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TEST #1- Cells

Patho

QuestionAnswer
is the study of the speicifc characteristics and functions of a living organism and its parts physiology
suffering or disease patho
the study of the disorder or breakdown of the human body's fuctions pathophysiology
homeostatis, disease, and illness key elements of pathophysiologis processes
dynamic steady state, representing the net effect of all turnover reactions homeostasis
temperature, cardiac output, blood pressure, oxygen and carbon dioxide levels, acid-base balance, fluid volume, and electrolyte composition parameters related to maintain homeostatis
causes the controller to respond in a manner that opposes or negates deviation from normal (set point) level negative feedback
an initial disturbance in a system sets off a chain of events that does not favor stability and often abruptly displaces a system away from its steady-state operating point positive feeback
disruption of homestasis disease
genetic variations, cultural considerations, age differences, gender differences, situational differences, time variations, laboratory conditions, and baseline evaluations various physiologic parameters
12-16 g/100 ml of blood normal women's range for hemoglobin concentration
13-18 g/100 ml og blood normal men's range for hemoglobin concentration
clacium ranges are slightly higher in ____ women
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate ESR
less than 13mm/hr men's ESR
around 13mm/hr women's ESR
0.4 to 1.3 mg/dl women's normal serum creatinine level
0.6 to 1.5 mg/dl men's normal serum creatinine level
____snore more, have longer vocal cords, better daylight vision, higher metabolic rates, and are more likely to be left handed males
RBO count increases when a person moves to a higher altitude, this is a normal adaptive response to the decreased availability of oxygen at a high altitude acclimatization
factors that vary according to the time of day circadian rhythm or diurnal variation
age, gender, genetic and ethnic background, geographic area, and time of day variations in physiologic processes
the mechanisms of its development etiologic process
etiologic process, pathogenesis, and clinical manifestations three aspects of a disease process that form a framework for understanding pathophysiology
structural and biochemical alterations induced in the cells and organs of the body pathogenesis
functional consequences of changes clinical manifestations
an expression of altered chemistry, and dystunction is an inevitable consequnce structure
the study of the causes or reasons for phenomena etiology
when the cause is unknown idiopathic
when the cause is due to an unintended or unwanted medical treatment iatrogenic
requires the unusual environment of premature birth and high oxygen concentration, which causes damage ot the retina, resulting in blindness retrolental fibroplasia
common disease involving many genotypes and a variety of environmental agents coronary arteriosclerosis
an inherited condition that causes red blood cells to form sickle shapes when the oxygen concentration is low--leads to headaches, dizziness, and pain in the abdomen whe the sickled erythrocytes plug small blood vessels in the brain and liver sickle cell anemia
genetic makeup and environmental interaction the two causes of human disease
the "survival of the fittest" idea that is a struggle between nature (genetic makeup or inheritance) and nurture (environment) is ongoing ecogenetics
inherited, congenital diseases/birth defects, metabolic, degenerative, neoplastic, immunologic, infectious, physical agent-induced, nutritional deficiency, iatrogenic, psychogenic, and idiopathic diseases etiologic classification of diseases
are responsible for most neonatal deaths prenatal influences
denotes the period of the utero life prenatal
denotes teh first 2 months of life neonatal
arise from abnormalities in the chemistry of the body metabolic diseases
account fo more than half of all deaths in the US heart attacks and strokes
approximately 50% of deaths from cancer involved___ lung, stomach, colon-rectum, liver, and breast
at least 15% of all cancers are consequence of chronic infectious disease such as____ hepatitis B and C (liver cancer), HPV (cervical cancer), and the Helicobacter pylori bacterium (stomach cancer)
when the immune system overreacts ex: hypersensitivity reaction
immune system attacks one's own body autoimmune response
when the immune system underreacts ex: AIDS
disease-causing organisms that damage the body in some way pathogens
any organism that lives in or on another organism to obtain its nutrients parasite
an intestinal loop can slip through a defect in the abdominal wall and become trapped hernia
the most common cause of death in developing countries TB and malnutrition
emotional factors psychogenic
the discipline involving the physiologic impact of psychic stress on the emergence of disease psychosomatic medicine
most common type of hypertension idiopathic hypertension
10% of hypertension cases secondary hypertension
refers to the development or evolution of a disease pathogenesis
Created by: TayBay15
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