Layer of centrifuged blood containing leukocytes and platelets
What is the buffy coat?
This organ filters blood and contains red and white pulp
What is the spleen?
These structures receive incoming signals on a neuron
What are the dendrites?
This lobe is responsible for visual processing
what is the occipital lobe?
These receptors detect smell
What are olfactory receptors?
These antigens are found on type B red blood cells
What are B agglutinogens?
These lymph nodes are located in the groin
What are ingunial lymph nodes?
This glial cell myelinates CNS axons
What is an oligodendrocyte?
This structure connects the two cerebral hemispheres
What is the corpus callosum?
This structure vibrates when sound waves strike it
what is the tympanic membrane?
These cells make up the majority of formed elements
What are erythrocytes?
This duct drains lymph from most of the body
What is the thoracic duct?
This region of the neuron initiates action potentials
What is the axon hillock?
this space contains CSF between arachnoid and pia mater
what is the subarachnoid space?
This region of the retina has the highest density of cones
What is the fovea centralis?
This granulocyte has bilobed nucleus and combats parasites
What is an eosinophil?
This enlarged sac sits at the base of the thoracic duct
What is the cisterna chyli?
These glial cells act as immune defenders in the CNS
What are microglia?
These tree like white matter structures are found in the cerebellum
what is the arbor vitae?
These ducts detect rotational acceleration
What are the semicircular ducts?
A patient with type O neg blood can donate to any blood type becasue they lack these two major surface antigens
What are A & B antigens?
Cluster of lymphatic tissue in the upper chest
What is the Thymus?
Structure houses sensory neuron cell bodies and bulges along the posterior root of the spinal nerve
Posterior root ganglion?
This is cranial nerve #6 (VI)
What is the abducens?
Damage to this cranial nerve would result in loss of smell
What is the olfactory nerve (CN I)?