Respiratory
Digestive
Metabolism
Urinary
Fluid/Acid-Base
100

What are the four processes of respiration?

1. Pulmonary ventilation

2. External respiration

3. Transport of respiratory gases

4. internal (cellular) respiration

100

What are the 6 major digestive processes?

Ingestion, propulsion, mechanical digestion, chemical digestion, absorption, defecation 

100
Define catabolism and anabolism.

Anabolism
- synthetic. Add together. Build up

Catabolism
- degradative. Take apart.

100

Describe the three layers of the filtration membrane

1. Fenestrated endothelium of glomerular capillaries

2. Visceral membrane of glomerular capsule made by podocytes

3. Intervening basement membrane (fused basal lamina of other two layers)
- permits most solutes and only the smallest proteins to pass

100

What are the main cation and anion in the extra and intracellular fluids?

What pump maintains this concentration?

Extracellular fluid
- Na is main cation, Cl is main anion

Intracellular fluid
- K is main cation, phosphate is main anion

ATP NaK pumps

200

Differentiate between the respiratory and conducting zone

Respiratory zone (gas exchange)
- respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, alveoli

Conducting zone (conduit for air, cleanse, humidify, warm)
- all other passageways 

200

Compare and contrast peristalsis and segmentation

Peristalsis
- food is moved distally along the tract. Propulsive

Segmentation
- Food is moved back and forth. Mixed

200

Define oxidation and reduction.

Oxidation
- loss of hydrogen or gain oxygen
- lose electrons

Reduction
- gains hydrogen from oxidized substance
- gain electrons

200

What is GFR?

What is a normal GFR?

GFR is the total amount of filtrate formed per minute by kidneys

Normal is 120-125 ml/min

200

What happens to the cell in dehydration?

What are causes of dehydration?

The cell shrinks.

Hemorrhage, severe burns, prolonged vomiting or diarrhea, profuse sweating, water deprivation, diuretic abuse, diabetes mellitus, diabetes insipidus 

300

Define tidal volume, vital capacity, residual volume, and dead space.

List the volumes of each

Tidal volume - volume for a normal breath. 500 ml

Vital capacity - total amount a person can breathe in and total amount out. 4800 ml

Residual volume - air that is always in the lungs. 1200 ml

dead space - air that does not participate in gas exchange. 150 ml

300

What are the 4 types of secretory cells in the gastric glands?

What do each one make?

Mucous neck cells
- acidic mucus

Parietal cells
- HCl, intrinsic factor

Chief cells
- pepsinogen

Enteroendocrine cells
- gastrin, histamine, endorphins, serotonin, cholecystokinin, somatostatin

300

Describe glycogenolysis.

(What do you start with, what are the outcomes)

Start with -2 ATP

Gain 4 ATP and 2 NADH

Outcome is 2 pyruvic acid

300

Where does reabsorption begin in the nephron?

What is completely reabsorbed here?

Proximal convoluted tubule

Glucose, amino acids, organics

300

What happens to the cell in hypotonic hydration?

What causes hypotonic hydration?

The cell bursts.

Excessive water intake or kidney insufficiency. 

400

Define boyle's, dalton's, and henry's law

Boyle's
- P1V1 = P2V2. Relationship between pressure and volume of gases

Dalton's
- Pressure of each gas is proportional to amount of that gas in the mixture

Henry's
- the ability of a gas to dissolve in liquid is proportional to it's pressure

400

What are the 3 modifications of the small intestine to increase absorption?

1. Circular folds (plicae circulares)

2. Villi
- epithelia = absorptive columnar enterocytes

3. Microvili
- create brush border
- brush border enzymes


400

Describe electron transport chain and oxidative phosphorylation.

1. Electrons from NADH and H create transport gradient

2. Gradient drives them through the ATP synthase complex

3. ATP synthase uses this electrical energy to synthesize ATP from ADP + P

400

Describe how ADH, aldosterone, and ANP affect water and sodium

ADH
- reabsorbs fluid. "don't pee" hormone. 

Aldosterone
- reabsorbs water, followed by sodium reabsorption

ANP
- inhibits sodium reabsorption

400

What causes metabolic acidosis?

What causes metabolic alkalosis?

What are the bicarb levels in both?

Metabolic acidosis
- excessive loss of bicarbonate ions

Metabolic alkalosis
- vomiting of the acid contents of the stomach
- intake of excess base (antacids)

Bicarb is low in acidosis, high in alkalosis

500

How does pH, CO2, and temperature affect how much O2 binding to hemoglobin?

pH
- High pH increases O2 sat
- Low pH decreases O2 sat

CO2
- High CO2 decreases O2 sat
- Low CO2 increases O2 sat

Temp
- High temp decreases O2 sat
- Low temp increases O2 sat

500

What to cholecystokinin and secretin do during digestion?

1. Pancreatic secretion

2. Bile secretion by liver

3. Gallbladder secretion

4. Hepatopancreatic sphincter relaxation
- bile enters the duodenum

500

Differentiate between the post absorptive and absorptive states. Which state is insulin more prevalent and which state is glucagon more prevalent?

Absorptive
- Anabolism. Fed. Building things up. Insulin is more prevalent because of increase blood glucose

Post-absorptive
- catabolism. Breaking things down. Glucagon is more prevalent because of decreased blood glucose

500

Describe where water can and can't leave the loop of henle. 

Water can leave descending limb but not the ascending limb 

500

What causes respiratory acidosis?

What causes respiratory alkalosis?

What are the CO2 levels in both?

Respiratory acidosis
- person breathes infrequently or shallowly
- pneumonia, cystic fibrosis, emphysema. gas exchange is impaired

Respiratory alkalosis
- hyperventilation

CO2 high in acidosis, low in alkalosis