Integumentary
Skeletal System
Muscular System
Bone Cells and Hormones
Miscellaneous
100

This is the most superficial layer of the skin.

Epidermis

100

The shaft of a long bone is known by this name.

Diaphysis

100

The walls of the stomach and intestines contain this type of muscle.

Smooth muscle

100

In osteoporosis, where bone resorption outpaces formation, this bone cell is most active.

OsteoCLASTS 

(clast = destroying, blast = creating)

100

This type of joint / joint shape provides the greatest range of motion (HINT: shoulder, hips)

Ball-and-socket joint

200

This protein gives skin its waterproofing and tough protective capability.

Keratin

200

Compact bone is organized into these dense, cylindrical structures, while spongy bone is a lattice of trabeculae.

Osteons 

200

This is the term for the ability of a muscle to shorten.

Contractility

200

Calcitriol is the most active form of this substance.

Vitamin D

200

The average number of bones in the adult human skeleton.

206

300

This is the deepest layer of the epidermis.

Stratum basale
300

The fatty substance dominating the medullary cavity of an adult humerus.

Yellow marrow

300

This type of muscle has a single nucleus per cell while skeletal muscle is multinucleated.

Smooth muscle

300

Blood calcium deficiency stimulates this hormone's secretion, leading to osteoclastic activity.

Parathyroid hormone (PTH)

300

The scapula belongs to this division of the skeleton.

Appendicular

400

This pigment gives color to human skin.

Melanin 

400

What composes the axial skeleton?

Skull, vertebral column, rib cage  

400

These two muscle types can contract without the need for nervous stimulation.

Smooth and cardiac muscle (involuntary!)

400

Which hormone lowers blood calcium levels?

Calcitonin

400

This muscle type is characterized by being both striated and involuntary.

Cardiac muscle

500

This layer of the skin contains nerves, glands, and hair follicles, while the epidermis is mainly a protective cell layer.

The dermis

500

What bone shape are the scapula and sternum?

Flat bones

500

The proper term for your thigh muscle.

Quadriceps

500

A patient with impaired osteoblasts would most likely experience this consequence.

Impaired bone formation and repair

500

CHALLENGE: Olympic training at high altitudes increases red blood cell count. Based on what you know about oxygen and muscle contraction, why does this result in longer aerobic respiration?

Red blood cells carry oxygen. More oxygen = more ATP = increased energy availability for muscles. Aerobic respiration requires a steady supply of oxygen!