Flat

300

What does RAMP stand for?

Raise, Activate, Mobilise, Potentiate

300

Give 3 characteristics of veins:

Toward the heart

Low pressure 

De-oxygenated

Thin walls

400

Bundles of muscle fibres are called:

Fascicles

400

The sagittal plane allows movement around which axis?

Transverse axis

400

From superior to inferior, list the 5 sections of the vertebral column, including the number of vertebrae in each one:

7 cervical

12 thoracic

5 lumbar

5 sacrum

4 coccyx

400

Resistance training results in hypertrophy. What is hypertrophy?

An increase in size of the muscle

400

What is the formula that helps to understand acute responses to exercise.

Q = SV x HR

500

What is the key benefit of a 3rd class lever in sport? 

Increase in angular speed

500

When an athletes knee extends beyond the normal range of motion, this is called

Hyperextension

500

List the 6 types of synovial joints. Provide an example for each. 

Pivot: neck

Gliding: carpals/tarsals

B&S: shoulder/hip

Hinge: elbow/knee

Saddle: thumb

Condyloid: wrist

500

Outline the difference between the 2 types of stretching. Which one is best for a warm-up?

Static - stretching slowly to the point of discomfort

Dynamic - the gradual movement of one body position to another (best for warm-up)

500

What are the 4 components of blood and what are their functions?

RBCs: Carry O2

WBCs: Fight infection

Platelets: Blood clotting

Plasma: Trasport nutrients, maintain body temp

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