The primary function of the alveoli in the lungs.
What is a gas exchange?
This molecule is the primary carrier of genetic information in cells and is located in the nucleus.
What is DNA?
The condition where prolonged muscle disuse leads to decreased muscle size and strength.
What is Muscle Atrophy?
This structure transmits force from muscle to bone.
What is a Tendon
This memberous system is directly adjacent to the Tranverse tubules, having the role of storing and releasing Ca2+.
What is the Sarcoplasmic Recticulum.
This stress hormone is released by the adrenal glands.
What is cortisol?
This type of transport requires ATP to move substances against their concentration gradient.
What is Active transport?
The maximum amount of oxygen a person can use during exercise.
What is VO2 max?
Type of contraction where force is produced but no movement occurs?
What is Isometric Contraction?
A fracture where the bone pierces through the skin, increasing the risk of infection.
What is a compound (open) fracture?
The part of the brain responsible for balance and coordination
What is the cerebellum?
The process by which glucose is synthesized from non-carbohydrate sources
What is Gluconeogenesis?
The part of the autonomic nervous system that reduces heart rate after exercise.
What is the Parasympathetic Nervous System?
The primary driver of muscle force production.
What is Motor Unit Recruitment?
This autoimmune disease overstimulates the TSH receptor, causing excess thyroid hormones.
What is Grave's disease (Hyperthyriodism)?
The part of the nervous system that controls involuntary functions like heart rate and digestion.
What is the Autonomic Nervous System?
The passive movement of molecules from an area of higher concentration to a lower concentration without the use of transport proteins.
What is Simple Diffusion?
The nervous system division that controls voluntary movement.
What is the Somatic Nervous System
This muscle contraction produces the most force because the muscle resists stretching while under tension.
What is Eccentric Contraction?
The most abundant neurotransmitter/chemical in the peripheral nervous system (found in Somatic and Autonomic braches)
What is Acetylcholine?
The muscle that runs along the palmar side of the forearm and is sometimes absent in humans.
What is the palmaris longis?
This type of passive transport moves molecules through a membrane using protein channels.
What is Facilitated Diffusion?
The term for the air left in the lungs after maximal exhalation.
What is Residual lung Volume?
What are the collagenous connective tissues in a muscle that provide support, transmit force, and help with elasticity?
What is the Epimysium, Perimysium, Endomysium?
What type of muscle found in the afferent and efferent arterioles regulates glomerular filtration by controlling vessel diameter?
What is Smooth muscle?