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Anatomy & Physiology Final Exam Review sheet Fall 11-12 Name: Date: Chapter 1 1. List and define the characteristics of living things. Digestion- breakdown of food into nutrients that can be absorbed Respiration- gas exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide, using oxygen to make ATP Excretion- Removal of a substance Assimilation-the breakdown and reassembling of nutrients into usable forms Absorption- the intake of a substance through membranes Growth- change in size but not necessarily shape Movement- change in position of a body or of a body part; Motion of and internal organ Circulation- movement of substances Reproduction- production of new organisms or cells Responsiveness- reaction to change inside and outside the body 2. What is homeostasis? Maintaining stable internal environments 3. What is metabolism? Sum of all chemical reactions in the body. The characteristics of life collectively make up all of metabolism. 4. What are the requirements for life? Food, water, pressure, oxygen, heat 5. Define each level of organization. Atom- smallest complete unit of matter Molecule- made of atoms Macromolecule- made of molecules Organelles- cell parts Cells- made of organelles Tissue- made of cells Organ- made of tissues Organ system- made of organs Organism- made of organ systems 6. What are the different systems of the body and what are the major organs and the basic functions of each? SEE CHART FROM CHAPTER ONE for functions and organs Integumentary Skeletal Muscular Nervous Respiratory Cardiovascular Digestive Urinary Endocrine Lymphatic Reproductive Chapter 2 7. List the parts of an atom. Where are they located? What are their charges? Proton- nucleus, positive charge Neutron- nucleus, neutral charge Electron- around nucleus, negative charge 8. What is an isotope? Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons 9. How are isotopes used? Treat cancer, diagnose illnesses, carbon dating 10. What is the most abundant compound in the human body? water 11. Sketch a water molecule. 12. What does a valence electron have to do with bonding? Valence electrons are found in the outer shell and are the electrons that are shared, given away, or gained during bonding. 13. What is atomic number? The number of protons in an atom. It also identifies the which element the atom is. 14. What is a covalent bond? Sharing of electrons 15. What is an ionic bond? Atoms give and take electrons, become charged (ions), and the ions opposite charges attracts them to each other forming an ionic bond. 16. What type of ion forms when an atom loses electrons? positive 17. What does a pH of 6 indicate about a substance? Acidic 18. What does it mean when we say water is a polar molecule? The atoms do not share the electrons equally so the atoms in the molecule takes on partial charges 19. What is the difference between an acid and a base? Acids release hydrogen ions and bases release hydroxide ions. 20. Amino acid is to protein as simple sugar is to carbohydrate_. 21. What are the building blocks of a carbohydrate? What are they used for in the body? monosaccharide, energy 22. What are the building blocks of a protein? What are the functions of proteins in the body? amino acids, protein carriers and channels, antibodies, enzymes (catalysts that speed up chemical reactions), structural material 23. What is a lipid made of? Where would I find lipids in the body? There are three types of lipids:1) fats (triglycerides) containing 3 fatty acids and a glycerol, 2) Phospholipids containing 2 fatty acids, a glycerol, and a phosphate and are found in cell membranes 3) steroids – 4 interconnected rings structures 24. What is a chemical reaction? When molecules and atoms break and reform bonds. Chapter 3 25. What cell structure contains the cell’s genetic material? The chromosomes in the nucleus 26. Where is the nucleolus, chromatin and DNA all found? Nucleus 27. Which organelle converts chemical energy stored in food into more convenient forms for the cell to use? mitochindria 28. Which organelle controls what comes in and leaves the cell? Cell membrane 29. Which organelle makes proteins using coded instructions from the nucleus? Ribosomes 30. What is activation energy? The energy it takes to start a chemical reaction 31. What is an enzyme? How does it act as a catalyst? A protein that speeds up chemical reactions by lowering activation energy 32. The cell membrane is sometimes described as a fluid mosaic because of the large molecules that move around on its surfaces. These molecules can be used as pumps, channels, or attachment points. What type of molecules are these? Proteins 33. What is diffusion? The movement of substances from high concentrations to low concentrations 34. Why does diffusion occur? Molecules are moving and bumping into one another which causes them to spread out (molecular motion) 35. When the concentration of molecules on both sides of a membrane is the same, the molecules are in dynamic equilibrium. What does this mean? The molecules are moving in and out of the cells in equal amounts. (no NET movement) 36. What is passive transport? Describe the 3 types of passive transport we discussed in class. Mechanisms that don’t involve energy. Diffusion, facilitated diffusion, and osmosis are all examples 37. What is osmosis? Movement of water from high concentrations of water to low concentrations of water 38. Why do cells surrounded by fresh water burst? There is less solute outside and more water so water moves into the cell. 39. What is active transport? Give an example. Movement of substances from low concentration to high concentration using a protein carrier and requiring oxygen 40. What is cell specialization? Cells taking on specific roles such as a red blood cell, an ostoclasts, etc. Chapter 4 41. What is released during cellular respiration? ATP is main product but bi-products include water, carbon dioxide, and heat 42. The starting molecule for glycolysis is GLUCOSE__. 43. Cellular respiration releases energy by breaking down __glucose___. 44. List the 3 parts of cellular respiration and tell where in the cell each one occurs. Glycolysis – cytoplasm Citric acid cycle and electron transport chain- mitochindria 45. Why is cellular respiration called an aerobic process? Requires oxygen Chapter 5 46. What are the main tissue types of the body? What is the function of each tissue type? Epithelium- covers and lines and protects Connective- binds, supports, makes blood cells, stores fat Nervous- sends signals throughout body Muscle- contracts for movement 47. Differentiate between the 3 types of muscle tissue. Be sure you can give examples of where each type is located and what it looks like. Which are striated? Cardiac- heart, striated Smooth- in walls of hollow organs like stomach and bladder Skeletal- attach to bones, striated Chapter 6 48. What is the most important function of the skin? Protection 49. What makes up the integumentary system? Hair, skin, nails, sebaceous glands, sweat glands 50. What is hair and nails mainly composed of? Dead keratinized cells 51. What are the layers of the skin? Epidermis, dermis, subcutaneous layer 52. What is the top layer of skin composed of? Epidermis- dead keratinized cells 53. Why is the top layer of skin waterproof? Keratin builds up in cells 54. How does the skin control body temperature? Sweats and blood vessels dilate Chapter 7 55. Differentiate between the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton. Axial- head, neck, and trunk of body Appendicular- arms and legs 56. What are the major functions of the skeletal system? Support, protection, movement, makes blood cells, stores calcium 57. Describe spongy bone. Bone that is hard but has holes throughout so is light weight 58. What is red bone marrow? What does it do? Red bone marrow is s soft net like tissue in bones that form blood cells 59. What is the tough layer of connective tissue that surrounds bones called? periosteum 60. Where can ball and socket joints be found in the body? Hips and shoulder 61. What is the skeleton of an embryo mainly composed of? What type of bone development is this? Cartilage--endochondral 62. What are the 3 main types of bone cells? What does each do? Osteoblasts- build bone Osteocytes- were osteoblasts that can no longer make bone matrix Osteoclasts- breadk down bone 63. What is the difference between a tendon and a ligament? Tendons connect muscle to bone Ligaments connect bone to bone Chapter 8 64. What is lactic acid fermentation? Where does it occur? How does it make your muscle feel? When there is a lack of oxygen during exercise cells switch over to lactic acid fermentation. The lactic acid produced makes muscles achy 65. What must be done to repay oxygen debt after exercise? Increased breathing rate and more oxygen had to be taken so lactic acid can be broken down. 66. What is a neurotransmitter and what does it do? Chemicals release from synaptic knobs of neurons which cross the synapse and start an impulse in next neuron Chapter 13 67. What body system acts like a transportation system? Cardiovascular (circulatory) 68. What makes up the circulatory system? Heart, blood vessels, blood 69. How does blood flow through the heart? SEE FLOW CHART FROM CLASS 70. What prevents the oxygen-rich blood on the left side from mixing with the oxygenpoor blood on the right side of the heat? Septum 71. Compare and contrast arteries, veins, and capillaries. Arteries take blood away from heart, blood under high pressure Veins take blood to heart, contain valves, blood is under high pressure, contain three layers Capillaries- have a single layer of squamous epithelium and allow exchange between blood and cells in body, 72. What is the middle layer of the heart called? Myocardium 73. What are valves and what purpose do they serve in the circulatory/cardiovascular system? Valves are flaps of tissue in the heart and veins that keep blood form going backwards. Chapter 16 74. What is respiration? Gas exchange and using the oxygen to break down glucose from our food to make ATP 75. What type of tissue is in the lungs? omit 76. What serves as a passageway for both air and food? Pharynx 77. What causes air to come into the lungs? What muscle is involved? Decrease pressure due to increase volume because diaphragm and intercostals muscles contract Chapter 15 78. Name the organs of the alimentary canal from mouth to anus in order. Mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine 79. What is normally found in the stomach? Include enzymes, acids, and food paste. Gastric juice- pepsin, HCl (hydrochloric acid), mucus The juice and food mix to become chyme 80. What is mechanical digestion? Breakdown of food into smaller pieces to increase surface area 81. What mechanical digestion occurs in your stomach? Mixing waves 82. What does the pancreas do? Release enzymes and bicarbonate and also produces insulin 83. What are the other accessory organs and their functions? Salivary glands make saliva Pancreas (see #90) Liver- make bile and detoxify substances Gallbladder – store bile 84. Where does chemical digestion start? What enzyme starts it? Mouth-- amylase 85. What is chyme? Where is it formed? Mixture of gastric juice and food found in stomach 86. Where is water extracted in the alimentary canal? Large intestine 87. What is peristalsis? Muscular movement that forces food through alimentary canal 88. What are sphincters? Rings of muscles that control movement of things like food between organs 89. What are the parts of the small intestine in order? Duodenum, jejunum, ileum 90. What is the purpose of villi? Increase surface area in small intestines for more absorption 91. What is the alimentary canal? What organs make it up? Organs in the digestive tract that food moves through, see #86 92. Where is bile made? liver 93. Where is stomach acid neutralized? In the duodenum of small intestine with bicarbonate from pancreas