Cardiovascular System
Blood Pressure Measurement/ECG
Axial Vasculature
Appendicular Vasculature
Respiratory System
100
This is the muscle layer of the heart.
What is myocardium
100
This records the electrical activity of the heart during the cardiac cycle
What is electrocardiography
100
These two arteries branch right of the Brachiocephalic trunk.
What is Right common carotid and right subclavian artery.
100
These arteries arches over their respective lung and passes posterior to the clavicle
What are the subclavian arteries
100
This is the basic airflow in lungs
What is bronchi to bronchioles to alveoli
200
These are the four chambers of the heart.
What is Right and left ventricles and right and left atria.
200
This is also known as the "pacemaker" in the heart located in an atrium.
What is Sinoatrial node.
200
This is the hole in the diaphragm that the aorta passes through to become the abdominal aorta
What is the aortic hiatus.
200
This artery wraps around the humerous
What is the circumflex humeral
200
These are the narrow air passage beneath each conchae and has a superior, middle, and inferior portion
What are nasal meatuses
300
This sinus is directly connected to the great cardiac vein and is below the pulmonary veins.
What is coronary sinus
300
This is the name of blood pressure when the vessels are at work
What is systole
300
These arteries branches from the external common carotid and supply blood to various parts of the face. (Name at least 3)
What is the Superficial Temporal Artery, Maxillary artery, facial artery, supraorbital artery, ophthalmic artery, and occipital artery.
300
This artery is the most common place to take a pulse and descends laterally through the forearm along the radius
What is the radial artery.
300
This lines the roof of the nasal fossa.
What is Olfactory mucosa
400
This wall separates the VENTRICLES.
What is interventricular septum.
400
This is what a blood pressure reading of 140/90 would be considered
What is hypertension.
400
These are the five parts of the "Circle of Willis".
What is the posterior/anterior communication arteries, the posterior/anterior cerebral arteries, and internal carotid artery.
400
These three veins are responsible for draining the blood of the upper limbs (arms).
What are the cephalic, basillic, and brachial veins.
400
These are the three parts of the pharynx
What are the nasopharynx, oropharynx, and laryngopharynx
500
This is the blood flow through the heart starting from with deoxygenated blood and ending with oxygenated blood.
What is blood from superior/inferior vena cava to right atrium. Right atrium through right av(tricuspid) valve to right ventricle. Right ventricle through pulmonary valve into pulmonary trunk. Pulmonary arteries to lungs then returns through pulmonary veins to left atrium. From left atrium through left AV(bicuspid) valve into left ventricle. Through aortic valve into descending and ascending aorta.
500
The QRS Complex in an ECG trace represents this
What is Ventricular depolarization.
500
These are the three main arteries branching from the celiac trunk.
What is Splenic artery, left gastric artery, and common hepatic artery
500
This is the longest vein in the body and travels along the medial portion of the leg and thigh. Portions are commonly excised and used in grafts in coronary bypass surgery.
What is the Great Saphenous Vein.
500
This is the flap of tissue that guards the glottis and directs food and drink to esophagus.
What is epiglottis.