Bone Tissue
Membrane Mechanics
Don't Use These When You Sneeze
Cellular stuff
Bone Anatomy
100

This chemical is responsible for making bones flexible and provides Tensile strength.

Collagen

100

This is the quality of the cell membrane to allow certain substances in and out of the cell.

Selective Permability

100

Epithelial tissue that is taller than it is wide that appears to be layered, but in reality all cells are able to touch the basement membrane would be classified as this type of tissue.

Pseudostratified Columnar

100

The Powerhouse of the cell; this organelle is responsible for energy production.

Mitochondria 
100

A shallow depression or groove in a bone or other tissue.

Fossa

200

This mature bone cell is the predominant type of bone cell and helps maintain daily metabolism of the bones.

Osteocytes
200

When cells are placed in a hypertonic solution the water rushes out of them, leaving the cells in this shrunken state.

Crenated/Crenation

200

This type of gland secretes by pinching off a section of themselves, the apical surface. They're primarily found as mammary glands, and the type of sweat glands that begin to 'turn on' during puberty.

Apocrine Glands

200

Cilia and Flagella are made up of these cytoskeleton structures.

Microtubules

200

Refers to an opening or a hole.

Foramen

300

This boney structure pierces the periosteum and carries vessels and nerves horizontally through the bone.

Volkmann's Canals/Perforating Canals

300

Scattered among the membrane, we find Cholesterol molecules as well as these which serve as both identifiers for other cells, but can also transport other substances, or act as a channel.

Proteins

300

This substance is stored in mast cells that when triggered, both dilates the capillaries and increases the permeability of the vessel walls, resulting in warm swollen tissue after an injury.

Histamine

300

Meiosis is known as reductive division because each cell formed has half the number of chromosomes, but Mitosis is known as this type of division because it's daughter cells have the same amount of chromosomes.

Equatorial Division

300

The most common area of the femur to fracture, especially in the elderly.

Neck of the Femur

400

These concentric rings make up groups of hollow tubes of bone matrix.

Lamellae

400

In both cellular eating and drinking the cell utilizes this type of membrane movement that involves using vesicles.

Endocytosis

400

This tissue type has the poorest capacity for cellular renewal after injury. 

Nervous
400

When converting DNA into RNA, Thymine is exchanged for Uracil, but whatever base is being used of the two, it's partner is this Base.

Adenine

400

A small rounded projection or process.

Tubercle

500

This vitamin is needed for the synthesis of collagen and without it a person may develop Osteomalacia, Rickets, or possibly even Scurvy.

Vitamin C

500

The structure of the phospholipids with hydrophilic heads and hydrophobic tales, results in them arranging in this type of structure which makes up the basis of our cellular membranes.

Bilayer

500

The embryonic connective tissue from which all other connective tissue arises from

Mesenchymal

500

Made up of a Large and Small subunit, and being responsible for the assembly of proteins, this organelle is built in what other structure of the cell?

Nucleolus

500

Essentially a larger tubercle, we find a greater and lesser versions of this anatomical feature on the Femur.

Trochanter