World's most versatile flashcards

or...
Reset Password Sign Up

gen med terms Word Scramble

 
 


 

 
Teachers & Webmasters: If you would like this word scramble activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
 

 

 

 
Follow us on Twitter
Be a StudyStack fan on Facebook
www.eapps.com




Copyright ©2001-2009 John Weidner All rights reserved.
About -  Terms of Service -  Privacy Statement



TERM DEFINITION
myocardiummuscle that makes up the heart
endocardiumc.t. that encloses the entire heart
pericardiumattaches the endocardium to the thorax
coronary arteriesbranch from the base of the aorta to supply the entire myocardium
systolecontraction phase
diastoleatria and ventricles relaxed
stroke volumeamount of blood pumped into aorta during a single ventricular contraction
cardiac outputstroke volume x heart rate: volume of blood pumped per minute
erythrocytes (rbc)transport o2 remove co2
leukocytes (wbc)phagocytosis, mediate immune system response
thrombocytes (platelets)clotting
blood pressurepressure of blood against arterial walls, maintains perfusion of o2 into organs
myocardial ischemiamyocardium deprived of oxygen resulting in chest pain (angina)
dyspneashortness of breath; occurs when cardiac output decreases
fatiguereduction in the body's capability to perform work
palpitationsenseation of skipped beats or the heart fluttering uncomfortably
arrhythmiadisturbance of the electrical activity that controls the heartbeat which causes cardiac contractions of excessive pace or strenght (palpitations)
claudicationimpaired gait, occurs when blood flow to a lower limb is blocked
edemaabnormal accumulation of fluid in the interstitial spaces, occurs with chronic cardiac conditions or obstruction of veins or lymph vessels
Korotkoff soundssounds used to determine bp
atherosclerosisarteries that have been pathologically narrowed
aneurysmdeformed arteries
athletes heartgeneral cardiac hypertrophy- enlargmenet of both ventricles due to adaptation to strenuous aerobic exercise
hypertrophic cardiomyopathypathological enlrgment of the heart associated with an asymmetricl enlrgment of the left ventricular cavity-leading cause of SCD in young athletes
myocardial ischemiaoxygen needed by myocardium exceeds oxygen in blood delivered by the coronary arteries
arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD)fatty infiltration (penetration) and fibrosis of the myocardium of the right ventricle
Mitral valve prolapse (MVP)deformity of mitral valve leaflets that prevents it from closing completely
paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardiaintermittently occuring very rapid heart rate at rest >150 bpm- defect in discharge pattern of SA node, atria, or AV node that causes drastic increase in heart rate
Q-T intervaltime it takes for ventricles to depolarize and repolarize
Wolfe-parkinson-White Syndromeaccessory pathway between atria and ventricles conducts more rapidlyithan the AV node, and result is that one of the ventricles depolarizes slightly before the other
marfan SyndromeConnective tissue disorder associated with increased risk for scd, develop potentially fatal deformities in aorta
Commotio CordisSudden blows to the chest that occur during the vulnerable phase of cardiac repolarization that induce a severe ventricular arrhytmia
myocarditisinflammatory process of the cardiac muscle cells
generic drugcopy of brand name drug whose patents have expired can sell for cheaper bc no experimental cost
enteral routesroutes of admin that provide entry to the boyd by way of alimentary canal or digestive system (oral, rectal)
parenteral routesinjection inhalation sublingual buccal and topical
enteric coatingdelays the release of medication until it reaches small intestine
extended release medicationreleased over a longer period, contains more drug
buccalbetween cheek and gum
suppositorycommon dosage form used to administer meds via rectum
pharmacokineticsphysiological process of how the body acts on a drug (ADME)
bioavailabilityamount of drug that is actually available in the body's tissues
first pass effectoccurs if drug is absorbed from the intestine into the liver before entering the systemic circulation
passive diffusionlipid soluble drugs diffuse more quickly and easily and are capable of passing through blood brain barrier to affect cns
active transportprotein move drug across membrane
facilitated diffusiondrug selectivity through binding of a protein
onset of actiontime it takes for drug to reach site of action
duration of actionperiod of time when concentration levels are sufficient enough to proeduce a therapeutic effect
metabolismprocess by which drugs are inactivated and broken down into more water soluble metabolites in preparation for excretion
halflifetime it takes for concentration to be reduced by one half after it has reached peak concentration
eliminationprocess by which body rids itself of drug
pharmacodynamicsprocess of how drug acts on the body
agonistdrug that fits the receptor and initttates a mechanism similar to the endogenous compound
antagonistdrug that fits receptor but fails to initiate or block mechanism
receptor theory of drug actionagonists and antagonists
potencystrenght of drug
steady statemaintaing blood levels within the therapeutic range, achieved once the blood levesls from continued dosing matches the levls of excretion of a drug
agonistic interaction2 drugs of same type taken together to add and increase overall effect
antagonistic effects2 unrelated drugs to reduce effectivenss of oral drug
cox 1 (housekeeping) responsible forgi mucosal integrity, platelet aggregation, renal function
cox 2 (inflamatory gene) responsible forinflamation, pain, wound healing
penicilins, cephalosporins, and carbapenemsinhibit synthesis of bacterias cell wall (bactericidal antibiotics)
tetracyclines, macrolides, aminoglcosidesdisrupt normal protein synthesis
sulonamidesinhibit an enzyme used to synthesize tetrahydrofolic acid within bacteria
staphylococcus aureus infectionmisuse of antibiotics has lead to increased incidence of antibiotic resistancce
h1 histaminerespiratory tract
h2 histaminestomach
h3 histaminecerebrospinal fluid
1st generation h1 antihistaminelipid soluble, can cross blood brain barrier to affect cns (drowsiness)
2nd gen antihistamineless lipid soluble, not as drowsy, better for daytime
decongestantscause vacoconstriction of the blood vessls within the nasal passages to help reduce swelling of mucous membranes
bronchodilatorsused by individuals with asthma to relax bronchial spasms and expand airways
antiemeticsused to treat nausea and vomiting (regulated in medulla)
antidarrhealsused to treat symptoms of diarrhea, howerver don't generally treat underlying cause
bulk forming laxativemade of a fiber or cellulose that swells once combined with fluid producing a thick substance that stimulates perisatalsis and pushes the intestinal content forward
osmotic laxativesfunction to increase peristalis by drawing water into the intestinal lumen
stimulant laxativesincrease motility of bowels
antacidsneutralize stomach acid and increase gastric pH
fungicidalsdisrupt cell membrane of fungus thus killing the fungal cell,
fungistaticsprevent the fungal cell from replicating, allowing the immune system to mainage the infection
antiviral medsused to treat herpes and influenza infections prevent and reduce duratin and severity of the virus
deep somatic painbone nerve muscle tendons ligaments arteries or joints
visceral paininternal organs
hyperplasiaincrease in nmber of cells in a tissue without chane in the rate of cell division or function (adaptaion to chronic increased metabolic demands)
metaplasiareplacement of cells of one type with antoher in response to physical or chemical irritants
dysplasiacells adapt by changing to an abnormal cell type (cancer)
necrosiscell death
proliferative stageserves to close the tissue wond (scar)
remodeling stageoverlaps proliferative: some tissue remodeling occurs while collagein is still being deposited to heal the damage. stops when structure is restored
hyperpnearapid respiration
osteocytesmature bone cells
osteoplatsproduce osteocytes
osteoclatsresorbe osteocytes
osteomyelitisinflammation of bone and bone marrow
arthritissubtle joint instability and joint capsule inflammation
connective tissuecollagen and elastin. heals with collagen only, loses flexibility after injury
epitheliumlines int. ext surfaces of body
endotheliumlines cardiovasuclar system
hemorrhageloss of large amounts of blood from vascular system
shockorgans become deprived of blood borne nutrients and oxygen
septicemiapresense of infection