Organ Structures
organ function
Overall knowledge
Defense
what dose it do
100

This bean-shaped structure acts as a tiny filter to trap bacteria and viruses, and it often swells up when you are sick.

a lymph node

100

The main job of this largest organ of the body is to act as a wall to keep pathogens from entering in the first place.

What is skin 

100

This is the general scientific term for any living thing (like a bacteria, virus, or fungus) that causes a disease.

Pathogen or germ 

100

This sticky fluid found in your nose and throat traps dust and pathogens before they can get deeper into your body.

What is Mucus

100

The immune system produces these Y-shaped proteins that latch onto specific pathogens to mark them for destruction.

What are antibodies

200

This soft tissue is found inside the hollow center of your bones,where all blood cells are made.

What is bone marrow

200

These specialized cells travel through your blood vessels to hunt down and destroy invaders.

what is white blood cells 

200

a medical shot that trains your immune system to fight a specific virus without actually making you sick.

What is vaccine

200

If pathogens break through your skin, this "second line" response causes the area to swell, turn red, and heat up to bring in help.

What is inflammation 

200

The body deliberately raises its internal temperature to create this condition, which slows down the reproduction of viruses and bacteria.

What is fever 

300

Located in the upper left side of your abdomen,

What is spleen

300

This organ destroys worn-out blood cells and keeps a backup supply of platelets and white blood cells ready.

What is spleen 

300

This happens when your immune system overreacts to a harmless substance, like pollen, peanuts,

Allergic reaction

300

This line of defense is highly specific, meaning it creates custom weapons to target one exact type of germ.

What is the third line of defense? (Accept: "Adaptive immunity")

300

This process causes redness, swelling, and heat around a cut, bringing more blood and white cells to the injury site to fix it.

What is inflammatory 

400

This small, butterfly-shaped gland sits right behind your Chest 

What is thymus 

400

The primary job of the thymus gland is to train these specific types of white blood cells so they can fight infections.

What is T cells 

400

What number did i say multiple times in my slides 

2

400

These tiny, hair-like structures in your respiratory tract sweep mucus and trapped germs up and out of your airways.

What are cilia

400

This is the specific action where a white blood cell engulfs, "eats," and digests a pathogen.

What is phagocytosis

500

These two rings of lymphatic tissue sit at the back of your throat

What are tonsils

500

vessels drains excess fluid from your body tissues, filters it, and returns it safely to your bloodstream.

Lymphatic system

500

This type of illness occurs when the immune system gets confused and mistakenly attacks the body's own healthy cells.

What is an autoimmune disease

500

Found in your stomach, this highly acidic liquid destroys most of the pathogens that manage to enter through the food you eat.

What is stomach acid

500

The immune system creates these specific cells after an infection so that if the same germ returns years later, you won't get sick again.

What is memory cells