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A&P
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Referring to the abdominopelvic region, what is in the right hypochondriac region? | Right lobe of the liver, and gallbladder are visible. |
| Referring to the abdominopelvic region, what is in the right hypochondriac region? | superficially, only a portion of the stomach and a small portion of the large intestine is visible. |
| When in anatomical position, how should the arms and palms face? | The arms are to the side and palms face forward. |
| What is an example of extrinsic control? | nervous and endocrine (hormonal) regulation. |
| Referring to the abdominopelvic region. what is in the hypogastric region? | loops of the small intestine, the urinary bladder, part of the large intestine, and the appendix are seen. |
| What can hydrogen bonds only attach to? | H-bonds on nitrogen, oxygen and flourine atom |
| During prolonged exercise ATP supply may be short. Where can muscles get energy from? | Creatine phosphate. When CP releases its phosphate group, the energy can be used to add a phosphate to ADP, thus “recharging” ATP. |
| What is an example of a primary structure? | PTH (parathyroid hormone) |
| What is an example of a secondary structure? | Alpha helix |
| A protein structure that has a polypeptide twisted into coils that touch one another in many places, and “spot welds,” or interlocking connections. | tertiary structure |
| What is an example of a quarternary structure? | antibody molecules, hemoglobin molecules in RBC |
| The functions of IMPs in a phospholipid bilayer are: | Transport, identify, signal, and connect |
| Heart muscles are joined by | Gap junctions so that a single impulse can travel to, and thus stimulate, many cells at the same time. |
| Skin is joined together by | desmosomes |
| The intestines are joined together by | Tight junctions |