EMT-B: Chapter 5 The Human Body Notes

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subcutaneous tissue

Causes aging/wrinkling from the decrease in this substance

Arteriovenous shunts close or sphincters close

How do capillaries respond to blockage?

grows 3 years, rests for 1-2

How does follicle growth grow by time?

contracts and relaxes skeletal muscle

How does the body move?

electrical system

How does the heart function without the central nervous system?

30% heart, arteries, capillaries 70% veins and venules

How is blood distributed % wise throughout the body?

by the amount of ligaments and bone structure

How is the motion of bones established?

1-3 hours

How long does it take to transfer food from the stomach to duodenum (small intestine)

206

How many bones are in the human body?

8

How many carpal bones are in the wrist?

6

How many liters of air can be in a guy's lungs?

6

How many liters of blood are in an adult?

2-3

How many liters of blood are in children?

8-10

How many liters of fluid is secreted into the GI tract?

300

How many milliliters are in an infant?

4-6

How many minutes until the brain and heart die without oxygen?

600

How many muscles are in the body?

7

How many tarsal bones are in the foot?

450 ml

How much blood is in the spleen?

6-10 minutes

How much time does it take to clot?

Absorb food and water for stool

Purpose of the Large Intestine?

liver

Renders poison harmless, clotting factors are formed here, .5-1 L Bile assists in fat digestion, is a large mass of blood vessels and cells, all blood in GI tract passes through, 25% of cardio output, and 1.5 L goes through the ----- per minute.

feedback group

Term for when heightened levels of alertness occur after the adrenal glands are activated and deactivated.

Respiratory Compromise

The inability for the body to move gas effectively.

exocrine

This gland secretes 2 Liters of pancreatic enzyme juice to aid in digestion.

endocrine

This pancreatic system produces insulin to regulate glucose in blood.

Beta 2

This receptor is found in the lungs (tells the bronchioles to bronchodilate (relax)

Beta 1

This receptor makes the heart beat harder and faster (nothing but the heart)

Alpha 2

This receptor relaxes (vasodilates) (nothing but smooth muscle of arteries)

Alpha 1

This receptor starts vasoconstriction (nothing but smooth muscle of arteries)

kidney

This structure uses millions of filters called nephrons to retain vital cell components and pass the rest off as urine.

blocked airway, swelling in airway, trauma to mouth and neck, swallowing of blood or vomitus

What are 4 ways that Respiratory compromise can occur?

pulmonary capillaries

What are on the walls of alveoli?

erythrocytes

What are red blood cells called?

Cranium and Facial

What are the 2 groups of bones that make up the skull?

cerebrum, cerebellum, brain-stem

What are the 3 portions of brain?

normal tidal volume, regular rhythm, rise and fall on both sides, abdomen movement

What are the characteristics of normal breathing?

venae cavae, aorta, pulmonary arteries and veins

What are the great vessels?

lobes

What are the lungs divided into?

intercostal, abdominal, pectoral, diaphragm

What are the muscles involved with breathing?

provide shape, protect fragile organs, and allow movement

What are the notable functions of bones?

cecum, colon, rectum

What are the parts of the large intestine?

muscle retractions, nasal flare, seesaw respirations

What are the signs that an infant or child is not breathing?

fontanels

What are the soft spot's on a baby's head without bones?

manubrium, body, xiphoid process

What are the three components of sternum?

protect the body, regulate temperature, and transmit information

What are the three functions of the skin?

control fluid balance, filter wastes, control pH

What are the three purposes of the urinary system?

exocrine and endocrine

What are the two pancreas glands/portions?

leukocytes

What are white blood cells called?

carotid

What arteries supply blood to the bone?

radius, ulna

What bones make up the forearm?

midbrain

What brain piece keeps you awake?

evaporation

What causes the body to cool while sweating?

brain stem

What controls breathing?

nervous system

What controls the size of arteries and veins?

arterioles and venules

What do capillaries connect to?

constrict

What do capillaries do in cold temperature to keep blood from radiating heat?

dilate

What do capillaries to in warm environments to increase the radiation of heat?

CO2

What do the lungs control in order to control the pH level?

spleen

What filters the blood and removes old red blood cells?

heart and arteries

What has high pressure?

veins

What has low pressure?

rings of cartilage

What holds the trachea from collapsing with air moving through?

ovum

What is a specialized egg cell called?

impaired heart function

What is related to cardiogenic or obstruction shock?

Cardiac Output

What is the amount of blood moved in a minute?

flexion

What is the bending of the joint?

larynx

What is the dividing line between the upper and lower airway

decrease CO2 increase O2

What is the function of respiratory system through ventilation and respiration?

autonomic breathing

What is the function of the medulla oblongata?

8-12th ribs

What is the liver protected by?

Pia mater

What is the lowest level of the meninges?

decrease CO2

What is the main reason for breathing?

skeletal muscle

What is the major muscle mass of the body?

meninges

What is the membrane of the central nervous system?

arachnoid

What is the middle layer of the meninges?

left ventricle

What is the most muscular pumping chamber in the heart?

33 vertebrae

What is the number/name of bones in the spinal column

cricoid cartilage

What is the only complete circle cartilage?

throat

What is the oropharynx?

digest fat

What is the purpose of bile?

12 to 20

What is the range for an adult's safe breathing rate?

extension

What is the stretching of the joint?

biliary system

What is the system of bile ducts and the gall bladder? The gall bladder holds 60-90 ml of bile and empties when food is in the duodenum.

vulva

What is the term for external female genitalia?

systole

What is the term for ventricle contraction?

diastole

What is the term for ventricle relaxation?

parietal pleura

What is the tissue lining the chest wall / thorax?

dura mater

What is the top layer of the meninges?

gravity, skeletal muscle contraction, intrathoracic pressure from breathing

What is venous blood flow aided by?

hinge joint

What kind of joint does the knee have?

germinal layer

What layer of the skin helps produce skin color by producing pigment granules?

frontal lobe

What lobe Controls the voluntary motions/muscles?

occipital lobe

What lobe interprets visual impulses from the optic nerve?

ovaries, fallopian tubes, uterus, cervix, vagina

What make up the female reproductive system?

testicles, epididymis, vasa deferentia, prostate gland, seminal vessels, penis

What make up the male reproductive system?

vibration of the vocal cords

What makes sound in the larynx?

midbrain, pons, medulla oblangata

What makes up the brainstem?

brain and spinal cord

What makes up the central nervous system?

pia mater, dura mater, arachnoid

What makes up the meninges?

clavicle, scapula, humerus

What makes up the shoulder girdle?

duodenum, jujenum, ileum

What makes up the small intestine?

muscle contractions

What moves food in esophagus?

insulin

What moves glucose into cells?

parasympathetic

What nervous system controls the heart's rate and beat? (weak or slow)

VRG, DRG, pneumotaxic center, apneustic center

What parts of the brain work to regulate the right amount of air?

20

What percent of the heart's blood goes through the kidneys?

subcutaneous tissue

What serves as an insulator for the body and a reservoir for energy in the skin?

peritoneal sack

What the abdomen is held in

visceral pleura

What tissue covers the lungs?

circular muscle, elastic

What tissue makes up an artery?

blood

What transports O2 and nutrients to various tissues and cells in the body?

92% H20, 7% proteins

What's blood?

brain, aorta's walls, carotid arteries

Where are the other oxygen sensors?

11th rib to 3rd lumbar vertebrae

Where do the kidneys lye?

diffusion

Why does O2 shift from alveoli to blood?

maintain adequate pressure

Why does the body adjust to a loss in blood?

baroreceptors

allow the brain to receive information about blood pressure. Found in the arch of the aorta and the carotid arteries.

tachypnea

fast breathing rate

tachycardia

fast heart rate

cardiac output

heart rate x stroke volume=

hypercarbia

high levels of CO2

14

how many bones make up the skull

2

how many lobes are in the left lung

3

how many lobes are in the right lung

12 pair

how many ribs are there?

1/3

how much of the nose is made up of bone

shock

inadequate flow of blood and oxygen or perfusion

reflex arc

minimum electrical energy necessary to bypass cNS to motor signals in spinal cord.

vision network

optic nerve-> stimulated-> occipital portion

Fowler's

position to help patients breathe easier and control airway

Trendelenburg's

position to keep blood at the core of the body

sensory network

sensory-> CNS-> motor-> muscle

hypovolemic shock

shock from a decrease in blood volume

bradypnea

slow breathing rate

bradycardia

slow heart rate

sinoatrial node

the pacemaker of the heart and is responsible for the initiation of the heart beat.

islets of Langerhans

this is the name for the endocrine glands in the pancreas.

atrioventricular node

this node is the brake pedal (the back up) (vagus nerve) (cranial nerve #10)

arm, forearm, hand, fingers

what 4 things compose the upper extremity?

elbow, wrist, finger joints

what are the joints of the upper extremity?

coronal, transverse, sagittal

what are the three anatomic planes of the body

sympathetic nervous system

what controls the fight or flight response?

iliac bones and sacroiliac joints

what does the sacrum bond to?

atlas

what is the first cervical vertebra called?

vertebral disks

what lies between vertebrae?

autonomic and somatic

what makes up the peripheral nervous center?

patient's

what reference point do health care providers use?

unilateral

what to call one sided structures

physical, emotional stress

when are the pons both used

lactic acid

A replacement for cells' oxygen when it is limited or unavailable.

hypoxia

Body's lack of oxygen.


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