Name: ______SCORE:______
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT BODY SYSTEMS:
The Integumentary System
- What are the functions of the Integumentary System? P. 936 & 938-939
- What is the main organ of the Integumentary System? ______
- List the four tissues this organ is made up of and the functions: P. 936
- ______: ______
- ______: ______
- ______: ______
- ______: ______
- What are the 3 layers of the skin? P.936 ______
- What is the function of your Epidermis Layer of the skin? P. 936 ______
- What is the function of your Dermis Layer of the skin? P. 937 ______
- What is the function of your Subcutaneous (“hypodermis”) layer of the skin? P. 937
- Keratin is found in your epidermis. What is keratin? P. 936 ______
- Your epidermal tissue contains melanocytes that produce a pigment protein called melanin. What does melanin do for your body? P. 937
The Skeletal System
- How many bones does the average human adult skeleton have? P. 941 ______
- Besides bones, what else makes up the skeletal system? P. 941 ______
- What is the main function of the skeletal system? P. 941 ______
- What is the difference between the axial and the appendicular skeleton? P. 941 ______
______
- List the 2 types of bone marrow and their functions. P. 942
- ______bone marrow: ______
- ______bone marrow: ______
- What 2 minerals do your bones store? P. 922
- What are the skeletons of embryos made of? ______What does it develop into? ______P.943
- What is the function of an osteoblast: ______P. 943
- What is a joint? P. 944 ______
- What do ligaments do for our bones? P. 944 ______
The Muscular System
- What are the types of cells found within the body? What is the origin of each one? ______P. 258
- What is the main job of the muscular system? P. 947 ______
- What are the three different types of muscle tissues? P. 947
- ______muscle
- ______muscle
- ______muscle
- Where do you find a. skeletal muscle? P. 948 ______
- Smooth muscle? P. 947______
- Cardiac muscle? P. 947 ______
- What 2 muscle types are involuntary? P. 947 ______
- What muscle type is voluntary? P. 948 ______
- The striations in skeletal muscle cells are formed by alternating patterns of thick and thin filaments.
What are the thick filaments called? P. 948 ______The thin filaments are called? P. 948 ______
- The tiny myosin and actin filaments are the force-producing engines that cause a muscle to contract. Below describe how a muscle contracts: aka the Sliding Filament Theory. P. 949
______
______
- The process described above takes a lot of ATP energy. What organelle would you find in high numbers within a muscle cell? ______(*HINT: this organelle performs cellular respiration)
- What is a tendon? P. 948 ______
The Excretory System
- What is the function of the excretory system? P. 1005 ______
- What organs are involved with the excretory system? P. 1005 ______
- What do our kidneys do? P. 1006 ______
- What is the filtering part of the kidney called? ______What is its function? P. 1006
- What do the kidneys help the body to maintain? P. 1007
The Digestive System
- What are the 3 functions of the digestive system? P. 1020
- Where does digestion begin? P. 1020 ______What type of digestion is this? ______
- Where is food chemically digested? P. 1020 ______How does it work?
- What is peristalsis? P. 1021______
- What organ of your digestive system is your food absorbed into your bloodstream? P. 1023 ______
- What are villi? P. 1023 ______
- What lives within the large intestines and has a mutualistic relationship with humans? P. 984 ______
- What is food called that cannot be digested? P. 1023 ______What happens to it? P. 1024
- What happens to excess water in the large intestines? P. 1024 ______
- How does the change in pH in the stomach aid in digestion? P. 1020
The Respiratory System
- What is the main function of the respiratory system? P. 1000 ______
- What is the difference between internal and external respiration?
- What is the primary gas that the blood transports to tissues? P. 1002 ______Gas blood gets rid of? ______
- List the 7 organs of the respiratory system: P. 956 ______
- What other systems or organs does the respiratory system combine with in order to function? P. 1003
(*HINT: this system transports gases and nutrients throughout the body).
- Where does gas exchange occur within the Respiratory System? P. 1003
- What muscle assists the respiratory system to allow air to enter and expel from your body? P. 1002
The Circulatory & Cardiovascular System
- What is the circulatory system composed of? P. 992
- What are the 3 main vessels of the body? P. 993
- The smallest of blood vessels are capillaries. What is the function of capillaries? P. 993
- What does the circulatory system provide for various organs around the body (List at least 4 things)? P. 943
The Heart
- What type of muscle is the heart made of? P. 994 ______
- How many chambers does the human heart have? P. 994 ______
- What are the names of the top 2 chambers? P. 994 ______What is their function? ______
- What are the names of the bottom 2 chambers? P. 994 ______What is their function? ______
- Circle. Arteries carry blood (to / away from) the heart. While veins carry blood (to / away from) the heart. P. 996.
- What is the largest artery in the heart? P. 995 ______
- What is blood pressure? P. 995 ______
- What is atherosclerosis and how does it affect blood pressure? P. 999
Blood
- What are the 4 components of blood? P. 997
- What is plasma? P. 997______
- What are erythrocytes (HINT: RBC)? P. 952 ______List their Function?
- Red blood cells contain the protein called ______. What element is found in hemoglobin ______, what does it do? P. 997 ______
- The cells discussed in question 4 are not confined only to the circulatory system. What other system are they apart of?
- What are leukocytes? P. 998 ______List their function?
- What are the functions of platelets in our blood? P. 997
The Nervous System
- What is the function of the nervous system? P. 962
- What cell carries information throughout the body in the form of electrochemical signals called impulses? P. 962
- What is a sensory neuron? P. 963
- What is a motor neuron?
- What is a synapse? P. 967
- Define reflex arc. ______
- What is the difference between the central and peripheral nervous system? P. 968
- What part of the nervous system has the responsibility for issuing nerve impulses and analyzing sensory data? P. 968
What does it include?
- What are interneurons? P. 968 ______
- What part of the nervous system has the responsibility for carrying nerve impulses to and from the body? P. 971
- What are the 2 divisions of the peripheral nervous system? P. 971 ______& ______
- What is the function of the somatic nervous system? ______
- What is the function of the autonomic nervous system?______
- What are the 2 branches of the autonomic system?
The Endocrine System
- What is the endocrine system? P. 1031 ______
- What is a hormone? P. 1031 ______
- What is negative feedback? ______
- In general, the body’s responses to hormones are circle (slower / faster)(shorter or longer-lasting) than the nervous system. P.
- What is a gland? P. 998 ______
- List the glands of the endocrine system. P. 1033-36 ______
- What hormones regulates metabolism? P. 1034
- What hormone regulates blood sugar ______What organ produces it? P. 1034 ______
- What hormone regulates water balance______What organ produces it? P. 1037 ______
- The main endocrine organ that regulates many of the other endocrine organs is the pituitary gland. Where is the pituitary gland located? P. 1033
The Reproductive System
- What are the two types of reproduction (*HINT: one involves one parent and the other involves 2 parents)?
- Circle. Mitosis / Meiosis is the cell division that creates the cells (gametes) of the reproductive system.
- What is the main function of the reproductive system? P. 1048 ______
- What part of the male body produces sperm and where is it located? P. 1049 ______
- What part of the female body produces the egg? P. 1050 ______
- What is fertilization? P. 1054 ______
- What happens if NO fertilization occurs? P. 1051 ______
- What is a zygote? P. 1055 ______
- After fertilization, the zygote undergoes the division of cells called ______and implants on the uterine wall. At this point of development the hollow ball of cells is called a blastocyst and these cells do not have a specialized function yet what kind of cells are they? ______
- Where does the embryo develop? P. 1056 ______
The Lymphatic & Immune Systems
- What is the function of the lymphatic system? P. 1086
- List the lymphatic organs.
- What do lymph nodes do? P. 1086
- What is the function of the immune system? P. 1084
- What are the barrier s of the immune system? P. 1084
- What is an interferon? P. 1085
- What is an antigen? P. 1088
- The cells of the immune system that recognize specific antigens are 2 types of lymphocytes (white blood cells): B lymphocytes and T Lymphocytes.
- What do B cells provide? P. 1086
- What do T cells provide? P. 1088
- What are antibodies? P. 1086
- What major virus attacks Killer T cells, therefore destroying our immune response? P. 1045
- What gives us immunity from viruses? P. 1089