Anatomy And Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

What types of bones protect vital organs?

A

Flat bones

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2
Q

How does the skeleton move?

A

The skeleton are moved by muscles which are attached to the bones by tendons. When muscles contract, the bones are pulled causing them to move at the joints

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3
Q

Where in the Body is the talus?

A

In the ankle

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4
Q

Which flat bones in the chest help to protect the heart and the lungs?

A

The ribs and the sternum

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5
Q

What two types of joint movements occur at the ankle?

A

Plantarflexion and dorsiflexion

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6
Q

What bones meet at the shoulder joint?

A

The scapula and the humerus

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7
Q

What is the difference between circumduction and rotation?

A

Circumduction = movement of a limb in a circular motion
Rotation = the limb turns around it’s own axis

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8
Q

What are antagonistic pairs?

A

How muscles work (in pairs)
When the agonist contracts and shortens, the antagonist relaxes and lengthens

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9
Q

What is the agonist for flexion at the shoulder?

A

Deltoid

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10
Q

Agonist for extension at the shoulder?

A

Latissimus dorsi

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11
Q

Agonist for adduction at the shoulder

A

Latissimus dorsi/pectorals

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12
Q

Agonist for abduction at the shoulder joint

A

Deltoid

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13
Q

Agonist for rotation at the shoulder joint

A

Rotator cuff

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14
Q

Agonist for circumduction at the shoulder joint

A

There are many

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15
Q

Agonist for extension at the elbow

A

Tricep

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16
Q

Agonist for flexion at the elbow joint

A

Bicep

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17
Q

Agonist for flexion at the hip joint

A

Hip flexors

18
Q

Agonist for extension at the hip joint

A

Gluteals

19
Q

Agonist for abduction at the hip joint

A

Gluteals

20
Q

Agonist for adduction at the hip joint

A

There are many

21
Q

Agonist for flexion at the knee joint

A

Hamstrings

22
Q

Agonist for extension at the knee joint

A

Quadriceps

23
Q

Agonist for plantar flexion at the ankle joint

A

Gastrocnemius

24
Q

Agonist for dorsi flexion at the ankle joint

A

Tibialis anterior

25
Q

What type of bones produce gross movements like running, kicking

A

Long bones

26
Q

What type of bones produce fine movements e.g. aiming, balancing

A

Short bones e,g. Carpals, phalanges

27
Q

What are the functions of the skeleton?

A
  • support
  • protection
  • movement
  • structural shape and muscle attachment
  • mineral storage
  • blood cell production
28
Q

How does the skeleton provide support?

A

The bones are solid and rigid so keep us upright and hold muscles and organs in place e.g. ribs and sternum hold the heart and lungs in place

29
Q

How does the skeleton provide protection?

A

Parts of the skeleton enclose and protect the body’s organs from contact force e.g. brain is protected by the cranium which is especially important in contact sports

30
Q

How does the skeleton provide movement?

A

The skeleton provides anchor points for the muscles to pull against.
E.g. elbow joint allows the arm to bend in the middle by contracting the bicep

31
Q

How does the skeleton provide structural shape?

A

The skeleton gives us our general shape such as height and build. Tall people have long leg bones and large vertebrae

32
Q

What is the type of muscle contraction where the muscle changes length?

A

Isotonic

33
Q

Type of muscle contraction where the muscle lengthens:

A

Eccentric - controls the speed of a movement

34
Q

Type of muscle contraction where the muscle shortens:

A

Concentric - involves muscle contracting and shortening to cause a movement

35
Q

What is meant by one cardiac cycle?

A

One phase of diastole and systole (one cycle of the heart filling up with blood and then pumping the blood out)

36
Q

Why do valves open and close in the heart?

A

They open due to blood pressure so that the blood can fill the heart chambers. Valves close to prevent back flow

37
Q

Describe the path the blood takes between the right atrium and the aorta

A

Deoxygenated blood enters the heart through the vena cava into the right atrium and then the right ventricle. Deoxygenated blood is then sent to the lungs through the pulmonary artery where gaseous exchange occurs and the blood becomes oxygenated. The oxygenated blood is then taken back to the heart by the pulmonary vein where it enters the left atrium, the left ventricle and then goes to the rest of the body through the aorta.

38
Q

Give one advantage of capillaries being very narrow

A

It means lots of them can fit into the body’s tissues, which gives them a large surface area to let gas exchange happen more easily.
It also causes blood to flow through them slowly, so blood has a longer time to exchange gases with the body’s tissues

39
Q

Describe how air is exhaled from the lungs?

A

The diaphragm relaxes back into it’s dome shape and the intercostal muscles relax causing the rib cage to drop down and inwards. This causes the volume of the chest to decrease and the pressure to increase meaning air is forced out of the lungs.

40
Q

Give three key features of alveoli that make exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide in the lungs more efficient

A
  • large surface area
  • thin moist walls
  • large blood supply as are surrounded by lots of capillaries
41
Q

Describe how oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged in the lungs

A

Both of them move from a high concentration to a lot concentration.
Oxygen moves from a high concentration in the lungs (alveoli) to a low concentration in the capillaries
Carbon dioxide moved from a high concentration in the capillaries to a low concentration in the lungs (alveoli)