Anatomy

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where are the fusion of the ilium, ischium, and pubic bone visible

acetabulum

what does the posterior superior iliac spine form

back dimples

The ______ layer of the epidermis is where the we can see the highest rate of cell proliferation.

basale

what are the structural levels of organization?

chemical, cellular, tissue, organ, organ systems, organismal

which bones have a coronoid process

mandible and ulna

what bones form the sternum

manubrium, body, xiphoid process

fibula

smaller lateral bone. articulates with tibia at both ends. it is support for the tibia

what tissue is this

smooth muscle tissue

dark areas on an x ray correspond with

soft tissues

what is a true pelvis

space below the pelvic brim

Layers of integumentary system

Skin: Epidermis, Dermis Hypodermis

What is the false pelvis?

Space above the pelvic brim

what number is pollox

1

How many thoracic vertebrae are there?

12

thoracic vertebrae

12

When do long bones stop growing?

15-23 yrs

how many floating ribs are there

2 (14-15)

how many fused bones form the coccyx

4

coccyx

4 fused

How many lumbar vertebrae are there?

5

lumbar vertebrae

5

how many false ribs are there

5 (8-13)

Sacrum

5 fused

sacrum

5 fused vertebrae

cervical vertebrae

7

how many cervical vertebrae

7

how many true ribs are there

7 (1-7)

Neighboring epithelial cells can be joined together by: Gap junctions Desmosomes All of these can join neighboring epithelial cells Tight junctions

All of these can join neighboring epithelial cells

subclavian groove

Allows for passage of subclavian artery. Found on the superior side of the 1st rib about midway

desmosomes

Anchoring junctions that prevent cells from being pulled apart

The vertebra prominens gets its name because of the same kind of bony projection from Question 1. Which vertebra is also called vertebra prominens?

C7

what does the labrum do

Deepens the hip socket, decreases friction between two bones, add stability

Perichondrium

Dense irregular connective tissue membrane covering cartilage

bones of the orbit

Frontal, zygomatic, sphenoid, ethmoid, lacrimal, maxillae

sacral apex

Inferior portion of the sacrum

tight junctions

Membranes of neighboring cells are pressed together, preventing leakage of extracellular fluid

epiphysial fracture

Separation of the epiphysis of a long bone

sacral promontory

Where the first sacral vertebrae bulges into pelvic cavity

A Computerized Axial Tomography (CAT) scan uses _______________ energy.

X-ray

Looking at an adipocyte from white fat, we can see that the majority of cell is occupied by:

a lipid droplet

axis function

allows head to rotate

Hemidesmosomes

anchor cells to the basement membrane

name the three cranial fossa

anterior, middle, posterior

A "plane" in anatomical terminology is:

any flat surface through which an individual is viewed

Stratified epithelia often contain cells of varying shapes. By convention, we name a stratified epithelium by the shape of the cells on the _______ surface of the stack of cells.

apical

epithelial polarity

apical (free) and basal surfaces (supported by connective tissue)

On a hot Summer day, what type of secretion would a sweat gland from your armpit most likely be secreting?

apocrine

This type of loose connective tissue underlies almost all epithelia in the body, and it surrounds almost all small nerves and vessels.

areolar

Which type of connective tissue is considered "a model" of the general connective tissue structure?

areolar

loose connective types

areolar, adipose, reticular

The anatomical term "axillary" refers to the:

armpit

apocrine sweat glands

armpits, anal, genital areas lead to normal body odor

what is C1

atlas

anterior longitudinal ligament

attaches to the body of the vertebrae and intervertebral discs. prevents hyperextension

posterior longitudinal ligament

attaches to the intervertebral discs. prevents hyperflexion

what is C2

axis

4 major parts of sphenoid bone

body, lesser wings, greater wings, ptergoid process

greenstick fracture

bone breaks incompletely

describe steps of endochondral ossification

bone collar forms around diaphysis. blood vessels invade and convert perichondrium to periosteum. chondrocytes create a strip where they die and calcify. periosteal bud invades and outside cartilage continues to grow. diaphysis elongates and epiphysi calcify

comminuted fracture

bone fragments into three or more pieces

spiral fracture

bone has been twisted apart

compression fracture

bone is crushed

bone appositional growth

bones grow wider

Serosal membranes surround all of the following organs except: the heart the lungs the brain the intestines

brain

cardiac muscle tissue characteristics

branching at the intercalated discs. one nucleus cells

depressed fracture

broken bone portion is pressed inward

heel bone

calcaneus

osseous tissue characteristics

calcified matrix with many collagen fibers

what tissue is this

cardiac muscle tissue

proliferation zone

cartilage cells undergo mitosis

Microvilli and cilia are both extensions of the cell membranes of particular types of epithelial cells. Which one of them actively moves back and forth (for example, to move mucus up the respiratory tract)?

cilia

stratum lucidum

clear layer. only present in thick skin. dead keratinocytes

Reticular fibers in connective tissues are most closely related to:

collagen fibers

hyaline cartilage characteristics

collagen fibers are matrix. formed by chondrocytes

cauda equina

collection of spinal nerves below the end of the spinal cord

characteristics of connective tissue

common origin, degrees of vascularity, extracellular matrix

the pelvic girdle is a __________ bony ring

complete, attaching to sacrum

What type of fracture would most likely happen as a consequence of osteoporosis?

compression

dermis

connective tissue proper with lots of blood vessels and nerves.papillary and dermis

classification of connective tissue

connective tissue proper, cartilage, bone, and blood

what makes a true rib

connects directly to sternum via its own costal cartilage

ligamentum flavum

connects the laminae of adjacent vertebrae

what makes it a false rib

connects to another rib costal cartilge

what landmark orients the clavicle

conoid tubercle - points inferioposteriorly

sacral canal

continuation of vertebral canal - contains cauda equina

What are the 4 sutures of the skull?

coronal, sagittal, squamous, lambdoidal

Epithelial tissue

covers outside of the body and lines organs and cavities as lining or glands

what are the two groupings of skull bones

cranial and facial

what are the major body cavities

cranial, vertebral, thoracic, abdominal, pelvic,

cartilage function

cushions by resisting tension

Osteogenesis ___________ as we age.

decreases

stratum basale

deepest layer of epidermis. contains stem, merkel, and melanocytes cells

reticular dermis

dense irregular connective tissue with collagen and elastic fibers. make up cleavage and flexion lines

what tissue is this

dense irregular elastic connective tissue

what tissue is this

dense regular connective tissue

light areas on x ray correspond to

dense tissues

For long bones to grow longer, where is the newly formed bone matrix deposited at?

diaphyses

Which type of microscope provides the lowest magnification?

dissecting

three types of microscopes

dissecting, compound/digital , florescence microscopy

Artifacts are ________ in anatomical images.

distortions

name the cranial bones

frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital, sphenoid, ethmoid, mandible, maxillary,

What type of cell-cell connection allows the exchange of small molecules between two neighboring cells?

gap junctions

what type of connection do canaliculi use

gap junctions

fontanelles

gaps of unfused sutures

types of sweat glands

eccrine(non erupting) and apocrine(partial erupting)

Epidermis derives from

ectoderm

epithelial tissue develops from

ectoderm

what tissue is this

elastic cartilage

A carcinoma is any cancer that arises from __________ tissue.

epithelial

describe how an exocrine gland is formed

epithelial cells grow and push into underlying tissue. A cord of epithelial cells forms. The lumen forms; inner cells form the duct and the outer cells produce secretion.

describe how an endocrine gland is formed

epithelial cells grow and push into underlying tissue. a cord of epithelial cells forms. the connecting cells atrophy and are cut off from epithelial surface

endocrine gland

epithelial tissue that releases hormones into blood

The only bone that would not appear on a lateral view of an intact skull would be the:

ethmoid

Which bone(s) form(s) the nasal septum?

ethmoid and vomer

elastic cartilage location

external ear, epiglottis

What are the two main components of tissues?

extracellular matrix, cells

Endocrine glands contain ducts true or false

false

name 2 sexual dimorphisms between male and female pelvises

female: tilted forwards to birth children, wider male: narrow, thicker bones

Compared to a similar volume of epithelial tissue, connective tissue has many ________ cells and much ______ extracellular matrix.

fewer, more

What are the two main components of the extracellular matrix?

fibers and ground substance

What type of cartilage can we find in the pubic symphysis?

fibrocartilage

what tissue is this

fibrocartilage

function/location of loose connective tissue proper reticular

form stroma that support other cell types. found in lymphoid organs (lymph nodes, bone marrow, and spleen)

location and function of transitional epithelium

found in the bladder. very stretchy so the cells are fully flattened when the organ is stretched

areolar loose connective tissue proper

gel matrix with all three fiber types, fibroblasts, macrophages, mast cells, and white blood cells

what does a thoracic vertebra look like

giraffe

stratum granulosum

grainy layer. flattened dying keratinocytes

appositional growth

grow bigger on edges - added by chondroblasts

interstitial growth

grow from within - chondrocytes divide to add more

"Manus" is the anatomical terms for the:

hand

central canal

haversian canal carries artery vein and nerve

The mediastinum of the body contains the:

heart

bone repair process

hematoma forms. fibrocartilaginous callus forms, bony callus forms, bone remodeling occurs

dense elastic connective tissue proper characteristics

high proportion of elastic fibers (looks scrunchy)

dense elastic connective tissue proper functions/locations

high recoil ability following stretching. found in large arteries!!! and within walls of bronchial tubes

stratum corneum

horny. made of dead keratinocytes and highly connected by desmosomes

The deltoid muscle attaches to the:

humerus

costal cartilage is made of

hyaline cartilage

endochondral ossification

hyaline cartilage turns to bones of limbs, vertebral column, ribcage, and facial bones

cartilage types

hyaline, elastic, fibrocartilage

sacral hiatus

inferior opening of the sacral canal

pelvic outlet

inferior opening of the true pelvis

endosteum

inner layer of connective tissue in bone

what are all but 2 vertebrae separated by?

intervertebral discs

fibrocartilage locations

intervertebral discs, pubic symphysis, discs of knee joint

dense irregular connective tissue characteristics

irregular arranged collagen fibers. fibroblast is major cell type. very strong because of many planes of fibers

orient the fibula with a landmark

malleolus is lateral

When we sit, our weight is now mostly supported by the:

ischium

nail

keratinized layers of epidermis

in anatomical position, where is the radius in the arm

lateral side

which side of the bone has more collagen?

lateral side

stratified cuboidal epithelium

layers of cuboidal cells. found in large ducts (sweat, mammary, salivary) and used for protection

why is the repair of cartilage more unlikely as we leave the womb?

less blood supply, chondroblasts have matured, damaged cartilage is mostly replaced with fibrocartilage

What is the fovea capitis?

ligament that attaches acetabulum to head of femur

All of the following vertebral structures are anterior to the spinal cord except the: vertebral bodies anterior longitudinal ligament intervertebral disks ligamentum flavum posterior longitudinal ligament

ligamentum flavum

lunule

little moon

nail bed

living layers of epidermis

skeletal muscle characteristics

long, cylindrical, multiple nucleus cells; obvious striations

Adipose tissue is a type of ________ connective tissue.

loose

connective tissue proper classifications

loose connective and dense connective

what is this tissue

loose connective tissue proper reticular

CAT scan

lots of X rays integrated into a 3D image

which part of the vertebral column is convex

lumbar

eccrine sweat glands

main function is cooling

elastic cartilage functions/locations

maintain structure shape found in ear and epiglottis

what are the 5 sinuses of the skull

mastoid, sphenoidal, ethmoid, nasal, maxillary

calcification zone

matrix becomes calcified, cartilage cells die and matrix deteriorates

functions of the integumentary system (4)

mechanical protection, waterproofing, UV protection, temp regulation, excretion

tibia

medial bone that participates in knee and ankle movements

which arch is responsible for the missing area of a footprint

medial longitudinal arch

three arches of the foot

medial longitudinal arch, transverse arch, lateral longitudinal arch

hair shaft layers

medulla, cortex, cuticle

parietal serosa

membrane faces the body wall

visceral serosa

membrane that faces the organs

what is the fetal skeleton made of

mesenchyme and hyaline cartilage

intramembranous ossification

mesenchyme turns to the flat bones of skull, mandible, and clavicles

where does the dermis originate from

mesoderm

where is connective tissue derived from

mesoderm - mesenchyme

PET scan

method of imaging using positron emissions

dens

modified body of C1 that is what the skull rotates on

what does a lumbar vertebra look like

moose

Compared to epithelial tissue, an equal volume of connective tissue would have:

more blood cells

elastic cartilage characteristics

more elastic fibers in the matrix

hyaline cartilage forms

most of the fetal skeleton

smooth muscle tissue function/locations

movement of substances along passageways. found along digestive system and in walls of hollow organs

What type(s) of tissue originate(s) from mesenchyme?

muscle, connective, blood

Epithelial tissue contains which one of the following?

nerves

nervous tissue cell types

neurons and neuroglia

ossification zone

new bone forms

papillary dermis

nipple like. areolar connective tissue beneath epidermis

smooth muscle characteristics

no striations. single nucleus in layered cells. involuntary

location and function of pseudostratified columnar

non-ciliated in sperm ducts. ciliated lines trachea and upper respiratory tract. function is secreting and moving mucus

hypertrophic zone

older cartilage cells enlarge

muscle tissue types

skeletal, cardiac, smooth

the nucleus pulposus is the

only remaining part of the notochord

is the pectoral girdle open or closed

open - incomplete bony ring attached to sternum

5 major paired openings of sphenoid bone

optic canal, superior orbital fissure, foramen rotundum, foramen ovale, foramen spinosum

The foramen rotundum is just lateral to the _________.

optic foramen (optic canal)

what tissue is this

osseous

describe intramembranous ossification

ossification centers develop in mesenchyme and turn into osteoblasts. osteoid is secreted and calcified. woven bone and periosteum form. compact bone replaces woven bone and red marrow develops

orient epiphysial plate growth

ossification zone always is closest to diaphysis

__________ are responsible for bone deposition

osteoblasts

__________ are responsible for bone resorption

osteoclasts

what are inside lacunae

osteocytes

types of bone cells

osteocytes, osteoblasts, osteoclasts

2 layers of periosteum

outer fibrous layer and inner osteogenic layer

2 layers of dermis

papillary and reticular

dense regular connective tissue proper characteristics

parallel collagen fibers. major cell type is fibroblast

what is the largest sesamoid bone in the body

patella

name the three serous cavities

pleural (lungs), pericardial (heart), peritoneal (GI tract)

characteristics of epithelial tissue

polarity, specialized contacts, supported by connective tissue, avascular but innervated, regeneration

ground substance

portion of extracellular matrix, made of interstitial fluid, cell adhesion proteins, and proteoglycans

nervous tissue characteristics

presence of neurons

Where does bone remodeling occur?

primarily from endosteum

sebaceous glands

produce sebum as holocrine (bursting) glands

What are the 4 zones of the epiphyseal plate?

proliferation zone, hypertrophic zone, calcification zone, ossification zone

cardiac muscle tissue function and locations

propels blood into circulation as it contracts. involuntary control. found in the walls of the heart

gap junctions

provide cytoplasmic channels between adjacent cells

what does the ligamentum teres do

provides stability to the femoral head

connective tissue

provides support and protection for entire body

dense connective tissue types

regular, irregular, elastic

location and functions of loose connective tissue proper adipose

reserve nutrient storage, insulation, supports and protects organs. found in hypodermis around kidneys, eyes, in abdomen, and breasts.

loose connective tissue proper reticular

reticular fibers in a loose ground substance

lamellae

rings around osteon

what are the most common carpals to break?

scaphoid and pisiform

which bones have a coracoid process

scapula

ventral sacral foramina

series of openings that face anteriorly

serous cavities of the body are lined with

serous membranes

what type of bone is the pisiform

sesamoid

stratified columnar epithelium

several layers of columnar cells. function is protection and secretion. found only in male urethra

stratified squamous epithelium function and location

several layers of squamous cells. protects underlying tissue in high traffic areas. found in many linings such as skin, vagina, and mouth.

costal groove

sharp inferior edge

Sesamoid bones can also be classified as:

short

what does a cervical vertebra look like

sid the sloth

2 main types of fractures

simple and compound

goblet cells location

simple columnar epithelium

pseudostratified columnar epithelium

simple columnar epithelium that appears stratified. nuclei lay at different angles above basement membrane

layers of epithelial tissue

simple, stratified

simple cuboidal epithelium

single layer of cube shaped cells. secretion and absorption. found in kidney tubules, ovary surface, ducts/secretory portions of small glands

simple squamous epithelium function and locations

single layer of flattened cells. allow materials to diffuse and filtrate where protection isn't important. Located in kidneys, alveoli, lymphatic vessels

simple columnar epithelium

single layer of tall cells with oval nuclei. often contain goblet cells. often ciliated or have microvilli. absorption and secretion are main functions. found in digestive tract (non-ciliated) and in bronchi and uterus (ciliated)

stratum spinosum

spiny layer. has keratinocytes in mitosis

shapes of epithelial tissue

squamous, cuboidal, columnar

Our feet support us through all kinds of rough terrains! The skin covering the plantar surface of your feet is most likely made up of _______ epithelium.

stratified

epidermis tissue type

stratified squamous epithelium

transitional epithelium

stratified squamous that appear in rounded shapes

layers of epidermis

stratum corneum, stratum lucidum, stratum granulosum, stratum spinosum, stratum basale

Which layer of the epidermis would you not expect to see in a histology slide of the skin of a person's brachial region?

stratum lucidum

bone grows along __________

stress lines

what anatomical landmark orients the ulna?

styloid process is inferiomedial

what anatomical landmark orients the radius

styloid process is on the inferiolateral side

sacral base

superior of sacrum

osseous function and location

support and protection. bones

osteons

support pillars

hyaline cartilage function/locations

supports and reinforces/high stress tolerance. found on the ends of long bones (arterial cartilage) costal cartilage, nose, and trachea

atlas function

supports the head - in control of up and down movement of head

The correct anatomical term to refer to the calf region is:

sural

where does the humerus tend to break?

surgical neck

dense regular connective tissue proper function.locations

tendons and ligaments. very strong when pulled in one direction

what is the pelvis

the fusion of ilium (2), ischium (2), pubic bone (2)

pelvic inlet

the largest diameter within the pelvic brim

The apical surface of an epithelial cell lining the trachea faces:

the lumen of the trachea (where the air is)

orient the tibia with a landmark

the malleolus is medial

in anatomical position, where is the ulna in the arm?

the medal side

what is the pelvic brim

the opening through which a baby is birthed that makes a line

sacral ala

the sides/wings of the sacrum

The extracellular matrix of most types of connective tissues is produced by:

the tissue's young cells

What do hair, nails and the skin have in common?

they all have keratin

What is true about Sharpey's fibers?

they help attach periosteum to the bone

fibrocartilage characteristics

thick collagen fibers but matrix is less firm than hyaline

which part of the vertebral column in concave

thoracic

Imaging techniques

transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (3D)

nervous tissue function and locations

transmit electrical signals to send and receive messages. found in brain, spinal cord, and nerves

which arch is responsible for superior curve of foot

transverse arch

what do cervical vertebrae have that makes them unique from other vertebrae

transverse process

All exocrine glands produce products that are secreted onto the body surface or into some body cavity. true or false

true

true or false The anatomy of each bone in the human skeleton reflects the stresses most commonly placed on it.

true

what are the attributes of being a vertebrate? Name at least 4

tube within a tube bilateral symmetry dorsal hollow nerve cord notochord segmentation pharyngeal pouches

what are the bones of the nasal cavity

turbinates: anterior nasal conchae (ethmoid), middle nasal conchae (ethmoid), inferior nasal conchae (it's own bone) Nasal Septum: perpendicular plate (ethmoid), vomer (separate bone)

Sonography (Ultrasound)

use of sound waves to produce images

MRI

uses magnetic fields and radio waves to produce images that show types of soft tissue

Periosteum

vascular connective tissue that cover bone

adipose loose connective adipose

very little extracellular matrix. nucleus of cells pushed against each other

perforating canals

volkmans canals run perpendicular

skeletal tissue function and locations

voluntary movement and control. found in skeletal muscles

loose connective tissue proper adipose

what is this tissue

dense irregular connective tissue

what tissue is this

hyaline cartilage

what tissue is this

loose connective tissue proper - areolar

what tissue is this

nervous tissue

what tissue is this

skeletal muscle tissue

what tissue is this

function and location of dense irregular connective tissue proper

withstand high tension and structural strength. found in dermis and joints

location and function of areolar loose connective tissue proper

wraps and cushions organs. found under epithelial tissue and packages organs

facial bones

zygomatic, nasal, lacrimal, palatine, vomer, inferior nasal conche, hyoid

when does ossification occur

~8 weeks


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