Call in Sick
I Will Cell My Body
Cell My Junk
Stress Me Out, Daddy
Control My Cravings
Something's Rising and It's Not Insulin
100

Type of prevention that aims to prevent disease from occurring by targeting healthy individuals before they are susceptible, such as vaccinations or seatbelts.

Primary

100

A type of pathogen that enters the host cell to cause damage by using its processes to survive without the use of toxins, which will ultimately cause self-destruction.

Virus

100

As you age and your blood vessels harden over time, will the elasticity of your pulmonary vessels increase or decrease?

Decrease.

100

Lack of oxygen, which causes an increase in lactic acid.

Hypoxia

100

The beta cells of the pancreas secrete this hormone when it detects high levels of blood sugar and when the parasympathetic nervous system kicks in. It helps push glucose into the cell.

Insulin

100

If you have gestational diabetes, will your risk of diabetes increase or decrease later in life?

Increase.

200

Presence of this means you may develop the disease especially if you do not do anything about it.

Risk Factor

200

Does carbon monoxide increase or decrease oxygen bound to hemoglobin?

Decrease

200

Cellular adaptation that involves a decrease in cell size to minimize energy and nutrition consumption; an example would be decreased use of an arm after a fracture

Atrophy

200

Mineralocorticoid that is secreted during stress by conserving urine, increasing blood volume, and increasing blood pressure.

Aldosterone

200

Secreted by the alpha cells of the pancreas in times of stress and starvation.

Glucagon

200

What is the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes?

Type 1: Beta Cell Destruction

Type 2: Insulin Resistance

300

Disease that spreads to many people at the same time in a given area

Epidemic

300

Cellular death in a large area of tissue.

Gangrene

300

Cellular adaptation that refers to the increase in cell size, such as hepatomegaly due to bodily toxins.

Hypertrophy

300

What are the stages of Stress Response?

Alarm, Resistance, and Exhaustion.

300

Where is glycogen stored? And what do you call the process where it is broken down into glucose?

Liver and Muscles

Glycogenolysis

300

Give 3 risk factors of metabolic syndrome.

Age

Sedentary lifestyle

Native Americans/Hispanic Americans

400

Set of signs and symptoms where etiology has not yet been determined.

Syndrome

400

Influx of this electrolyte is involved in coagulative necrosis after ischemia has occurred and after the plasma membrane cannot maintain electro-chemical gradient.

Calcium

400

Type of cellular adaptation pertains to an increase in the number of cells, such as increased red blood cells in high-elevation areas.

Hyperplasia

400

Sudden increase in severity of disease or signs or symptoms.

Exacerbation

400

Widely considered as the best test for diabetes. How often do you need to test?

Hemoglobin A1C; 3 months

400

Give 3 effects of exercise on the body.

Decrease Insulin

Increase Glucagon

Increase Insulin Sensitivity

500

Period when the first signs and symptoms appear which marks the onset of the disease. 

Prodromal

500

Type of irreversible cellular injury that takes place when it suffers injury that DOES NOT directly kill the cell; aka cellular suicide.

Apoptosis

500

Type of cellular adaptation that can lead to cancer.

Dysplasia

500

Cause is due to medications or treatment.

Iatrogenic

500

What A1C level is prediabetes and full diabetes?

5.7-6.4

>6.5

500

Since Diabetes Type I involves "cellular starvation," what two processes of glucose metabolism are involved?

Glycogenolysis

Gluconeogenesis

600

Consequence of a previous disease or injury

Sequela

600

Type of irreversible injury that occurs after ischemia. This alters electrochemical gradient, which then allows calcium to rush into the mitochondria.

Coagulative Necrosis

600

A reversible type of cell injury that occurs due to a malfunction of the sodium-potassium pumps.

Hydropic Swelling
600

Stage after recovery from a disease.

Convalescence

600

Which glucose transporter is insulin dependent and where are they usually found?

GLUT 4; heart, skeletal muscle cells, and adipose cells

600

What are the signs of metabolic syndrome?

HDL Low

High cholesterol (triglycerides)

High blood sugar (insulin resistance)

High blood pressure

Heavy / Hug not achievable