Exam 2

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

A centrifuged sample of blood shows 53% plasma, 1% buffy coat, and 46% erythrocytes. What percentage of the blood is composed of leukocytes and platelets?

1%

What percentage of the total number of cardiac muscle cells are pacemaker cells?

1%

What is the average lifespan of erythrocytes?

100-120 days

Stage 2 hypertension results if resting blood pressure is higher than:

140/90 mm Hg

A patient has a heart rate of 70 beats per minute, an EDV of 110 ml, and an ESV of 70 ml. What is the patient's cardiac output?

2.8 L/minute

Calculate the end-systolic volume (ESV) if the end-diastolic volume (EDV) in a resting heart is 110 ml and stroke volume (SV) is 70 ml.

40 ml

How much blood does the average adult have?

5 L

What percentage of the blood is composed of plasma?

55%

What is the average lifespan of a platelet?

7-10 days

Normal blood pH should fall between __________.

7.35 and 7.45

Approximately how much blood is pumped from each ventricle during the ventricular ejection phase?

70 ml

What percentage of atria blood flows passively into the ventricles?

80%

What is the mean arterial pressure (MAP) given a systolic pressure of 130 mm Hg and diastolic pressure of 70 mm Hg?

90 mm Hg

What is the average value for mean arterial pressure (MAP)?

95 mm Hg

Which hormone decreases cardiac output by decreasing blood volume and preload?

Atrial natriuretic peptide

What hormone is released to decrease blood pressure?

Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)

Which of the following blood types would agglutinate if donated to a person with blood type A+?

B-

What kind of ion channels are unique to pacemaker cells?

HCN channels

Which of the following blood types is compatible with B- during a transfusion?

O-

Which of the following paths does an action potential in the heart normally take?

SA node, atrial contractile cells, AV node where it is delayed, AV bundle, right and left bundle branches, purkinje fibers, ventricular contractile cells

Which antigens does a person with blood type A- have on the surface of his or her erythrocytes?

a antigens

According to the Frank-Starling law, a bigger preload will result in __________.

a stronger contraction

What factors are related to anemia?

abnormal hemoglobin, decreased hematocrit, and decreased hemoglobin

Which of the following chemical messengers decreases heart rate?

acetylcholine

Which of the following molecules decreases heart rate, and thus cardiac output and blood pressure?

acetylcholine

Which of the following terms refers to the force the ventricles must overcome to eject blood into their respective arteries?

afterloadWhich of the following events can be heard most easily with a stethoscope?

What plasma protein is most important for the blood's colloid osmotic pressure?

albumin

A negative feedback mechanism will cause _____ if blood pressure drops.

an increase in heart rate, stroke volume, and vasocontriction

Excessive vasodilation can lead to a condition known as ____.

anaphylactic shock

What hormones increase blood pressure?

angiotensin-II, norepinephrine, antidiuretic hormone (ADH)

What arteries contribute to the cerebral arterial circle/circle of Willis?

anterior and posterior communicating arteries, internal carotid arteries, anterior and posterior cerebral arteries

Which of the following antibodies does a person with type B+ blood have in their plasma?

anti-a antibodies

What can be used interchangeably?

antibody and agglutinin

Carbohydrate groups on the surfaces of erythrocytes determine blood type and are known as __________.

antigens

The ABO blood group is based on which antigen(s)?

antigens A and B

What is the largest artery in the body?

aorta

Where does the left ventricle send blood?

aorta

The left subclavian artery branches directly from the:

aortic arch

Nora was exposed to radiation that caused her red bone marrow to make fewer red blood cells. This condition is known as __________.

aplastic anemia

What blood vessels do ventricles always pump blood into?

arteries

____ carry blood away from the heart, whereas ___ carry blood toward the heart.

arteries, veins

Which of the following pathways represents the systemic flow of most blood?

artery, arteriole, capillary bed, venule, and vein

The P wave on an electrocardiogram (ECG) represents the depolarization of cells in the __________.

atria

The P wave on an electrocardiogram (ECG) represents the depolarization of cells in the:

atria

Which of the following hormones decrease cardiac output by decreasing blood volume and preload?

atrial natriuretic peptide

Which hormone decreases cardiac output by decreasing blood volume and preload?

atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)

What allows the atria and ventricles to depolarize and contract separately?

atrioventricular (AV) node delay

Tissue perfusion is largely controlled by ______ to ensure that blood flow meets the cells' needs.

autoregulation

Which leukocyte is the least common and functions to mediate inflammation?

basophil

What would be the approximate blood pressure in a blood vessel leaving the kidneys in an individual lying down?

below 20 mm Hg

Which of the following characteristics is associated with erythrocytes?

biconcave shape

The mitral valve is the clinical name for the ______________.

bicuspid valve

Which of the following products from the breakdown of hemoglobin is excreted as a waste product by the liver?

bilirubin

What causes a bruise to appear greenish in the skin?

biliverdin

The most important force driving reabsorption at the venous end of a capillary is _____.

blood colloid osmotic pressure

Water in the blood exerts pressure on the walls of capillaries, generating ________.

blood hydrostatic pressure

What might happen if the papillary muscles and/or chordae tendineae stopped functioning?

blood would leak back into the atria from the ventricles

There are two _________________ in comparison to the one __________.

brachiocephalic veins; brachiocephalic artery

What cardiac dysrhythmia does a patient have with a resting heart rate of 50 beats per minute?

bradycardia

Blood flowing through the vertebral artery will enter the ____.

brain

The lungs receive systemic blood supply by way of the ____.

bronchial arteries

How can hydrophobic steroids travel in the blood?

by binding to hydrophilic transport proteins

Which of the following ion channels are time-gated closing channels?

calcium ion channels

What ions are necessary for both the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of the coagulation cascade?

calcium ions

Which of the following characteristics do platelets have?

capable of oxidative catabolism

What are the three main factors that influence blood pressure?

cardiac output, resistance, and blood volume

Autorhythmicity in the heart is a function of ________.

cardiac pacemaker cells

Autorhythmicity in the heart is the responsibility of:

cardiac pacemaker cells

What condition results from excess fluid in the pericardial cavity compressing the heart and reducing the capacity of the ventricles to fill with blood?

cardiac tamponade

From superior to inferior, the major branches of the abdominal aorta are:

celiac trunk, superior mesenteric artery, renal arteries, gonadal arteries, inferior mesenteric artery, common iliac arteries

What structure attaches the cusps of the atrioventricular valves to the papillary muscles?

chordae tendineae

Which coronary artery supplies the left atrium and parts of the left ventricle?

circumflex artery

Which of the following events can be heard most easily with a stethoscope?

closing of atrioventricular valves

Some rat poisons contain a toxin that blocks the liver's ability to use vitamin K. Animals that consume this poison would have problems with __________.

coagulation

Which antigens does a person with blood type A- have on the surface of his or her erythrocytes?

coagulation

Which of the following structures connects vessels through vascular anastomoses?

collaterals

Which pressure remains the same along the length of a capillary?

colloid osmotic pressure

Pulmonary arteries have ____ blood pressure compared to systemic arteries.

considerably lower

Which of the following cell populations does not spontaneously generate action potentials in the cardiac conduction system?

contractile cells

Inotropic agents affect __________.

contractility

Which of the following factors does not contribute to venous blood return?

contractions of the right ventricle of the heart

What is another name for the Rh antigen?

d antigen

Certain drugs used to treat dysrhythmias, called local anesthetics, work by blocking voltage gated sodium ion channels and slowing the entry of sodium ions into the cell during an action potential. What effects would you see?

decrease depolarization of the cell

Which of the following functions is not associated with erythropoietin?

decrease production of the protein hemoglobin

Which of the following stimuli is detected by a chemoreceptor?

decreased blood oxygen concentration

The right side of the heart receives ________.

deoxygenated blood from the systemic circuit

A patient, whose foot has become numb from lack of circulation, may not have a _____ pulse.

dorsalis pedis

The main artery that crosses the ankle and enters the foot, supplying the anterior side of the foot, is known as the _____.

dorsalis pedis artery

An excess amount of water in the interstitial fluid is known as ____.

edema

What provides a graphic representation of all the action potentials occurring in the heart?

electrocardiogram

What largely determines preload?

end-diastolic volume (EDV)

Which leukocytes have cytoplasmic granules that stain red and bilobed nuclei?

eosinophils

The visceral pericardium is the same as the ________.

epicardium

What are the three layers of the heart wall from superficial to deep?

epicardium, myocardium, and endocardium

What veins are located in the lower limb?

external iliac veins, popliteal veins, lateral plantar veins

What event initiates the intrinsic or contact pathway of coagulation?

factor xii contacts exposed collagen fibers

Small solutes can pass through small pores in some capillaries known as ____.

fenestrations

What is the most superficial layer of the pericardial sac?

fibrous pericardium

Which opening in the interatrial septum of the fetal heart connects the right and left atrium?

foramen ovale

High-pressured blood in the ventricles ________.

forces the semilunar valves open

Which of the following events must occur first during hemostasis?

formation of thrombin

Which of the following blood vessels are associated with the coronary sinus?

great cardiac

The superficial vein that is often used for bypass grafts is the:

great saphenous vein

What cell gives rise to all formed elements?

hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)

The physiology of blood flow in the cardiovascular system is known as _____.

hemodynamics

What is the oxygen-binding protein found in erythrocytes?

hemoglobin

What process does agglutination promote?

hemolysis

What clotting disorder results from an inadequate amount of the Christmas factor (IX)?

hemophilia b

What process involves a series of events that minimizes the amount of blood lost from an injured blood vessel?

hemostasis

Abdominal circulation, where venous blood is drained from the stomach and the small and large intestines, first enters the liver through the:

hepatic portal system

Into what vein do the splenic, gastric, superior mesenteric, and inferior mesenteric veins drain?

hepatic portal vein

What veins drain into the inferior vena cava?

hepatic veins, internal and external iliac veins, splenic veins

Blood pressure is equivalent to __________.

hydrostatic pressure

Decreased cardiac output may lead to ____.

hypotension

How does angiotensin-II affect blood pressure?

increased blood volume

How does epinephrine affect blood pressure?

increased cardiac output

Which of the following factors would increase cardiac output to the greatest extent?

increased heart rate and increased stroke volume

How does norepinephrine affect blood pressure?

increased peripheral resistance

The apex of the heart is __________.

inferior

Which of the following statements best describes the apex of the heart?

inferior tip of the heart and points toward the left side

Most veins below the diaphragm drain into the __________.

inferior vena cava

Looking in a microscope, what are the visible structures that join cardiac muscle cells?

intercalated discs

What characteristic differentiates cardiac muscle cells from skeletal muscle cells?

intercalated discs

Which of the following structural components is only found in cardiac muscles?

intercalated discs

What surface groove separates the right and left ventricles?

interventricular septum

Unlike skeletal muscle action potentials, cardiac muscle action potentials __________.

involve calcium voltage-gated channels

During what phase is the S1 heart sound first heard?

isovolumetric contraction phase

Which of the following statements describes the total refractory period of cardiac muscle?

it is longer than the total refractory period for skeletal muscle

In which direction will water move when hydrostatic pressure exceeds colloid osmotic pressure at the arteriolar end of a capillary?

it is pushed out of the capillary by filtration

What organ serves as the control center for the regulation of erythropoiesis?

kidney

The artery often used to bypass a blocked coronary artery and restore blood flow to the myocardium is the _____ artery.

left internal thoracic

What arteries branch off the aortic arch?

left subclavian artery, left common carotid artery, brachiocephalic artery

Which cardiac chamber has the thickest wall?

left ventricle

Which chamber generates the highest pressure during systole?

left ventricle

Which of the following organs produce most of the plasma proteins?

liver

Which of the following is not a risk factor for coronary artery disease or myocardial ischemia?

low blood pressure

Damage to the external iliac artery will affect delivery of blood to the __________.

lower limb

Which type of leukocyte may produce antibodies?

lymphocyte

What cells are categorized as agranulocytes?

lymphocytes and monocytes

Platelets are cell fragments derived from __________.

megakaryocytes

What artery has the smallest diameter?

metarteriole

During leukopoiesis, basophils are derived from __________.

myeloblasts

Net filtration pressure (NFP) is equal to the:

net hydrostatic pressure minus the net colloid osmotic pressure

What is the most common type of leukocyte in a healthy adult?

neutrophil

The main local autoregulatory mechanism of cardiac muscle tissue is ____.

oxygen

Does the pulmonary vein carry oxygenated or deoxygenated blood?

oxygenated

Which wave on the electrocardiogram (ECG) corresponds with the ventricular filling phase of the cardiac cycle?

p wave

A damaged atrioventricular (AV) bundle or AV node will primarily affect the length of the __________.

p-r interval

What nerves send impulses to the medulla oblongata caused by an increase in blood pressure?

parasympathetic nerves, vagus nerve (CN X), glossopharyngeal nerve

Which of the following structures is associated with the atria?

pectinate muscles

During what part of the action potential will calcium ions enter the contractile cell?

plateau phase

What is a contractile cell with a membrane potential of 0 mV experiencing?

plateau phase

Hemostasis is mediated by which of the following formed elements?

platelets

What name does the femoral artery take as it emerges in the posterior thigh?

popliteal artery

Blood flow through the capillary bed is regulated by ______.

precapillary sphincters

The degree of stretch experienced by the sarcomeres in the ventricle cells before they contract is called __________.

preload

Blood flow is directly proportional to _____ and inversely proportional to ____.

pressure gradient, resistance

What is the function of the valves in the heart?

prevent backflow of blood through the heart

Which of the following functions is not associated with blood?

protecting internal organs

What substances inhibit coagulation?

protein c, heparan sulfate, antithrombin-iii

The right side of the heart pumps deoxygenated blood into the __________.

pulmonary arteries

Which of the following blood vessels is not a great blood vessel of the heart?

pulmonary arteries

The ____ is the only route in which arteries carry less oxygen than veins.

pulmonary circuit

Which vessel is guarded by a semilunar valve at its base?

pulmonary trunk

Which of the following vessels carries oxygenated blood?

pulmonary vein

Oxygenated blood is delivered to the left atrium through the ____________.

pulmonary veins

Which of the following pacemaker cell populations has the slowest intrinsic rate of depolarization at about 20 times per minute?

purkinje fiber system

What obscures atrial repolarization on an electrocardiogram (ECG)?

qrs complex

Which wave on the electrocardiogram (ECG) represents ventricular depolarization?

qrs complex

Which electrocardiogram (ECG) finding can be used to measure heart rate?

r-r interval

What is initiated by a rapid influx of sodium ions into contractile cells creating a positive membrane potential inside the cell?

rapid depolarization phase

All red blood cells in an adult originate in the __________.

red bone marrow

What functions are associated with erythropoietin?

replacement of yellow bone marrow with red bone marrow, reduces the amount of time needed for new erythrocytes to mature, speeds up the rate of erythropoiesis

In erythropoiesis, what is the name of the cell that ejects its nucleus and other organelles prior to being released into the bloodstream?

reticulocyte

What valve prevents the backflow of blood from the right ventricle into the right atrium?

right atrioventricular valve (tricuspid valve)

Under what conditions will the myogenic mechanism slow blood flow into a capillary bed?

rising arteriolar pressure

The right and left atria depolarize and contract following the arrival of the action potential from the __________.

sinoatrial (SA) node

What normally serves as the pacemaker of the entire heart?

sinoatrial (SA) node

What type of capillaries have large pores within their endothelial cells and are the leakiest?

sinusoidal capillaries

One mechanism that increases the rate venous blood returns to the heart is by:

skeletal muscle pumps

Which organ traps older erythrocytes so they will be removed from circulation?

spleen

The celiac trunk branches almost immediately into what arteries?

splenic artery, common hepatic artery, left gastric artery

What is the volume of blood pumped out by one ventricle per heart beat?

stroke volume (SV)

What two values are needed in order to calculate cardiac output (CO) for a ventricle?

stroke volume (SV) and heart rate (HR)

What two values are needed to calculate cardiac output (CO) for a ventricle?

stroke volume (SV) and heart rate (HR)

Into which vein does blood in the external jugular vein drain?

subclavian vein

The small intestine receives its blood supply from the:

superior mesenteric artery

What is edema?

swelling

What blood vessels handle the highest blood pressure?

systemic arteries

Which blood vessels handle the highest blood pressure?

systemic arteries

Which blood vessels experience the sharpest decrease in blood pressure?

systemic arterioles

The vessels that deliver oxygen to the tissues of the body are part of the __________.

systemic circuit

Tissue perfusion in the heart decreases during ventricular ____ and increases during ventricular ____.

systole, diastole

Which of the following happens immediately after the P wave?

the atria contact

The thoracic organs are drained mainly by:

the azygos system

What is hematocrit?

the percentage of blood composed of erythrocytes

What activity is occurring in the heart during the Q-T interval on an electrocardiogram (ECG)?

the ventricular cells are undergoing action potentials

Which of the following statements best describes how coronary artery anastomoses might help a patient with coronary artery disease?

they provide alternative routes of blood flow when a vessel is blocked

What enzyme coverts fibrinogen to fibrin?

thrombin

What process dissolves a blood clot?

thrombolysis

What condition results in the formation of an inappropriate blood clot?

thrombosis

Which of the following functions is not associated with the heart?

to increase the rate at which erythrocytes

Large, lipid-insoluble molecules cross capillary walls by ___.

transcytosis

The primary function of red blood cells is to __________.

transport oxygen and carbon dioxide

Blood in the right atrium should travel next past the ________.

tricuspid valve and into the right ventricle

The innermost layer of blood vessels, that is composed of endothelium, is known as ____.

tunica intima

Arteries have a much thicker _____ than veins, which signifies their role in controlling blood pressure.

tunica media

Which of the following blood types is considered the universal recipient?

type AB+

A sample reacts with anti-A and anti-B antibodies, but it does not react with anti-Rh antibodies. What is the sample's blood type?

type AB-

Which cranial nerves have a negative chronotropic effect on heart rate?

vagus nerve (CN X)

What is the functional consequence of vascular spasms during hemostasis?

vascular spasms decrease blood vessel diameter to limit blood loss

Select the appropriate pathway for the steps of hemostasis.

vascular spasms, platelet plug formation, coagulation, clot retraction, and thrombolysis

_____ increases the diameter of a blood vessel.

vasodilation

Both the left and right atria receive blood from ________.

veins

Most blood is in the ___.

veins

Which vessels serve as the blood reservoirs of the body?

veins

What factors contribute to venous blood return?

venous valves, respiratory pump, and skeletal muscle pump

Which of the following cardiac dysrhythmias is immediately life-threatening and manifests on the electrocardiogram (ECG) with chaotic activity?

ventricular fibrillation

What vitamin is necessary for certain clotting factors to operate during coagulation?

vitamin k

What chemical is produced by endothelial cells at the site of injury during the first step of platelet plug formation?

von Willebrand factor

The most abundant component of plasma is __________.

water


Set pelajaran terkait

RN- General information- NCLEX STYLE QUESTIONS- MED SURG

View Set

Internal Medicine EORE- Vignettes

View Set

Fundamentals of Nursing - Test 1

View Set

physics misconceptual questions test 3

View Set

Chapter 11 Switch Security Concepts

View Set

Unit 7: Chemical and Waste Management Part 1

View Set