HBS EOC Final Study

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231 Terms

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What is the function of the urinary system?
To filter blood, remove waste in the form of urine
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What are the four organs involved in the urinary system?
Kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra
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What is the function of the kidney?
To filter blood and create urea
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What are ureters?
Tubes that transfer the urea from the kidney to the bladder
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What is the bladder?
Holds the urine until it can be removed
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What is the urethra?
Transports the urine out of the body
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What is the function of the nervous system?
Information collection and response, control of basic body functions
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What organs/structures are involved in the nervous system?
Brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves, sensory organs
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What are peripheral nerves?
Nerves that carry signals to and from limbs
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What is the function of the immune system?
Prevents and eliminates infections
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What are the organs of the immune system?
Thymus, tonsils, appendix, spleen, lymph nodes, skin
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What is the thymus?
Promotes production of WBCs
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What are the tonsils?
Trap pathogens as they enter the body
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What is the appendix?
Stores good bacteria
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What is the spleen?
Filters blood
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What are the lymph nodes?
Filter lymph fluid
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What is the function of the digestive system?
To break down food into nutrients to fuel the body
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What are the organs of the digestive system?
Teeth/tongue, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, rectum, anus, gall bladder, liver
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What is the pharynx?
Connects the mouth to the esophagus
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What is the rectum?
The final section of the large intestine
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What is the anus?
Part of the body from which stool is released
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What is the gall bladder?
Small membranous sac that stores bile and releases it into the large intestine
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What is the liver?
Makes bile for the small intestine
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What is the function of the respiratory system?
Takes in oxygen for cells and removes cellular CO2 waste.
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What are the organs of the respiratory system?
Nasal cavity, pharynx, larynx, trachea, epiglottis, bronchi,, alveoli
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What is the function of the cardiovascular system?
Moves blood throughout the body
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What organs/structures make up the cardiovascular system?
Atria, ventricles, arteries, arterioles, veins, venules, capillaries
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What is the function of the endocrine system?
Responsible for secretion of hormones
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anterior
front
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ventral
front (belly)
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posterior
back
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dorsal
back
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superior
higher, above
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inferior
lower, below
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lateral
side
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medial
toward the middle
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proximal
on limb, nearer to attachment point
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far
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distal
on limb, farther from attachment point
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near
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superficial
more external, surface of the body
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deep
more internal
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What does epithelial tissue do?
COVERS
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lines organs and body cavities
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How is epithelial tissue structured?
Layers (one kind of cells inside, different kind outside)
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What does muscle tissue do?
MOVES
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makes up all muscles, including the heart
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How is muscle tissue structured?
Long and narrow so they can contract to allow movement
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What does nervous tissue do?
SIGNALS
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includes neurons
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How is nervous tissue structured?
long axons to allow signals to travel distances, branches for connections
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What does connective tissue do?
JOINS
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adipose (fat), blood, bone, cartilage, etc.
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How is connective tissue structured?
fairly consistent matrix to allow it to fill spaces of various shapes/sizes
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What is the axial skeleton?
the skull and trunk
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PROTECTS soft organs like brain, heart, lungs
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What is the appendicular skeleton?
the arms and legs
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used for LOCOMOTION
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What is forensic anthropology?
the study of mankind; bones at a crime scene
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Male skull eye sockets
square
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Female skull eye sockets
rounded
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Male skull mandible
u-shaped
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Female skull mandible
v-shaped
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Male pelvis
heart-shaped
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Female pelvis
rounded
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Male end of pelvis
angled-in coccyx
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Female end of pelvis
wider pubic arch
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What bones can be used to determine height?
femur and humerus
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What is the best predictor of age in a pelvis?
more fused = older
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DNA stands for
deoxyribonucleic acid
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DNA makes up ______, which make up _______.
genes, chromosomes
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Each gene codes for a ______, which determines a _______.
protein, trait
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(ex, hemoglobin protein, oxygen carrying RBC trait)
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What are biometrics?
"life measurement" used for security purposes
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ex. iris scans, voice, analysis, fingerprinting
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What is used to amplify DNA (make many samples of DNA)
polymerase chain reactions (PCR)
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What kind of chemicals cut DNA?
restriction enzymes
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What is used to analyze the size of DNA fragments?
gel electrophoresis
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Restriction enzymes cut DNA into smaller fragments called ______.
restriction length polymorphisms (RFPL), are what is seen on gel electrophoresis
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What is gel electrophoresis?
how RFPLs get seperated
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smaller bits of DNA are lighter, so bits get separated by size and allow to tell individuals apart
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What charge does DNA have?
negative
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What kind of gel does gel electrophoresis use?
agarose gel
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When DNA is placed in the electrophoresis well, it is near a _______ electrode. When electricity is started, the move toward _______ electrode.
negative, positive
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Communication in the human body can be what two types?
chemical or electrical
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What are consequences of miscommunication in the body?
uncontrolled movements, lack of balance, paralysis, mental illness, etc.
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What is sensory input?
sense information that is carried to the brain
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What is motor output?
muscle movement as a response to a stimulus
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What is the peripheral nervous system (PNS)?
the nerves of the body not including the brain and spinal cord
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What is the central nervous system (CNS)?
the nerves of the brain and spinal cord
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What parts of the brain control necessary bodily functions?
cerebellum (balance, coordination), brainstem (breathing, swallowing, heart rate, etc.)
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What parts of the brain control emotion?
hippocampus (memory), amygdala (anger), hypothalmus (desire)
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Which lobes of the brain are connected to intelligence and higher cognitive functions?
frontal lobe, parietal lobe, temporal lobe, occipital lobe
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What part of the brain allows speech?
Broca's area
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What part of the brain allows voluntary movement?
Motor cortex
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What part of the brain processes sensory information?
Sensory cortex