Chapter 1 Review
What is normal body temperature?
37 degrees celsius
What does the principle of complementarity say?
Anatomy and physiology are inseparable. Function always reflects structure. What a structure can do depends on its specific form.
Armpit
Axillary
Pertaining to the cheek
Buccal
What system contains blood vessels that transport blood, which carries oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients, wastes, etc, the heart pumps blood?
Cardiovascular system
Neck region
Cervical
The *blank* body cavity is totally surrounded by bone and provides very good protection to the structures it contains
Cranial
What system breaks down food into absorbable units that enter the blood for distribution to body cells, indigestible foodstuffs are eliminated as feces?
Digestive system
Pertaining to the toes
Digital
The cranial and spinal cavities are parts of the *blank* body cavity
Dorsal
What system contains glands that secrete hormones that regulate processes such as growth, reproduction, and nutrient use (metabolism) by body cells?
Endocrine system
What system's overall function is production of offspring, ovaries produce eggs and female sex hormones, the remaining female structures serve as sites for fertilization and development of the fetus, mammary glands of female breasts produce milk to nourish the newborn?
Female Reproductive systerm
Thigh region
Femoral
Buttock area
Gluteal
Area where trunk meets thigh
Groin
Involve continuous monitoring and regulation of all factors that can change (variables), communication necessary for monitory and regulation, nervous and endocrine systems accomplish communication via nerve impulses and hormones
Homeostatic control mechanisms
What system forms the external body covering and protects deeper tissues from injury, synthesizes vitamin D, and houses cutaneous receptors and sweat and oil glands?
Integumentary system
Back area from ribs to hips
Lumbar
What system picks up fluid leaked from blood vessels and returns it to blood, disposes of debris in the lymphatic stream, houses white blood cells involved in immunity, the immune response mounts the attack against foreign substances within the body?
Lymphatic system/Immunity
What are the necessary life functions?
Maintaining boundaries between internal and external environments, movement, responsiveness, digestion, metabolism, excretion, reproduction, growth.
What system's overall function is production of offspring, testes produce sperm and male sex hormones, and male ducts and glands aid in delivery of sperm to the female reproductive tract?
Male Reproductive system
What system allows manipulation of the environment, locomotion, and facial expression, maintains posture, and produces heat?
Muscular system
What system is the fast-acting control system of the body, it responds to internal and external changes by activating appropriate muscles and glands?
Nervous system
Posterior aspect of head
Occipital
What system keeps blood constantly supplied with oxygen and removes carbon dioxide, the gaseous exchanges occur through the walls of the air sacs of the lungs?
Respiratory system
What system protects and supports body organs, and provides a framework the muscles use to cause movement, blood cells are formed within bones, bones store minerals?
Skeletal system
Belly button area
Umbilical
What system eliminates nitrogenous wastes from the body, regulates water, electrolyte and acid-base balance of the blood?
Urinary system
The abdominopelvic and thoracic cavities are subdivisions of the *blank* body cavity
Ventral
Which body cavity is the bladder located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the large intestine located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the liver located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the ovaries located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the rectum located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the small intestine located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the spleen located in?
abdominopelvic
Which body cavity is the stomach located in?
abdominopelvic
What is responsiveness?
ability to sense and respond to stimuli, withdrawal reflex, control of breathing rate
What is metabolism?
all chemical reactions that occur in body cells, catabolism and anabolism
The thoracic cavity is *blank* to the spinal cavity
anterior, frontal
In humans, the ventral surface can also be called the *blank* surface
anterior/frontal
In the anatomical position, the nose and belly button are on the *blank* body surface
anterior/frontal
The heart is *blank* to the spine
anterior/frontal
What is necessary for adequate breathing and gas exchange in lungs?
appropriate atmospheric pressure
What are the two major divisions of the body?
axial and appendicular
What is the standard anatomical body position?
body erect, feet slightly apart, palms facing forward, thumbs pointed away from the body
What affects the rate of chemical reactions?
body temperature
What is digestion?
breakdown of ingested foodstuffs, absorption of simple molecules into blood
What is reproduction?
cellular division for growth and repair, production of offspring
What are the levels of structural organization?
chemical, cellular, tissue, organ, organ system, organismal
What are nutrients?
chemicals for energy and cell building, carbohydrates, fats, proteins, minerals, vitamins
Which control mechanism determines set point at which variable is maintained, receives input from receptor, and determines appropriate response?
control center
Which body cavity is the brain located in?
cranial
Away from the body surface; more internal
deep (internal)
Farther from the origin of a body part or the point of attachment of a limb to the body trunk
distal
The soles of the feet are the most *blank* part of the body
distal
What is homeostatic imbalance?
disturbance of homeostasis, increase risk of disease, contributes to changes associated with aging
Toward or at the back of the body; behind
dorsal (posterior)
Which control mechanism receives output from control center, provides the means to respond, and response either reduces or enhances stimulus?
effector
Subdivisions of anatomy include:
gross/macroscopic, microscopic, developmental
To study physiology you must:
have the ability to focus at many levels, study basic physical principles, study basic chemical principles
What is the maintenance of relatively stable internal conditions despite continuous changes in environment, a dynamic state of equilibrium, and maintained by contributions of all organ systems?
homeostasis
What is growth?
increase in size of a body part or of organism
In four-legged animals, the ventral surface is the *blank* surface
inferior
The nipples are *blank* to the shoulders
inferior
The knee is *blank* to the thigh
inferior/distal
Away from the head end or toward the lower part of a structure or the body; below
interior (caudal)
Between a more medial and a more lateral structure
intermediate
Away from the midline of the body; on the outer side of
lateral
To study anatomy you must:
master anatomical terminology, observation, manipulation, palpation, auscultation
The heart is *blank* to the lungs
medial
The nipples are *blank* to the armpits
medial
Toward or at the midline of the body; on the inner side of
medial
Which response reduces or shuts off original stimulus?
negative feedback
What are the survival needs?
nutrients, oxygen, water, normal body temperature, appropriate atmospheric pressure
Subdivisions of physiology are based on:
organ systems
What is essential for energy release (ATP production)?
oxygen
Forms a slippery sac around the heart
pericardium
Surrounds the abdominopelvic cavity organs
peritoneum
Covers the lungs and cavity of the thorax
pleurae
Which response enhances or exaggerates original stimulus, may exhibit a cascade or amplifying effect, and usually controls infrequent events that do not require continuous adjustment?
positive feedback
The calves and shoulder blades are on the *blank* body surface
posterior
Closer to the origin of the body part or the point of attachment of a limb to the body trunk
proximal
Which control mechanism monitors environment and responds to stimuli?
receptor (sensor)
What are the components of a control mechanism?
receptor, control center, effector
What is excretion?
removal of wastes from metabolism and digestion, urea, carbon dioxide, feces
If an incision cuts the brain into right and left parts, the section is a *blank* section
sagittal
You are told to cut an animal along two planes so that the paired lungs are observable in both sections. The two sections that meet this requirement are the *blank* and *blank* sections
sagittal, frontal
Which body cavity is the spinal cord located in?
spinal
Toward or at the body surface
superficial ( external)
The thoracic cavity is *blank* to the abdominopelvic cavity
superior
Toward the head end or upper part of a structure or the body; above
superior (cranial)
The knee is *blank* to the toes
superior/proximal
Anatomy is
the study of structure
Physiology is
the study of the function of the body
Which body cavity is the heart located in?
thoracic
Which body cavity is the lungs located in?
thoracic
If the brain is cut so that the superior and inferior parts result, the section is a *blank* section
transverse
Toward or at the front of the body; in front of
ventral (anterior)
What is the most abundant chemical in body, environment of chemical reactions, and fluid base for secretions and excretions?
water