Some terms
Conditions
Cells
Diseases
ETC
100

Bodily structure

What is anatomy?

100

Body temperature, pulse rate and respiration are used to represent this

What are vital signs?

100

These substances may cause the cell to lyse, stop mitosis and activate apoptosis.

What is cytotoxicity?

100

A condition where the number of red blood cells that carry oxygen throughout the body is decreased.

What is anemia?

100

Mucus is abnormally thick in this disease.

What is cystic fibrosis?

200

This change results in more change in the same direction.

What is positive feedback?

200

A deletion of three nucleotides causes this autosomally recessive inherited disease.

What is cystic fibrosis?

200

This structure helps move large substances that are not able to enter or leave a cell

What is the cell membrane?

200

With this mutation, water ions cannot move and mucus gets sticky outside the cell

What is the mutant CFTR channel?

200

You get all your mitochondria from this parent

What is the mother?

300

The chemical processes in a living cell to maintain life

What is metabolism?

300

A mutation in the DNA for this organelle mainly affects children and can lead to seizures, strokes and severe developmental delays

What are mitochondria?

300

Binding with other cells on the membrane, sticking

What is cell adhesion?

300

A point mutation results in this autosomally inherited disease.

What is sickle cell anemia?

300

Because of this disease, crescent cells clump and can get stuck in the capillaries

What is sickle cell anemia?

400

Changing absorbed materials into different materials that can be used

What is assimilation?

400

a condition where there is low sodium concentration in the blood

What is hyponatremia?

400

These cells carry oxygen throughout the body.

What are red blood cells?

400

This disease is caused by a frameshift mutation in the Beta-hexosaminidase gene

What is Tay-Sachs disease?

400

A specialized cell or group of cells that respond to a signal

What is a receptor?

500

An initial change away from the set point stimulates a response that reverses the initial change (FROM:  Breathing Lab protocol, Waldron)

What is negative feedack?

500

This is the amount of a substance that will kill 50% of the test subjects

What is the LD50?

500

This organelle is responsible for digesting food and breaking down lipids

What are lysosomes?

500

This type of mutation comes from an addition or a deletion of 1 or 2 nucleotides

What is a frameshift mutation?

500

Insulin production regulates blood sugar in this way.

What is negative feedback?