Respiratory
Urinary
Digestive
Metabolism
Grab Bag
200

This is the volume that you breathe in and out at rest.

What is tidal volume?

200

This is a measurement of how much blood is filtered by the glomerulus.

What is GFR (glomerular filtration rate)?

200

These are the two digestive enzymes produced in the mouth.

What are lingual lipase and salivary amylase?

200

This is where the citric acid cycle takes place.

What is the mitochondrial matrix?

200

This structure is shared by the digestive and respiratory system.

What is the pharynx?

400

Food or water that enters this structure will trigger a coughing episode to help expel the food/liquid.

What is the larynx?

400

Glucose is reabsorbed in this segment of the nephron.

What is the proximal convoluted tubule?

400

If this sphincter does not stay properly closed, a person could experience heartburn or acid reflux.

What is the lower esophageal sphincter? 

400

This molecule is the universal energy currency of the cell; catabolism releases energy to produce it, while anabolism consumes it to build complex macromolecules.

What is ATP?

400

This structure is shared by the male reproductive and urinary systems.

What is the urethra?

600

The contraction of this muscle is responsible for most of the lung volume increase that causes inhalation.

What is the diaphragm? 

600

This segment of the nephron loop is permeable to water but not ions.

What is the descending thin limb?

600

These three gastric cell types line the stomach: one secretes pepsinogen, one secretes HCl and intrinsic factor, and one produces mucus to protect the stomach lining.

What are chief cells, parietal cells, and mucous cells?

600

Fermentation in human cells creates this byproduct.

What is lactic acid? (or lactate)

600

This is a process that occurs in parietal cells and red blood cells. It allows the cells to export bicarbonate ions.

What is the chloride shift?

800

An increase in this metabolic byproduct of RBCs causes the oxygen-hemoglobin saturation curve to shift to the right.

What is BPG?

800

When plasma glucose exceeds this concentration, the Na⁺-glucose cotransporters in the PCT become saturated and glucose begins appearing in the urine.

What is renal threshold?

800

Unlike amino acids and monosaccharides, digested lipids are packaged into these particles, absorbed into lacteals, and enter the lymphatic system rather than the hepatic portal blood.


What are chylomicrons?

800

During the post-absorptive state, this process occurs in the liver and muscle cells to release glucose into the bloodstream.

What is glycogenolysis?

800

Both glucose and glycerol (from triglycerides) are converted to this molecule to feed into later stages of cellular respiration.

What is pyruvate?

1000

Pulmonary fibrosis stiffens the lungs, impairing exhalation by destroying this property: the lungs' natural tendency to spring back after inspiration.

What is elastic recoil?

1000

This hormone is released when plasma osmolarity rises or blood pressure drops; it inserts aquaporins into the DCT and collecting duct to enable facultative water reabsorption.

What is ADH?

1000

Released by the duodenum when fat and protein arrive, this hormone simultaneously signals the gallbladder to contract and the pancreas to release digestive enzymes.

What is CCK?

1000

During the absorptive phase, insulin promotes this dominant class of metabolic reactions - including glycogenesis in the liver, lipogenesis in adipose tissue, and protein synthesis in muscle

What is anabolism?

1000

This is the most abundant organic waste excreted in the urine. It is produced from a byproduct of amino acid metabolism.

What is urea?