Anatomy Test 3

Lakukan tugas rumah & ujian kamu dengan baik sekarang menggunakan Quizwiz!

What determines hair color?

# and type of melanin

superficial, partial-thickness burn

(first-degree burn) -only epidermis harmed -inflammation -healing in days/weeks (no scar)

deep, partial-thickness burn

(second-degree burn) -epidermis and some dermis harmed -may blister -stem cells in hair follicles & glands help skin regenerate -usually no scarring

full thickness burn

(third-degree burn) -destroys epidermis, dermis, accessory structures -prolonged exposure to heat, flames, hot liquids -some healing from margins, but most require skin grafts/substitutes

What happens in the skin when body temperature drops?

*thermoreceptors signal hypothalamus *vasoconstriction of dermal blood vessels *vasodilation of deep blood vessels *sweat glands inactive *muscles contract involuntarily (shivering)

What happens in the skin when body temperature rises?

*thermoreceptors signal hypothalamus *vasodilation of dermal blood vessels *vasoconstriction of deep blood vessels *activation of sweat glands

physiological factors that affect skin color

- Oxygenation in blood of dermal: pinkish cyanosis (blush) - Vasociation/Vasoconstriction of dermal blood vessels (cold, shock, sick) - accumulation of carotene (pigment in plants) - jaundice

types of sensory receptors in dermis

-Lamellated (Pacinian) corpuscles -Tactile (Meissners') corpuscles

apocrine sweat glands

-axillary and groin areas -open to hair follicles

Vitamin D

-calcium absorption

specialized sweat glands

-cerimunous glands (earwax) -mammary glands (milk)

What makes up the extracellular matrix of bone?

-collagen -inorganic salts

Vitamin C

-collagen synthesis

mesenchymal cells

-differentiate into osteoblasts in primitive tissue -become periosteum at end of intramembranous ossification

types of sweat (sudiferous) glands

-eccrine (merocrine) -apocrine -specialized

types of melanin

-eumelanin (brownish-black in epidermis) -pheomelanin (reddish-yellow)

parts of hair follicle

-hair root -hair bulb (contains dividing matrix cells) -hair shaft

rule of 9s percentages

-head=9% -arms=18% -torso=36% -legs=36% -perineum=1%

parts of the sternum

-manubrium -body -xiphoid process

eccrine (merocrine) sweat glands

-most prevalent -mostly water, some salts -open to body surface through pores

parts of nails

-nail plate -nail bed -nail matrix

layers of dermis

-papillary layer (thinner) -reticular layer

sex hormones

-promote bone formation -stimulate ossification

functions of bone

-provide body shape -protect/support body structures -aid body movements -contain tissue that produces blood cells -store inorganic salts

types of heat loss through skin

-radiation ***primary method -conduction -convection -evaporation

four qualities of inflammed skin

-redness (rubor) -swelling (tumor) -warmth (calor) -pain (dolor)

growth hormone

-stimulates cartilage cell division

levels of the epidermis

-stratum corneum -stratum lucidum -stratum granulosum -stratum spinosum -stratum basale

types of burns

-superficial, partial-thickness (first degree) -deep, partial-thickness (second degree) -full thickness (third degree)

extra bone examples

-sutural bones (Wormian) -small sesamoid bones in tendons -vertebrae

layers of epiphyseal plate

-zone of resting cartilage -zone of proliferating cartilage -zone of hypertrophic cartilage -zone of calcified cartilage

When do secondary ossification centers in long bones appear?

0-5 yrs.

How thick is the epidermis?

0.7-1.2 mm

How thick is epidermis on palms and soles?

0.8-1.4 mm

How thick is the dermis?

1-2 mm

How much bone is remodeled each year?

10%-20%

There are ____ thoracic vertebrae

12

How many bones are in the appendicular skeleton?

126

How many facial bones are there?

14 (13 immovable, one movable)

At what age do upper limbs and scapulae ossify?

15-18 (F) 17-20 (M)

At what age do lower limbs and hip bones ossify?

16-21 (F) 18-23 (M)

4 fontanels close between _____________ and __________________

2 mos. and 2 years

How many bones are in an adult human body?

206

At what age to sternum, clavicles, and vertebrae ossify?

21-21 (F) 23-25 (M)

How many bones are in the skull?

22

At what age are all bones ossified?

23 (F) 25 (M)

How many vertebral bones are there in an adult?

26

When does bone growth begin?

3 mos. prenatal

When does ossification of long bone appear?

3 mos. prenatal

How many vertebral bones are there in an infant?

33

There are ___ coccygeal vertebrae

4

When do primary ossification centers in long bones appear?

4 mos. prenatal

There are ___ sacral vertebrae

5

There are ____ lumbar vertebrae

5

At what age does rapid ossification occur from centers of long bones?

5-12/14 yrs.

There are ____ cervical vertebrae

7

How much of bone matrix is composed of inorganic salts?

70%

How many cranium bones are in the skull?

8

How many bones are in the axial skeleton?

80

What is normal deep body temperature?

98.6 F 37 C

rule of nines

A system that assigns percentages to sections of the body, allowing calculation of the amount of skin surface involved in the burn area

What is another name for a dendritic cell?

Langerhans cell

What are other names for a tactile cell?

Merkel cell (epidermis) Meissner's cell (dermis)

Does the # of melanocytes vary between people?

No, just the amount of melanin produced and size/distribution of granules

functions of skin

PREPS -protective barrier -regulation of body temp -excretion -production of vitamin D -sensation

intramembranous ossification

Process of replacing embryonic connective tissue to form intramembranous bone

tactile cells

act as sensory receptors for light touch along with sensory nerve endings for tactile discs in dermis

What allows bones to keep growing longer?

active cartilage cells along epiphyseal plates

When does the coccyx fuse?

ages 25-30

The ____________________________ hold the upper and lower teeth

alveolar processes

What type of sweat gland responds to emotions, pain, or arousal?

apocrine glands

type of tissue in hypodermis

areolar and adipose

What tissue is the papillary layer of dermis composed of?

areolar tissue (dermal papillae)

What covers the epiphysis?

articular cartilage

arrector pili muscle

attached to follicle; contracts w/ cold or fear

The coronoid process of the mandible serves as a __________________________

attachment site for chewing muscles

epiphyseal plate

band of cartilage that persists between ossification centers

endochondral bones

begin as masses of hyaline cartilage -most of skeleton -femur, humerus, radius, tibia -phalanges -vertebrae

hair papilla

blood vessels contained here to nourish hair

formation of bone by osteoblasts

bone deposition

term for constant replacement of bone

bone remodeling

removal of bone by osteoclasts

bone resorption

osteoclasts

bone-destroying cells (break down calcified matrix)

osteoblasts

bone-forming cells (replace cartilage)

What's another name for spongy bone?

cancellous bone

What type of vertebrae is the smallest?

cervical

How can bones thicken? (even if length is calcified)

compact bone deposited under periosteum

type of tissue in dermis

connective tissue

What makes up the dermis?

connective tissue and muscle fibers

What's another name for compact bone?

cortical bone

another name for skin

cutaneous membrane

How does the stratum corneum form?

deeper cells reach superficial skin, become packed, and develop desmosomes

What tissue is the reticular layer of dermis composed of?

dense irregular tissue

bone shaft

diaphysis

What type of sweat gland responds to temperature?

eccrine

Where do bone deposition and bone resorption occur?

endosteum and periosteum

Which layers are considered skin?

epidermis and dermis

expanded end of bone

epiphysis

Ethmoidal air cells form __________________________

ethmoidal sinuses

Where are sebaceous glands found?

everywhere except palms and soles

What causes acromegaly?

excess growth hormone in adults

What causes gigantism?

excess growth hormone in children

What is acne caused by?

excess sebum

the area above the pelvic brim

false/upper/greater pelvis

What is sebum made of?

fatty material & cell debris

What do inorganic salts contribute to bone?

hardness

convection

heat loss from skin to circulating air currents

evaporation

heat loss through evaporating sweat carried from skin

conduction

heat moves from warm skin to cool object it's touching

What is the name for blood cell formation?

hematopoiesis

hyperthermia

high body temperature -radiation is less effective -body gains heat from hotter air -dry skin, dizziness, weakness, nauseousness, headache, rapid pulse

The deltoid tuberosity is found on the ________________

humerus

What is the most abundant inorganic salt in bone?

hydroxyapatite (calcium phosphate)

examples of inorganic salts in bone

hydroxyapatite, magnesium ions, sodium ions, potassium ions, carbonate ions

What monitors the set point of body temperature?

hypothalamus

Where is the most heat produced?

in active cells through metabolism -liver -skeletal & cardiac muscle

radiation

infrared rays go from warm skin to cool environment

albinism

inherited gene mutation; absence of melanin

What causes pituitary dwarfism?

insufficient growth hormone in children

two types of bones

intramembranous and endochondral

What type of ossification involves mesenchymal cells?

intramembranous ossification

hardening and dehydration of epidermal cells

keratinization

flattened, old, dead epidermal cells

keratinocytes

Tactile (Meissner's) corpuscules

light touch receptors

hypothermia

low body temperature -involuntary shivering from hypothalamus -confusion, lethargy, loss of reflexes & consciousness -organ failure

Where is marrow found?

medullary cavity and spaces

The crista galli holds _________________________

membranes that enclose the brain

widening part between diaphysis and epiphysis

metaphysis

The superior and middle nasal concha support ____________________

mucous membranes

The styloid process and mastoid process serve as ________________________

muscle attachment sites

What is calcium used for?

nerve impulse conduction and muscle contraction

bifid spinous process

on vertebrae C2-C6

shallow cut

only epidermis effective; margin cells divide rapidly

The cribriform plates serve as __________________

openings for olfactory axons

transverse foramina

openings in cervical vertebrae for arteries

intramembranous bones

originate w/in sheet-like layers of connective tissue -broad, flat skull bones -clavicles -sternum -some facial bones (mandible, maxilla, zygomatic)

Vitamin A

osteoblast and osteoclast activity

lunula

pale, half-moon over matrix

air-filled cavities in some cranial and facial bones that reduce skull weight and increase voice intensity

paranasal sinuses

What controls bone resorption?

parathyroid gland

What regulates blood calcium?

parathyroid hormone and calcitonin

area inside the pelvic brim

pelvic inlet

area outside the pelvic brim

pelvic outlet

What bone forms the main portion of the nasal septum

perpendicular plate of the ethmoid bone

dendritic cells

phagocytes that protect skin and lower tissues from infection

Lamellated (Pacinian) corpuscles

pressure receptors

What causes bone growth to stop?

primary and secondary ossification centers meet

area in center of diaphysis where bone tissue first replaces cartilage

primary ossification center

endochondral ossification

process of replacing hyaline cartilage to form an endochondral bone

melanocytes

produce melanin, which is distributed to keratinocytes for protection

The styloid process is found on the

radius and ulna

deep cut

reaches dermis/subcutaneous layer -blood vessels break; clotting -clot + dried tissue = scab -epithelial cells reproduce to fill gap -fibroblasts secrete collagen to bind -growth factors stimulate new tissue -phagocytic cells remove dead cells -excess collagenous fibers may form elevated mass (scar)

Where does hematopoiesis occur?

red bone marrow

thyroid gland function

replaces cartilage w/ bone in epiphyseal plates

What do collagen fibers contribute to bone?

resilience

inflammation

response to injury/stress involving dilation of blood vessels

osteoporosis

results from loss of bone mineralization

Where besides the cervical spine can you find transverse foramina?

sacral canal

What shifts the body weight to the legs?

sacroiliac joints

area of ephiphysis where spongy bone forms later in development

secondary ossification center

The _________________ holds the pituitary gland

sella turcica

In which bones is red marrow found?

skull, ribs, sternum, clavicles, vertebrae, pelvis

parathyroid gland function

stimulates bone breakdown

How does physical stress affect the skeletal system?

stimulates bone growth

What does yellow marrow do?

stores fat (replaces some red marrow w/ age)

type of tissue in epidermis

stratified squamous

Where are melanocytes located?

stratum basale

Where are tactile cells found?

stratum basale

single row of cuboidal/columnar cells that divide and grow; includes melanocytes

stratum basale

3-5 layers of flattened cells that contain keratin and shriveled nuclei

stratum granulosum

clear cells; nuclei, membranes, and organelles invisible

stratum lucidum

Where are dendritic cells found?

stratum spinosum

many layers of flattening cells with central, large, oval nuclei and developing karatin fibers

stratum spinosum

environmental factors that affect skin color

sunlight, UV light from sunlamps, X-rays

The zygomatic arch is formed by the _________________________ and ______________________

temporal process and zygomatic process

What causes cleft palate?

the left and right palatine processes don't fuse correctly in fetal development

What controls bone deposition?

thyroid gland

the patellar ligament articulates with the __________________

tibial tuberosity

canaliculi

tiny passageways through which cell processes of osteocytes exchange nutrients and waste

keratin

tough, fibrous, waterproof protein made and stored in cells

area below the pelvic brim

true/lower/lesser pelvis

the rib tubercle articulates with the ____________

vertebrae

spinous process of C7

vertebral prominens

types and number of ribs

vertebrosternal (TRUE) --> 7 pairs vertebrochondral (FALSE) --> 3 pairs floating ribs (FALSE) --> 2 pairs

What causes retardation of bone development?

vitamin A deficiency

What causes slender, fragile bones?

vitamin C deficiency

What causes rickets and osteomalacia?

vitamin D deficiency

thin layers of dead cartilage cells and calcified matrix in epiphyseal plates

zone of calcified cartilage

- Rows of older cells left behind when new cells appear that thicken epiphyseal plate, lengthening the bone - Matrix calcifies, cartilage cells (chondrocytes die)

zone of hypertrophic cartilage

rows of young, mitotic cells in epiphyseal plates

zone of proliferating cartilage

closest to epiphyses; resting cells anchor epiphyseal plates to epiphyses

zone of resting cartilage


Set pelajaran terkait

microeconomics practice questions for test 1

View Set

Esophagram & Upper GI (Section 1)

View Set

Exam 5 - Cellular Regulation & Thermoregulation

View Set

Ch. 68: Nursing Management: Emergency, Terrorism, and Disaster Nursing

View Set

NU273 Week 3 PrepU: Assessing the Peripheral Vascular System

View Set