Busy. Please wait.
Log in with Clever
or

show password
Forgot Password?

Don't have an account?  Sign up 
Sign up using Clever
or

Username is available taken
show password

Your email address is only used to allow you to reset your password. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.


Already a StudyStack user? Log In

Reset Password
Enter the associated with your account, and we'll email you a link to reset your password.

Phlebotomy Summer Fill In The Blanks

      Help!   
In each blank, try to type in the word that is missing. If you've typed in the correct word, the blank will turn green.

If your not sure what answer should be entered, press the space bar and the next missing letter will be displayed.

When you are all done, you should look back over all your answers and review the ones in red. These ones in red are the ones which you needed help on.
Question: What is the vein of choice?Answer: Median Vein
Question: What is the vein of choice?Answer: Vein
Question: What is the vein of choice?Answer: Basilic
Question: What is near the Vein?Answer: Brachial and Median Nerve
Question: What will a properly tied do?Answer: Allow Arterial blood to flow, and Venous to slow and pool.
Question: How far above the site the tourniquet be tied?Answer: 3-4
Question: What does mean?Answer: To examine by
Question: What is the of a needle?Answer: The of the needle, which should always be facing up.
Question: What is the of a needle?Answer: This is the gauge of the .
Question: What is the hub?Answer: Where the threads into the adapter
Question: What is the sleeve?Answer: This blood from leaking when tubes are removed
Question: What is the ?Answer: Aids in the and removal of tubes
Question: What is the Bill of Rights?Answer: Not a legal document, but an accepted statement of principle a patient must understand their .
Question: What does HIPAA for?Answer: Health Portability and Accountability Act
Question: What are DRG's?Answer: Diagnosis Groups, government decides payment of patient care regardless of length of stay
Question: What are laboratories?Answer: Large independent labs that have with other facilities to preform both routine and highly specialized tests
Question: What are ICD-9 ?Answer: International Classification of Diseases-Ninth Edition. What will be paid by insurance companies and Medicare depending on the code provided by the doctor
Question: What is the CDC and what do they do?Answer: Center for Control, responsible for tracing and preventing the spread of disease
Question: What is OSHA and what do they do?Answer: Occupational Safety and Health Administration, workplace safety
Question: infectionAnswer: Occurs when a invades the body
Question: Systemic InfectionAnswer: Throughout the body
Question: Define InfectionAnswer: to a small area of the body
Question: pathogenAnswer: The organism that causes the disease (bacteria, fungus, )
Question: What is a Infection?Answer: Infections that are contracted by a patient after to the hospital.
Question: How many links make up the chain of ?Answer: Six
Question: Define AgentAnswer: It is a bacteria, fungus, or protozoa
Question: Reservoir HostAnswer: Where the organism can survive
Question: Define Exit Answer: How the infection leaves their
Question: Means of TransmissionAnswer: The by which microorganisms can be transmitted from one hos to another
Question: Entry PathwayAnswer: How the microorganism enters the host
Question: Define Susceptible Answer: A person with a immune system
Question: How many Means of are there?Answer: Five
Question: Define the two of Contact transmissionAnswer: - skin to skin and Indirect- exposing a susceptible host to a pathogen by the means of an inanimate object (fomite)
Question: Which means of transmission can only travel less than 3 feet and remain suspended in air?Answer: Droplet
Question: Which means of transmission are generated by talking, coughing, and sneezing, can travel more than 3 feet and suspended on dust particles?Answer: Transmission
Question: Which means of transmission carries causative agents through contaminated food, , medications, and blood?Answer: Transmission
Question: Which of transmission carries infections through flies, fleas, ticks, mosquitoes, and rats?Answer: Transmission
Question: What's the difference TB disease and TB infection?Answer: TB disease is active TB, while TB infection is when the bacteria is but the carrier is not contagious
Question: How do you break the of infection?Answer: your hands
Question: Which vaccination is by federal law to be available free of charge to all employees that have occupational risk?Answer: Hepatitis B
Question: What are PPE's?Answer: Personal Protective
Question: What are the 5 of Isolation?Answer: Strict, contact, respiratory, blood and body , and reverse or protective isolation
Question: Universal PrecautionsAnswer: Designed to the transmission of blood borne pathogens. All blood and most body fluids that contain blood are considered potentially infectious. Regardless of diagnosis all patients are considered potentially infectious
Question: Body Substance IsolationAnswer: was designed for the body fluids UP did not cover, regardless if there was blood present or not, stated that hand after glove removal was not needed
Question: Standard PrecautionsAnswer: Combine UP and BSI into a single set of precautions to be used for the care of all patients when coming into contact with body fluids regardless if there is blood
Question: Transmission Based PrecautionsAnswer: Used when a patient has a or suspected infection
Question: A Biologic isAnswer: an agent
Question: Any that are harmful to health areAnswer: Biohazards
Question: Needles, lancets and broken glass all go into category of objects that can cause blood borne infections?Answer:
Question: When a substance has a risk of causing a possible exposure to toxic, or carcinogenic it is a?Answer: Chemical
Question: with electricity running through it is a potential?Answer: Electrical
Question: Bunsen burners, oxygen and chemicals can all be what type of ?Answer: Fire or
Question: Lifting incorrectly, bending and running are all ofAnswer: Physical
Question: What is the Needle Stick Safety and Act?Answer: Any new equipment that is brought into the must be first used by the employees, and after a trial period employees will be asked about the equipment
Question: What is a A fire?Answer: combustibles like wood, paper and cloth.
Question: What is a B fire?Answer: Flammable like grease, gasoline, paints and oils.
Question: What is a C fire?Answer: Electrical , motors and switches
Question: What is a D fire?Answer: metals
Question: What does P.A.S.S. for? Answer: Pull pin, Aim , Squeeze trigger, Sweep nozzle
Question: What does R.A.C.E. for?Answer: , Alarm, Confine, Extinguish
Question: What are the involved in radiation safety?Answer: Distance, Shielding, and
Question: What is the OSHA HazCom ?Answer: "The right to know law"meaning all chemicals must be labled
Question: What is an MSDS?Answer: Material Safety Data , contains information for all chemicals
Question: Pale cold skin, rapid weak pulse, increased shallow breathing, and expressionless face and staring eyes are symptoms of?Answer:
Question: What are the 5 steps to providing first aid for ?Answer: 1. Maintain an open airway, 2. call for help, 3. Lie the victim down and the feet, 4. Attempt to control bleeding or other cause of shock, 5. Keep the victim warm
Question: meansAnswer:
Question: Inferior Answer:
Question: Anterior Answer: Front or
Question: Posterior Answer: back or
Question: meansAnswer: toward the
Question: Lateral Answer: toward the
Question: meansAnswer: the point of attachment
Question: Distal Answer: Away from the of attachment
Question: meansAnswer: face
Question: Supine Answer: Face
Question: Frontal Plane divides the body Answer: front and back
Question: Sagittal Plane the body intoAnswer: right and left . Midsagittal is equal
Question: Transverse Plane divides the body Answer: upper and portions
Question: cavity includes which 2 cavities?Answer: Cranial (Brain) and (spinal cord)
Question: The Ventral includes which 3 cavities?Answer: Thoracic (lungs heart ribs) Abdominal (digestive ) and Pelvic (reproductive organs)
Question: MetabolismAnswer: all the reactions that happen within the body
Question: Define Answer: needed product
Question: CatabolismAnswer: break down of
Question: are?Answer: The smallest living
Question: A group of cells that have the same shape and function a..?Answer: Tissue
Question: Two or more of tissues that have the same shape and function create a..?Answer: Organ
Question: A of organs that have the same functions create an..?Answer: system
Question: What are the four (4) types of ?Answer: Epithelial, , Muscle, Nervous
Question: Every living organism is in a constant process of maintaining a "steady or balance. This is calledAnswer: Homeostasis
Question: The skeletal consists of?Answer: Bones, cartilage, ligaments, and
Question: Ligaments ..Answer: Bone to
Question: connect..Answer: Muscle to
Question: What are the 4 of bones?Answer: Flat bones, Irregular bones, Long and Short bones
Question: joints contain..Answer: fluid
Question: What is Gout and what test is used to for it?Answer: A disease caused by deposits of Uric Acid in the joints becoming full of crystals. Its a Uric Acid test, drawn in an SST and sent to Chemistry
Question: What is ?Answer: Imbalance between the down of bone
Question: What is ?Answer: Inflammation of the bone by bacterial infections
Question: What is Phosphatese (ALP) drawn in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is a (Ca) test drawn in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is a Phosphorus (P) test in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is a Vitamin D test in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What are the types of muscles?Answer: Skeletal (Striated), Smooth (Non-striated), and (lightly striated)
Question: Which Muscles are under voluntary control, and are involuntaryAnswer: Voluntary- Skeletal - Cardiac and Smooth
Question: What is a Creatine Phosphokinase (CK/CPK) or CPK/CK Iso enzymes drwan in for STAT and tests?Answer: STAT- Green and sent to Chemistry - SST and sent to Chemistry
Question: What is a Lactic acid drawn in and what are the procedures?Answer: Gray top tube, with NO and NO fist, must be transported on ice to Chemistry
Question: What is a Lactic Dehydrogenase (LD/LDH) in?Answer: SST and sent to Chemistry, STAT is
Question: What is a test drawn in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST) (GOT) (SGOT) in?Answer: SST and sent to Chemistry STAT
Question: What is a Creatine MB (CK-MB) drawn in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is Atrophy?Answer: Decrease in size due to
Question: What is dystrophy?Answer: Genetic disease in which muscles away
Question: What is the outermost layer of the system?Answer:
Question: What is the Stratum ?Answer: dead , outermost layer, where Keratin is produced
Question: What is the Germinativum?Answer: live , innermost layer of Epidermis, where melanin is produced
Question: Which layer is also the "true skin"?Answer: Dermis
Question: The dermis contains 2 , what are they and what do they produce?Answer: Sebaceous gland- produces oil called Sudoriferous gland- produces sweat
Question: What is the Layer?Answer: Lies underneath the Dermis and is of Fat and loose connective tissue, and insulates deep tissue
Question: What is Sarcoma?Answer: A form of skin cancer found in patients with AIDS. by numerous bluish red lesions on the skin
Question: AcneAnswer: Inflammatory disease of the sebaceous and hair follicles
Question: ImpetigoAnswer: Staph or infection
Question: What is ?Answer: Chronic skin condition of unknown origin characterized by clearly red patches of scaly skin
Question: What does the Nervous System include?Answer: and Spinal Cord
Question: What is the part of the brain?Answer: Cerebrum
Question: Which part of the brain plays an important part in control and in Latin also means "little brain"?Answer: Cerebellum
Question: Which is the link to the Endocrine System?Answer: Hypothalamus
Question: What connects the spinal cord to the brain and manages going between the brain and the rest of the body?Answer: Brain
Question: What are ?Answer: Membranes that the Central Nervous System
Question: What is the Pia ?Answer: Inner layer of meninges, adheres to the surface of the
Question: What is the Mater?Answer: Middle layer of the
Question: What is the Dura ?Answer: outermost layer of meninges that surrounds the
Question: What does the Peripheral System consist of?Answer: All the that project from the brain and spinal cord
Question: What are the 2 main associated with the Peripheral Nervous System, and what do they do?Answer: Motor- efferent nerves carry impulses from the CNS Sensory- afferent carry impulses to the CNS
Question: What is a ?Answer: Specialized cells that direct
Question: What is the of a cell?Answer:
Question: What do the do?Answer: Carry impulses to the
Question: What is the Axon?Answer: A fiber optic highway that extends from the cell body, impulses away from the cell body
Question: What is the Sheath?Answer: Protective over the Axon
Question: What is a ?Answer: A small space separating the neurons from the next set of
Question: What is ?Answer: disorder
Question: What is ?Answer: Inflammation of the membranes of the spinal cord and
Question: What is Sclerosis?Answer: Disease that causes of the Myelin Sheath
Question: What is ?Answer: Adult onset Chicken
Question: What is a Dilantin test in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What is drawn in?Answer: SST and sent to
Question: What does a Spinal Fluid test consist of?Answer: CSF (not by us) Glucose, Protein, cell count, and culture
Question: What does the System Produce?Answer:
Question: Which is the master gland that secretes hormones to stimulate other ?Answer: Gland
Question: Which hormone stimulates the adrenal glands to secrete Cortisol? What tube and ?Answer: Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH) SST to
Question: hormone stimulates the Kidneys to reabsorb water? What tube and department?Answer: Anti-diuretic Hormone (ADH) SST to
Question: hormone stimulates the development of Ova and Sperm? What tube and department?Answer: Stimulating Hormone (FSH) SST to Chemistry
Question: Which hormone stimulates ? What tube and department?Answer: Growth (GH) SST to Chemistry
Question: Which hormone Thyroid Activity? What tube and department?Answer: Stimulating Hormone (TSH) SST to Chemistry
Question: Which gland is located in the middle of the brain and calcifies puberty?Answer: Gland
Question: hormone effects sleep and wake cycles? What tube and department?Answer: Melatonin. SST to
Question: is the largest gland in the body?Answer: gland
Question: Which hormone calcium in the blood? What tube and department?Answer: SST to Chemistry
Question: Which hormone accelerates metabolic rate in the tissues? What tube and ?Answer: (T4) SST to Chemistry
Question: Which hormone maintains normal heart rate and development of bone and muscle tissue? What tube and ?Answer: Triidothyronine (T3) SST to
Question: Which small glands are located the Thyroid glandAnswer: Parathyroid
Question: Which hormone regulates blood calcium levels, increases blood calcium levels, and regulates P metabolism? Which tube and ?Answer: Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) SST to
Question: Which gland is in immune response?Answer: Thymus
Question: Which hormone is active in the development of lymphocytes? What tube and ?Answer: Thymosin Hormone SST to
Question: Which glands are on top of each Kidney?Answer: Adrenal
Question: Which hormone is active in fight or flight response? tube and department?Answer: Medulla Hormone. SST to Chemistry
Question: Which hormones are produced by the Adrenal ?Answer: Corticosteroid and Androgens and estrogens
Question: What is the name of the cluster of cells found the Pancreas?Answer: of Langerhans
Question: What does do?Answer: Needed for of glucose into the cells and decreases blood glucose levels
Question: Which word secreting too little?Answer:
Question: Which word secreting too much?Answer: Hypersecretion
Question: Which disorder is characterized by the over growth of hands, feet and face caused by excessive Hormone in adult hood?Answer: Acromegaly
Question: form of diabetes causes increased thirst and urine production?Answer: Diabetes
Question: Which disorder is characterized by "moon shaped" face and redistribution of fat to abdomen and back of neck caused by excess Cortisone?Answer: Cushing
Question: What is Diabetes Mallitis? What is the blood test , and what is the tube and department?Answer: Deficiency of Insulin. Hemoglobin A1C (Hgb A1C) Lavender to
Question: Name the six organs of the Gastrointestinal .Answer: Mouth, Pharynx, Larynx, , Stomach, Small Intestines, Large Intestines
Question: What does the do?Answer: Manufactures bile, harmful substances, stores vitamins, and makes Thrombin and Fibrinogen
Question: What does the do?Answer: bile
Question: What does the do?Answer: Secretes insulin, produces enzymes; Amalayse, Lipase, and Trypsin
Question: What is inflammation of the Gallbladder ?Answer:
Question: What is inflammation of the lining called?Answer: Gastritis
Question: Hepatitis ?Answer: Inflammation of the
Question: What is inflammation of the Pancreas ?Answer:
Question: What is an blood test?Answer: Blood in
Question: Where is an Ova and test sent?Answer: section of Chemistry Department
Question: What is the tube and for an Ammonia test?Answer: Green top to Chemistry. Don't to transport on ICE!
Question: Which is the filtering organ of the Urinary system?Answer:
Question: What is the main unit of the Kidneys?Answer:
Question: After the Nephrons, waste then travels to the _________________, inside this, the blood vessels get smaller and the tiny tufts of capillaries are called the ________ which make it possible to filter wasteAnswer: Glomerular (Bowmans Capsule), Glomerulus
Question: What do the tubules do?Answer: Where what is needed by the body gets back into the bloodstream
Question: From the kidneys, urine travels down the _______ and into the ______Answer: , Bladder
Question: The is..?Answer: How urine the body
Question: What are Calculi?Answer: Kidney
Question: What is Respiration?Answer: The actual act of breathing and getting the oxygen to the tissue cells
Question: What is Respiration?Answer: Exchange of gases between the tissue cells and the
Question: Which is the main organ of your respiratory ?Answer: Lungs
Question: What is the and epiglottis?Answer: Glottis is the slit in the larynx; Epiglottis is the flap of skin that covers the during swallowing
Question: Which structure of the respiratory system splits into smaller which extend to each lung?Answer: Trachea
Question: What are the ?Answer: Two man branches if the Trachea that go into the
Question: What are the divisions of the Bronchi called?Answer:
Question: What is the name of the hollow sacs at the end of the Bronchioles where gas exchange takes ?Answer:
Question: What is the pressure of oxygen?Answer: How high is in the lungs, and how low carbon dioxide is in the lungs
Question: What is the Partial Pressure of Dioxide?Answer: how low is in the lungs
Question: What is Answer: A cessation of breathing
Question: What is ?Answer: breathing accompanied by wheezing, caused by spasm or swelling in bronchioles
Question: What is ?Answer: chronic obstructive disease
Question: What is ?Answer: Deficiency of
Question: What is Edema?Answer: of fluid in the lungs
Question: What is the ?Answer: Inner layer of the
Question: What is the ?Answer: Middle of the heart
Question: What is the ?Answer: Outer layer of heart where Coronary arteries are .
Question: What do the coronary do?Answer: Supply the heart with oxygenated
Question: What is the sac that the Heart in place?Answer:
Question: What does the Atrium do?Answer: Receives deoxygenated from the Superior and Inferior Vena Cava
Question: After the atrium the deoxygenated blood flows through the..?Answer: (Atrioventricular) Valve
Question: After the Tricuspid (AV) valve, the deoxygenated moves to the..?Answer: Right .
Question: from the R Ventricle, the deoxygenated blood moves through the _____ and into the ______.Answer: Pulmonary , Pulmonary artery
Question: The artery brings the deoxygenated blood where? And what happens there?Answer: Lungs. The exchange of gases occurs. Blood becomes oxygenated, and Carbon Dioxide
Question: The Oxygenated blood enters the ______ through the ________Answer: Left Atrium, Pulmonary
Question: From the L Atrium, the oxygenated blood moves through the ______ and into the ______Answer: Bicuspid (Mitral) , Left Ventricle
Question: From the L Ventricle, the oxygenated blood moves through the _____ and into the _____Answer: Aortic , Aorta
Question: From the , blood then goes where?Answer: To the rest of the
Question: The Pulmonary Artery is the only that transports what?Answer: blood
Question: The Pulmonary Veins are the only veins in the body that what?Answer: Oxygenated
Question: is the biggest artery in the body?Answer: Aorta
Question: Which is the vein in the body?Answer: /Inferior Vena Cava
Question: SystoleAnswer: Ventricular Contraction, Atria are filling with and blood is being forced into the pulmonic and aortic valves. BP is higher, and is top number on BP
Question: Define Answer: Ventricular relaxation. Ventricles fill with blood, BP is at its and is the bottom number on a BP
Question: What is the Node? (SA Node)Answer: Body's pacemaker, located in the right atrium, and starts the electrical impulse that spreads throughout the and will eventually cause ventricles to contract
Question: After the SA Node, the are then picked up by.?Answer: The Atrioventricular (AV)
Question: After the AV Node, the Impulse travels to the ___________ and then to the little bundle of fibers that branch off that called the ___________Answer: Bundle of His, Fibers
Question: Both the of His and the purkinje Fibers are located where?Answer: They curve around up the Ventricles
Question: What is a Myocardial ?Answer: attack
Question: Why do arteries have walls?Answer: To withstand the pressure from the of the ventricles
Question: Which artery is used to a Blood Pressure?Answer:
Question: artery is used to find a pulse?Answer: Radial
Question: What are that join with capillaries called?Answer: Arterioles
Question: transport what?Answer: blood
Question: What is the vein in the body?Answer: Saphenous, from the groin to the lower leg
Question: When a joins to a vein it is called?Answer: Venules
Question: What do the do?Answer: the exchange of gases and nutrients take place.
Question: How thin are ?Answer: only 1 cell
Question: What is the Tunica Adventitia or Externa?Answer: The layer of a vessel
Question: What is the middle layer of a vessel ?Answer: Tunica
Question: What is the intima?Answer: The inner layer of a
Question: The difference between arteries and isAnswer: have valves to keep the blood flowing in one direction and Arteries do not
Question: What is an ?Answer: obstruction by a
Question: What is an Answer: A circulating
Question: What percent of are the formed elements?Answer: 45%
Question: What percent of the blood is the plasma and what does it ?Answer: 55% 7% , 91% water, and 2% other solutes
Question: What is an ?Answer: A Red Cell (RBC)
Question: What is an primary function?Answer: Transport oxygen from the lungs to the of the bod, and remove carbon dioxide
Question: Immature RBC's are called _______ and contain a _______Answer: , nucleus
Question: Which type of element is the most numerous of the formed elements?Answer: Red Cells
Question: What does do?Answer: a protien that the RBC's their color, and carries the oxygen
Question: What is a ?Answer: A Blood Cell (WBC)
Question: Which type of WBC is the most numerous type that numbers during bacterial infections?Answer:
Question: are 2 types of Lymphocytes, what are they and what do they do?Answer: B-Cell- antibodies, T-Cell- fighter cells that attack infected cells
Question: Which is the largest of the WBC's and numbers increase during chronic Answer: Monocytes
Question: Which WBC's numbers increase during ?Answer:
Question: Which WBC's numbers increase during allergic reactions and inflammatory ?Answer: Basophils
Question: name for platelets is..?Answer: Thrombocytes
Question: What do the do?Answer: Clotting
Question: For a with Type A blood, which antigen and which antibodies does it contain and where?Answer: RBC has the A , plasma contains the anti-b antibody
Question: For a person with Type B blood, which antigen and antibodies does it contain and where?Answer: RBC has the B antigen, plasma contains the anti-a
Question: For a person with Type AB blood, which antigen and which antibodies does it and where?Answer: RBC has both A and B antigens, plasma has A nor B antibodies
Question: For a person with Type O blood, which antigen and which antibodies does it contain and ?Answer: RBC has no antigens, plasma contains both A and B
Question: Which blood type is the donor?Answer: Type
Question: blood type is the universal receiver?Answer: Type
Question: What does the D-Antigen ?Answer: the Rh
Question: Where do you find ?Answer: Its the portion of a clotted specimen
Question: Where do you find Answer: It is the liquid of whole blood
Question: Which disorder is characterized by reduction in the number of RBC's in the circulating blood?Answer:
Question: What is ?Answer: An increase in RBC's
Question: What is ?Answer: a decreased of platelets
Question: Define Answer: the controlling of
Question: The first stage of hemostasis is Primary Hemostasis, what here?Answer: Vasoconstriction, the damaged vessel will constrict or to slow the flow of blood
Question: 2 of hemostasis is called platelet plug formation, what happens here?Answer: When a vessel is damaged, platelets become activated and release a chemical that causes aggregation, then platelets stick together and adhere to the area
Question: Stage 3 of hemostasis is Secondary hemostasis (Fibron clot formation) What happens here?Answer: Clots are from a protein called Fibrin, fibrin then turns to fibrinogen, from the enzyme thrombin, also needed is calcium, which acts as a glue to hold the fibrin to eachother and form a loose mesh work. This stabilized mesh will trap RBC's
 
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.

  Normal Size     Small Size show me how
Created by: 1086900246
Popular Phlebotomy sets