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Title: Human Anatomy Introduction
Description: Introductory terms for learning Human Anatomy.

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1
...
 What  
different  ways  can  one  approach  the  study  of  gross  anatomy?    
a
...
  Microscopic-­‐  study  of  structures  requiring  a  microscope
...
  Regional-­‐  where  it  is  located;  systematic-­‐  study  by  systems;  surface-­‐  study  what  
you  see    
2
...
  Cytology-­‐  study  of  individual  cells  (structure)    
b
...
  List  and  define  the  hierarchy  of  structural  organization  in  humans
...
 What  are  the  relationships  between  cells  and  tissues,  tissues  
and  organs,  organs  and  organ  systems?    
a
...
  Macromolecules  (lipids,  nucleic  acids,  proteins)  
b
...
  Organelles    
c
...
  Groups  of  specialized  cells  (epithelium,  connective  muscle,  nerve)      
d
...
  Formed  by  combination  of  individual  organs  (heart,  liver,  femur)    
e
...
  Urinary,  nervous,  endocrine,  integument    
f
...
  List  the  four  main  tissue  types    
a
...
  Epithelial-­‐covering  and  secretory    
c
...
  Nerve-­‐controller    
5
...
 Describe  function  of  each  organ  
system
...
  Skeletal-­‐  support  and  protection;  stores  calcium/phosphorus    
b
...
  Integumentary-­‐  protection,  regulates  body  temp,  vitamin  D  
d
...
  Nervous-­‐  controls  body  movement;  intelligence,  memory,  consciousness    
f
...
  Cardiovascular-­‐  moves  blood,  picks  up  waste  products    
h
...
  Respiratory-­‐  exchange  gases  between  blood  and  air    
j
...
  Urinary-­‐  filters  and  removes  waste    
6
...
 Why  is  this  important?    
a
...
  List  the  terms  used  in  describing  locations  of  structures  and  relative  location  of  
structures  when  in  the  anatomical  position
...
  Anterior-­‐  in  front  of;  toward  front  surface  
b
...
  Dorsal-­‐  at  the  back  side  of  the  body    
d
...
  Superior-­‐  toward  the  head  or  above    
f
...
  Cranial-­‐  at  the  head  end    
h
...
  Medial-­‐  toward  the  midline  
j
...
  Proximal  –  closest  to  point  of  attachment    
l
...
  Superficial-­‐  on  the  surface  
n
...
  Define  frontal  (coronal),  transverse,  sagittal  (both  median  and  parasagittal)  and  
oblique  planes
...
  Oblique  plane-­‐  diagonal  cuts  along  either  horizontal  or  vertical  planes    

9
...
 What  functions  do  body  cavities  perform?  What  are  the  
primary  contents  of  these  cavities?    
a
...
 
d  
c
...
 
d  

 

10
...
   
a
...
  Parietal-­‐  lines  the  outer  wall  of  body  cavities    
c
...
 Define  abdominiopelvic  quadrants
...
     
a
...
  Right/left  lower    
c
...
  Abdominal  regions    

i
...
 Describe  Cell  theory    
a
...
  Produced  by  existing  cells  through  mitosis/meiosis    
c
...
 What  are  cell  organelles?  List  the  organelles  found  in  a  cell  and  describe  the  structure  
and  function  of  each
...
 Describe  how  membranous  organelles  contribute  to  the  complexity  of  a  
cell
...
  Smooth  Er-­‐  regulates  and  releases  calcium  ions;  releases  toxins    
b
...
  Mitochondria-­‐  cellular  respiration  (take  in  nutrients/turn  into  energy  )    
d
...
  Rough  ER-­‐  protein  production  and  folding;  quality  control    
f
...
  Golgi  apparatus-­‐  modifying,  sorting,  packaging  of  proteins  for  secretion    
14
...
 Cytoplasm    
a
...
 Ions,  amino  acids,  sugars    
15
...
 Compare  osmosis/diffusion
...
  Passive-­‐  energy  independent    
b
...
  Osmosis-­‐  movement  of  solvent  across  a  membrane    

d
...
 Compare  and  contrast  mechanisms  of  bulk  transport  across  the  cell  membrane:  
pinocytosis,  receptor-­‐mediated  endocytosis,  phagocytosis,  exocytosis:    
a
...
  Receptor-­‐mediated  endocytosis:  selective  transport  of  materials  having  
receptors  on  the  cell  surface
...
   Endosome  then  modifies  the  contents  
c
...
  Exocytosis:  mechanism  to  move  substances  outside  of  the  cell    
17
...
 Where  are  they  formed?      
a
...
  Located  on  rough  ER    
18
...
     
a
...
  Rough-­‐  have  ribosomes;  synthesis  of  proteins    
19
...
   
a
...
 Describe  the  structure  and  function  of  mitochondria
...
  Production  of  ATP    
b
...
 What  is  the  cytoskeleton?  Describe  structure  and  function  of  microtubules,  
microfilaments  and  intermediate  filaments
...
  Cell’s  skeleton  and  motor    
b
...
  Microfilaments-­‐  anchoring  cytoskeleton  to  integral  membrane  proteins;  cell  
movement  
d
...
 Describe  the  structure  of  the  nucleus
...
  Nuclear  envelope-­‐  double  plasma  membrane  covering  nucleus  
b
...
  Chromatin-­‐linear  molecules  of  DNA    
23
...
   
a
...
  Germ  cell-­‐gamete  or  sex  cell    
24
...
   
a
...
  Ridding  cell  of  infected,  mutated,  or  DNA  damage
...
 What  is  a  tissue?    
a
...
 Four  primary  tissue  types  and  function  of  each      
a
...
  Connective-­‐  support    
c
...
  Nerve-­‐controller    
27
...
  Lining  hollow  body  organs    
28
...
 glandular  epithelial  tissues  
a
...
  Glandular-­‐  specialized  secretory  tissues    
i
...
  Endocrine-­‐  products  enter  the  bloodstream  and  distributed  by  the  blood    
29
...
  Covering  body  surfaces  or  lining  body  cavities    
30
...
     
a
...
  Lateral-­‐  cell-­‐to-­‐cell  attachments;  connected  to  other  cells  via  several  different  
types  of  specialized  juntions    
c
...
 What  is  lumen?    
32
...
  Layers  and  shape    
i
...
  Columnar,  squamous,  cuboidal,  transitional    
33
...
  Layer  of  extracellular  matrix  at  the  basal  surface  of  all  epithelia    
b
...
  This  is  where  epithelial  cells  are  attached    
34
...
 Where  are  they  found  
and  what  are  their  primary  functions?      
a
...
  Intermediate  (zona  adherens)-­‐  “belt”  junctions  between  cells  usually  found  just  
below  tight  junctions;  anchored  by  cytoskeleton  and  help  bind  the  two  cells  
together  
c
...
  Gap  junction-­‐  important  in  intercellular  communication    
35
...
  Secrete  ions,  enzymes,  regulator  peptides    
i
...
  Exocrine-­‐  secreted  product  is  released  onto  the  free  surface  f  the  
epithelium  and  often  transported  by  ducts
...
 What  is  a  connective  tissue?  List  the  types  of  connective  tissues  and  discuss  the  
characteristics  that  differentiate  one  form  another
...
  CT=  most  microscopically  &  functionally  diverse  group  and  abundant  tissue  type    
i
...
  Cartilage  and  bone    
iii
...
 Three  types  of  fibers  found  in  the  extracellular  matrix  of  fibrous  connective  tissue
...
 
What  is  “ground  substance”  and  why  is  it  important?    
a
...
  Elastic  fibers-­‐  rubber  band-­‐like  protein  fibers  that  are  elastic  and  recoil  back  to  
original  state  when  stretched    
c
Title: Human Anatomy Introduction
Description: Introductory terms for learning Human Anatomy.