Ch 1, 3, 5
Ch 6
Ch 4 & 8
Ch 9
Ch 11
100

The Femur is ___________ to the Metatarsal

Proximal

100

Which bone type secretes a bone matrix until it gets trapped and matures?

Osteoblast

100

Moving one’s head to the left until your ear touches your shoulder is an example of what movement

Lateral Flexion

100

Differentiate the 3 types of muscles

Skeletal, Smooth, Cardiac Muscle

100

What part of the neuron contains the nucleus and other necessary organelles?

Cell Body

200

What cavity contains the lungs?

Pleural Cavity

200

Spongy Bone is filled with which bone marrow? What is the function of this bone marrow?

Red Bone marrow produce Red Blood Cells, White Blood Cells, Platelets, etc.

200

Lydia standing on her tip toes to see out the door peephole is an example of what movement?

Plantarflexion

200

What is the difference between Depolarization, Repolarization, and Hyperpolarization?

Depolarization: Na+ reaches threshold, channels, open, and creates an action potential, shifting the charge positively

Repolarization: Na+ channels close. K+ channels open and close slowly, causing a decrease in charge

Hyperpolarization: K+ channels close, and charge falls below resting membrane potential

200

What neuron type is responsible for processing information between sensory and motor neurons?

Interneurons

300

What organelle makes lipids, detoxifies the cell, and stores calcium?

Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum

300

How does Calcitonin affect the bones, intestines, and kidneys?

Tone Down blood calcium levels

  • Bones: Decrease Osteoclast Activity = not getting Ca++
  • Intestines: Decrease reabsorption
  • Kidneys: Decrease Ca++ reabsorption
300

Which connective tissue helps reduce friction at the end of long bones?

Hyaline cartilage

300

What molecule holds tropomyosin in place?

Troponin

300

Of the 3 types of channels (Chemically-gated, Voltage-gated, and Mechanically-gated), which is responsible for sending action potentials along the axon?

Voltage-gated Na+ and K+

400

List the correct order of the skin layers (Superficial to deep)

Stratum Corneum, Lucidum, Granulosum, Spinosum, Basale (Basement)

400

Put the Intramembranous Ossification in order

1. Mesenchymal cells cluster differentiate into Osteoblasts → secrete bone matrix

2. Bone grows out in stall struts

3. Blood vessels enter area

4. Continuous Deposition of bone by Osteoblasts close to blood vessel

5. Remodeling around vessels → Osteons of compact bone

400

Which connective tissue gives strength in multiple directions, such as in the dermis of the skin and around visceral organs?

Dense Irregular

400

What happens when there’s not enough ATP?

Without ATP, we’ll be stuck contracted, muscles unable to rest.

400

What neuroglia prevents the CNS from regenerating?

Astrocyte forms scar tissue after injury

500

What are the 2 layers of the Dermis? And which has the Meissner corpuscles?

Papillary Layer – Meissner 

Reticular Layer 

500

Put the Endochondral Ossification in order

1. Cartilage Model Enlarges

2. Blood vessels grow around the edge of cartilage model

3. Blood vessels penetrate cartilage and enter the middle/center

4. Growth continues along with remodeling

5. Capillaries and osteoblasts migrate into the epiphyses

6. Epiphyses fill with spongy bone

7. Bone grows in length at the epiphyseal cartilage

500

Which epithelial tissue provides secretion and absorption in the respiratory tracts and also secretes mucus with the help of goblet cells?

Simple Columnar Tissue

500

What is the purpose of ACh, Na+, and Ca++?

ACh - Diffuse across the synaptic cleft and alter the sarcolemma’s permeability to Na+, causing Na+ to rush into the cell

Na+ - Starts and Continues the Action Potential

Ca+ - Binds to Troponin, exposing the active sites on the thin filaments

500

What is Summation?

The net/collective effect of EPSPs and IPSPs that determines if an action potential occurs