What is the largest lobe of the brain?
Frontal lobe
What is blood viscosity?
How thick or sticky your blood is.
What is a pathogen? AND give an example.
A pathogen is any foreign body that can attack a host and make you sick. Bacteria, viruses, parasites, and fungi.
Sperm
What is more advanced an embryo or a fetus?
A fetus
Name the 4 Disney World parks.
Epcot, Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom, Hollywood Studios.
What is the lobe on top called?
Parietal lobe
Does high blood viscosity increase or decrease blood flow?
It decreases blood flow by increasing blood resistance.
What is the difference between an innate response and an adaptive response?
Innate is non specific and reacts the same way to a pathogen while an adaptive response is specific to eliminating pathogens.
What gametes do ovaries create?
Eggs
Where is a blastocyst implanted?
The uterus
What are the 2 types of anaerobic respiration?
Lactic acid and alcoholic fermentation.
What is the lobe on the side?
Temporal lobe
What is blood resistance and how does it impact blood flow and blood pressure?
Blood resistance is how much force is required to push blood through the arteries. It decreases flow and increases blood pressure.
What is a B and T cell?
B cells create antibodies and T cells destroy the pathogen via apoptosis.
What does the vas deferens do?
What is the part called that the egg will travel through before implantation?
The fallopian tubes
What are the monomers of a lipid?
Glycerol and a fatty acid.
What is the lobe at the back of the brain?
Name the 3 types of blood vessels.
Arteries, veins, capillaries. If a capillary were to be blocked, your body would be affected the least.
What is the correct order of attack by the secondary immune response.
1. Fever
2. Inflammation
3. Phagocytes consume pathogen and rush white blood cells to the area.
3. White blood cells rush to the area and consume the pathogen.
2. Inflammation
1. Fever
Why are testes outside of the body?
They help to keep the sperm cool. The human body is too warm.
What does a blastocyst become? (inside and outside cells)
The inside cells becomes the embryo and the outside cells become the placenta.
What is an organelle?
Tiny cell "organs". Mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, nucleus, chloroplast, etc.
What structure is located beneath the occipital lobe?
The cerebellum
What is atherosclerosis?
A build up of plaque in the arteries that leads to a restriction of blood flow, higher blood resistance, and slower blood flow.
What is a vaccine and how does it create immunity?
Vaccines are when you are injected with a partial or dead pathogen that allows your body to create memory B cells. These memory cells allow your body to fight against a future attack of that pathogen. (example chicken pox)
Where do babies grow?
The uterus
What does the umbilical cord do?
Nutrients from foods digested by the mother pass from her blood to the fetus through blood vessels in the umbilical cord. It also allows for waste removal from the fetus (carbon dioxide and other waste)
What planet has the longest day?
Venus with 1 day taking 243 Earth days.
What structure is located at the top of the brain stem that allows the cerebellum to communicate with the spinal cord?
The pons
How does exercise affect the cardiovascular system?
It allows the heart to pump more blood, increases blood vessel flexibility, and helps to get rid of plaque build up.
What is the difference between an antibiotic and an antiviral?
Antibiotics attack and destroy bacteria. Antivirals do not kill the virus, but can prevent the spread of it and can assist in recovery time.
Describe the difference between a gamete and a zygote.
A gamete is haploid and becomes a zygote when an egg become fertilized. A zygote is a diploid cell that rapidly divides before becoming a blastocyst.
Around week 9
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