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Anatomical position
Standard positioning of the body as standing; feet together; arms to the side; with head, eyes, and palms of hands forward.

Cells
The basic structural unit of an organism from which living things are crated.

Cellular functions
Processes that include growth, metabolism, replication, protein synthesis, and movement.

Anatomical Directions
Words used to explain relationships of locations of anatomical elements (distal, posterior, medial, etc.)

superior, inferior, lateral, medial, distal, proximal, anterior, posterior
What are the 8 anatomical directions?

Distal
Farther from the trunk of the body

Lateral
Away from the midline of the body
dorsum of hand
top of hand

dorsum of foot
Top of foot

posterior
Back of the body

medial
Toward the midline of the body
anterior
Located towards the front of the body

inferior
Lower on the body, farther from the head

Organ system
A group of organs that work together in performing vital body functions.

Organelle
A specialized part of a cell that has a specific function.
Organ
A self-contained part of an organism that performs a specific function.

Anatomical Planes
Planes dividing the body to describe locations: sagittal, coronal, and transverse.

coronal, transverse, sagittal
What are the 3 anatomical planes?

frontal plane
the coronal plane is also called?
medial plane
the sagitall plane is also called?
Tissue
A group of cells with similar structure that function together as a unit, but at a lower level than organs.

Alveoli
Tiny air sacs in the lungs where exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide takes place.

Asthma
A lung disease characterized by inflamed, narrowed airways and difficulty breathing.

Bronchi
The main passageways directly attached to the lungs.

Bronchioles
Small passages in the lungs that connect bronchi to alveoli.

cystic fibrosis
A genetic disorder that affects the lungs and other organs, characterized by difficulty breathing, coughing up sputum, and lung infections.

nasopharynx (pic)

oropharynx (pic)

laryngopharynx (pic)

larynx (pic)

trachea (pic)

left and right bronchus (picture)

Bronchioles (picture)

Diaphragm (picture)

perfusion
The passage of fluid to an organ or a tissue.
pleura
A membrane around the lungs and inside the chest cavity.

Surfactant
a lipoprotein secreted by the alveoli that lowers the surface tension in the alveoli, reduces the amount of pressure needed to inflate the alveoli, and decreases the tendency of the alveoli to collapse.
tidal volume
Amount of air inhaled and exhaled during normal breathing
trachea
The windpipe; tube leading from the larynx to the lungs; a passage through which air moves in the respiratory system

ventilation
The movement of air in and out of the body via inhalation and exhalation.
pulmonary loop
Carries deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs and back to the heart
systemic loop
Carries oxygenated blood from the heart to the body and back to the heart

arteries
Blood vessels that deliver blood from the heart to other parts of the body.

capillary
Small blood vessels that connect arterioles to venules.

diastole
The portion of the cardiac cycle in which the heart refills with blood; relaxes

heart
The muscle that pumps blood throughout the body.

superior vena cava

Aorta

pulmonary artery

pulmonary veins

right atrium

pulmonary valve

tricuspid valve

right ventricle

inferior vena cava

left atrium

mitral valve

aortic valve

left ventricle

Hemoglobin
The protein in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body.

leukocyte
White blood cells, which protect the body against disease.

lymph
Clear fluid that moves throughout the lymphatic system to fight disease.

lymphocyte
A subtype of white blood cell found in lymph.

plasma
The pale yellow component of blood that carries red blood cells, which blood cells, and platelets throughout the body.

systole
The portion of the cardiac cycle in which the heart expels blood; contract

vein
Blood vessels that carry blood to the heart.

sinoatrial node
pacemaker of the heart

Antibodies
An antigen-binding immunoglobulin, produced by B cells, that functions as the effector in an immune response.

Anus
The opening of the rectum from which solid waste is expelled.
bolus
A mass of food that has been chewed and swallowed.

chyme
The semifluid mass of partly digested food that moves from the stomach to the small intestine.

enzymatic digestion
The break down of food by enzymes for absorption.
gall bladder
The organ that stores bile.

large intestine
Also known as the colon, where vitamins and water are absorbed before feces is stored prior to elimination.

liver
The organ that produces bile, regulates glycogen storage, and performs other bodily functions.

mouth
The oral cavity at the entry to the alimentary canal.

pancreas
The gland of the digestive and endocrine systems that produces insulin and secretes pancreatic juices.

peristalsis
A series of muscle contractions that move food through the digestive tract.

rectum
The last section of the large intestine, ending with the anus.
saliva
The clear liquid found in the mouth, also known as spit.
small intestine
The part of the GI tract between the stomach and large intestine that includes the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum, where digestion and absorption of food occurs.

stomach
The organ between the esophagus and small intestine in which the major portion of digestion occurs.

salivary amylase
Enzyme in saliva that breaks down starch
salivary lipase
What is the enzyme present in saliva that breaks down fats?
gastric lipase
Enzymes produced in the stomach that cleaves fatty acids from glycerol molecules. (breaks down fats)
pepsin
An enzyme in the stomach that breaks down protein
hydrochloric acid (HCl)
Which acid is in the stomach?

Gastrin
Digestive hormone that stimulates sustained secretion of gastric juice from the stomach
ghrelin
A hunger-arousing hormone secreted by an empty stomach
Melatonin
pineal gland hormone released in response to light deprivation and causes drowsiness. It does not respond to low blood pressure.
Oxytocin
is released by the posterior pituitary. It stimulates emotional bonding, lactation, and labor. It does not respond to blood pressure changes.
Bile
A substance produced by the liver that breaks up fat particles. it's stored in the gallbladder.
Aldosterone
Retains salt in the kidneys and results in water retention, which increases blood volume and pressure.
Pancreatic juice
contains trypsin, chymotrypsin, amylase, lipase and bicarbonate, it is secreted by the pancreas.
Proteases
enzymes that break down proteins in digestion
amylase
hormone secreted by salivary glands and by the pancreas; digests starch into disaccharides (breaks down starch)
secretin
Digestive hormone that stimulates the pancreas to release bicarbonate to neutralize acid in duodenum.
somatostatin
Is produced by the anterior pituitary and suppresses growth hormone secretion from the thyroid.
insulin
A protein hormone synthesized in the pancreas that regulates blood sugar levels by facilitating the uptake of glucose into tissues
glucagon
A protein hormone secreted by pancreatic endocrine cells that raises blood glucose levels; an antagonistic hormone to insulin.