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Human Structure Wk 2

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
What is myotome?   All MM innervated by a single spinal nerve  
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What is dermatome?   all skin innervated by a single spinal nerve  
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What do motor nerves attach to?   Muscles  
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What could occur if the brachial artery bifurcated high? And what are the symptoms?   ulnar artery may course superficial to the flexor MM and may be mistaken for the ulnar vein when an IV is started. The drugs injected into the capillary bed damages it and results in gangrene.  
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What Artery are you feeling when you take a pulse in the wrist?   Radial A or radial pulse  
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Which aretery do you listen to with your stethoscope when taking blood pressure?   The brachial A lies in the cubital fossa and when taking a blood pressure this is what you are listening to with your stethoscope.  
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What divides the axillary A into 3 parts?   pectoralis minor  
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What are some AA involved in the scapular anastamoses?   suprascapular A, dorsal scapular A, circumflex scapular A, posterior humeral cicumflex A, posterior intercostal A  
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What movements can not be done with Erb palsy? What is the characteristic sign? What is injured?   Can not laterally rotate, abduct, or flex; waiter's tip hand; upper trunk  
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>Why is it called monkey hand?   beccause the thenar eminence becomes flattened due to lack of work because median nerve has been severed  
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what are the syptoms of injury to musculocutaneous N?   causes weakness of supination and flexion of forearm and loss of sensation on the lateral side of forearm. Because remember the musuclocutaneous nerve turns into the lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve.  
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what two injuries cause wrist drop?   injury to posterior cord [crutch palsy] and injury to radial nerve from fracture of the midshaft of the humerus  
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A broken surgical neck of the humerus might injure what two structures? What movements can't be done? And which M could still assist in one of those movements?   axillary nerve, aposterior circuflex humeral artery; weakness of lat rotation and abduction of arm; supraspinatus can abduct the arm but not to a horizontal level  
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What is Carpal Tunnel Syndrome?   caused by compression of the median nerve due to inflammation or thickening of the synovial sheaths. Pain, Paresthesisa [tingling, burning, numbness]  
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What is it called to have a supernumerary breast?   polymastia  
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What is it called to have a supernumerary nipple?   Polythelia  
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What kind of joint is the interphalangeal joint and what is its movement?   hinge joint; flex and extend  
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What kind of joint is the metacarpophalangeal joint and what is its movement?   condyloid joint; flex, extend, abduct, adduct  
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What kind of joint is the carpometacarpal joint and what is its movement?   saddle joint between trapezium and the 1st metacarpal bone ; flex, extend, abduct, adduct, and circumduct; also plane joints between carpal bones and four metacarpal- sliding and gliding  
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What kind of joint is the midcarpal joint and what is its movement?   plane joint; between proximal and distal carpal rows; gliding and sliding  
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What kind of joint is the radiocarpal joint and what is its movement?   condylar joint; flex, extend, abduct, adduct, circumduct  
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What kind of joint is the proximal radioulnar joint and what is its movement?   pivot joint; pronate and supinate; head of radius rotates within the encircling annular ligament  
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What kind of joint is the distal radioulnar joint and what is its movement?   pivot joint; supinate, pronate  
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ermatome C2   Top of skull -Dermatome  
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Dermatome C3-4   Neck - Dermatome  
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Dermatome C5   Shoulder and Lateral Arm - Dermatome  
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Dermatome C6   Lateral Forearm and Thumb - Dermatome  
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Dermatome C7   Index and Middle Digit - Dermatome  
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Dermatome C8   Medial Hand/ Forearm - Dermatome  
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Dermatome T1   Medial Arm / Axilla - Dermatome  
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Dermatome T4   Nipple Line - Dermatome  
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Dermatome T7   Xiphoid Process - Dermatome  
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Dermatome T10   Umbilicus [Appendix] - Dermatome  
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Dermatome L1   Inguinal Ligament - Dermatome  
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Dermatome L4   Medial Leg /Foot - Dermatome  
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Dermatome L5   Lateral Leg - Dermatome  
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Dermatome S1   Lateral Foot/ Back of Leg - Dermatome  
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Dermatome S2-5   Genitals - Dermatome  
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Which bones make up the pectoral girdle?   clavicle, scapula and the humerus  
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What are cleavage lines?   skin tension lines, correspond to the natural oreintation of collagen fibers in the dermis and epidermis  
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Which vertebra provide support for the pelvic girdle?   sacral and coccygeal  
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Which vertebrae allow flexibility and movement?   cervical thoracic and lumbar  
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What makes up the axial skeleton?   ribs, sternum, skull, and vertebrae; NOT THE CLAVICLE  
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What is a suture?   fibrous joint; rigid joint  
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What unites 2 adjacent vertebra?   intervertebral disks and articular processes  
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Which regions are your 2 primary curvatures?   thoracic and sacral coccygeal  
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Which regions are your secondary curvatures?   cervical and lumbar  
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What is lordosis?   an inward curvature ofa portion of the lumbar and cervical region  
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Which back MM are involved in respiration?   serratus posterior superior, serratus posterior inferior, levator costarum?  
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What are the borders of the triangle of auscultation?   latissimus dorsi, trapezius, medial margin of scapula  
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What are the borders of the lumbar triangle?   latissimus dorsi, iliac crest, external oblique M  
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Where would a lumbar hernia occur occasionaly?   lumbar triangle  
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Where would a nerve be found on a muscle?   middle deep side of muscle; equatorial plane of muscle  
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Almost all "limb" MM this includes superficial back are from where?   the brachial plexus; ie. Thoracodorsal N [latissimsus dorsi] is off the posterior cord  
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What movement could you not do if you cut the accessory nerve?   could not pick up shoulder  
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Which artery supplies all of the limb? And what supplies the scapula?   Subclavian A; still the subclavian A because remember the scapula is part of the appendicular [limb] MM  
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What is a lateral bend of the spine? And what complications would it cause? How does it occur?   scoliosis; pushing on breast cavity, due to unequal growth of the vertebral column  
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Who has hyperlordosis? What is it from?   pregnant women; trunk muscle weakness and osteomalacia [softening of bones due to lack of vitamin D]  
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What is another name for a hunchback? What could cause it?   Excessive thoracic kyphosis; osteoporosis  
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What is Pott's Disease?   Tuberculosis of the spine which leads to kyphosis  
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What is Scheuermann's disease?   juvenile kyphosis; due to front of vertebra not growing as fast as back  
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What does the notochord turn into?   nucleus pulposus  
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What is annulus fibrosis?   fibrocartilage  
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In what direction does a herniated disk occur and what does it affect?   posterior laternal; impinges on spinal nerves and roots  
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Where is a herniatedisk most common?   lumbar vertebra  
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Where do spinal nerves arise in relation to intervertebral disk?   above the intervertebral disk; so that nerve won't be impinged if herniated disk  
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What does the ligamentum flavum do?   connects the laminae of 2 adjacent vertebra; helps maintain upright posture; lots of elastic fibers  
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What does the postrior longitudinal ligmaent do?   prevents hyperflexion  
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What does the anterior longitudinal ligament do?   prevents hyperextension  
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What goes through the transverse foramen?   intervertebral A or vertebral A  
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What does the supraspinous ligament do?   connect the spinous processes together  
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What does the interspinous ligament do?   connect the spinous processes together  
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What ligament is from the dens to the occiput?   Alar ligament  
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Which ligament helps with the atlantoaxial joint?   cruciate ligament by holding the dens in place  
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What is a continuation of the posterior longitudinal ligament?   Tectorial Membrane  
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What movement is permitted by the atlantooccipital joint? And what kind of joint is it?   flexion and extension; Yes; it is a condylar synovial joint  
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What kind of joint is the atlantoaxial joint and what movement does it allow?   2 lateral plane joints and a pivot joint. Rotation and lateral flexion. "No" movement.  
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What makes the vertebral arch?   pedicle and lamina  
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What part of the vertebral column bares the weight?   vertebral body  
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What kind of joints do articular facets make?   Plane synovial joints; gliding movement  
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What bony defect is caused by spinal bifida occulta?   vertebral arch doesn't fuse  
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What part of the vertebra forms the intervertebral foramen?   superior and inferior vertebral notches  
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What are between the Superior and inferior articular facets of the vertebrae?   interspinous and supraspinous ligaments  
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What does spondyl mean?   vertebra  
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What occurs in a hangman fracture?   pedicles of the axis are fractured and the cruciform ligament is torn causing the spinal cord to be crushed  
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What allows for the range of motion of the vertebra?   articular facets; remember they are plane joints allowing for a gliding motioni  
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What is the name of C7?   Vertebrata prominens [spinous process not bifid]  
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What does the nuchal ligament do?   Helps support the head over the vertebral column [huge I nhorese]  
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Rib 7 would articulate with which 2 vertebra?   T6 and T7; superior facet connects with the corresponding rib  
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What does the transverse costal facet articulate with?   tubercle of ribs  
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What movement do lumbar vertebra have?   left right wisting and lateral flexion; more mvoement than thoracic vertebrae  
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What attaches to the mammillary processes of the lumbasr vertebrae?   multifidi M  
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What is the modified/fused transveres process of sacrum called?   Ala  
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What is the fused bodies of sacral vertebra called?   sacral promentory  
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Where do you inject anesthesia?   sacral hiatus  
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Why would there be more thean 4 coccyx vertebra?   9 somites must degenerate  
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Which AA supply the vertebra in the cervical region?   Subclavian A branches: Vertebral A and Ascending Cervical  
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Which AA supply the thoracic and lumbar vertebra?   posterior interocstals off the aorta and lumbar AA off the aorta  
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Which AA supply the sacral vertebra?   Lateral sacral off the internal iliac A  
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Whatare the segmental AA?   I think they are the posterior intercostal and the lumbar AA  
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What is the most common site for bony metastases? Why?   vertebral column; these VV are valveless permitting blood to flow superior or inferior depending on blood pressure  
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Describe the venous system of the vertebral column.   There are Anterior and posterior external vertebral plexuses which are connected to an internal vertebral plexus [in the epidural space] by communication VV  
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Which spinal cord region has the greatest range of motion?   cervical region  
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Where does the spinal cord end?   L1-L2  
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What causes Cauda Equina Syndrome and what are the symtoms?   interruption of the cauda equina below L2 by trauma. Causes urine or fecal incontinence with saddle"numbness"  
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What are the AA that supply the spinal cord?   1 anterior spinal A and 2 posterior spinal AA  
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Where is the cervical enlargement?   C4-T1  
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Where is the lumbar enlargement?   L2-S3  
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Where do you get a spinal tap?   usually between L3 and L4 or L4 and L5. Below the conus medullaris [L2]; CSF from the subarachnoid space  
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When does the dural sac end?   S2  
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Which meninge has blood vessels?   pia mater  
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What are the lateral extensions of pia mater called and what do they do?   Denticulate ligament; hold psinal cord in position within the subarachnoid space  
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Where is the CSF around the spinal cord?   in the subarachnoid space  
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What does the rami communicans do?   connects the sympathetic chain ganglia to the dorsal and ventral primary rami  
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Where are the preganglionic sympathetic and parasympathetic cell bodies?   Intermediolateral cell column of lateral horn of the spinal cord  
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What does the autonomic nervous system control?   viscera  
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What does the somatic nervsous system control?   voluntary control of skeletal MM  
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Name the apaces and meninges in order.   epidural space, dura mater, subdural space, arachnoid mater, subarachnoi spce, pia mater, spinal cord  
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Name what the needle would penetrate when doing a spinal tap.   supraspinal ligament, Interspinal ligament, Ligamentum Flavum, Epidural spcae, dura mater, Subdural space, Arachnoid mater  
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What is and What causes Spinal Stenosis?   narrowing of spinal column that causes pressure on the spinal cord. Usually occurs as a person ages and the disks become drier and shrink or as bones and ligaments swell and grow larger due to arthritis.  
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What is polio?   Poliomyelitis is a viral dsiease that can lead to paralysisi. It affects the meninges of the central nervous system.  
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What is Shingles?   Herpes Zoster, caused by varicella zoster virus that remains latenet in the dorsal root ganglia of spinal nerves. Causes severe neurologic pain and a rash in the nerves dermatome.  
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What do glial cells do?   provide support, nutrients, clean-up  
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What are 2 names for a cell body?   perikaryon and soma  
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What are collaterals?   branches of axons that usually feed into another soma  
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What kind of conduction do dendrites have?   passive membrane  
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What properties does the axon hillock have?   action potential generated; active membrane properties; no decrease in potetntial with propagation  
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What is an oligodendrocyte?   forms the myelin sheath in the CNS  
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What is a Schwann cell?   forms the myelin sheath in the PNS  
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What is multiple sclerosis?   chronic disease caused by destruction of myelin I spinal cord and brain; may be autoimmune; muscle weakness,numbness, pain; 3 x more in females then males  
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What is at the terminal button?   synapse  
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Where do you find bipolar neurons?   in special sensory processes like smell, taste, sight and hearing  
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Where do you find pseudounipolar neurons?   sensory info; remember the cell bodies are located in the dorsal root ganglion; one end is in the PNS and one end is in the CNS  
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Where do you find multipolar neurons?   motor neurons, neurons in the brain; interneurons  
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What are cortical neurons and what do they do?   nerves that make up the cortex of the brain; aid in memory, mood, behanvior, feeding, reasoning along with sensory and motor  
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What does the brain stem and spinal cord deal with?   somatic sensory, motor and special senses  
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Are the cranial nerves part of the CNS or PNS?   PNS  
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What are groups of cell bodies call in the CNS? PNS?   Nuclei; Ganglia  
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What are groups of axons called in the CNS? PNS?   Tracts, nerves  
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What does somatic deal with?   conscious control of skeletal M and awareness of stimuli. Motor neurons to skeletal M. Sensory endings to activate neves that carry info to your perceptive brain.  
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What is Visceral?   things that happen that you may or may not be aware of an any given moment, ie. Contraction of smooth M; breathing; also deals with visceral sensory [osmolarity in blood]  
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What's another name for an alpha motor neuron?   somatic motor nerve  
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Where are the somatic motor neuron cell bodies located?   anterior [ventral] horn  
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Which system is catabolic metabolism involved in?   sympathetic  
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Which system is anabolic metabolism involved in?   parasympathetic  
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Blood to genitals causing an erection is caused by which system [para or sym]?   parasympathetic  
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Ejaculation is caused by which system [para or sym]?   sympathetic  
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Where is the pregangilionic cell body located in the parasympathetic division?   Intermediolateral synapse of lateral horn in either cranio or sacral portion of spinal cord  
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Where does the preganglionic neuron synapse in the parasympathetic division ?   at , in or near the target organ  
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Where are the postganglionic cell bodies of the parasympathetic division?   at the synapse with the preganglionic neuron, in or near the target organ  
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Where are the synapses for preganglionic neurons of the sympathetic division going to the bodyn located?   sympathetic chain or in the preaotic ganglionated plexus  
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Where are the sypathetic preganglion neurons's cell bodies [going to the body] located?   intermediolateral part of lateral horn in T1 - L2 of the spinal cord [thoracolumbar division]  
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Where are the sympathetic postganglionic cell bodies [going to the body] located?   sympathetic chain ganglions or the preaortic ganglionated plexus.  
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What is the rami communicantes?   communicating branch between the spinal nerve and sympathetic trunk  
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Where is the white rami in the sympathetic nervous system?   It is the preganglionic neuron which travels up and down the sympathetic chain to the ganglion closest to the target organ. It synapes in that ganglion and the postganglion is gray rami because it is so close to the organ it does not need to go fast.  
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Where do the sympathetic splanchnic nerves arise?   from the sympathetic chain  
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Where do the parasympathetic pelvic splanchnics arise?   from S2-4 ventral primary rami  
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What are splanchnic nerves?   paried nerves that contribute to the innevation of the viscera  
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Where is the cell body of a preganglionic neuron of the sympathetic NS going to the viscera located?   intermediolateral synapse  
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Where does the preganglionic neuron of the sympathetic NS going to the viscera synapse? What kind of nerves are they and what region of the spinal cord do they come from?   preaortic ganglia [between sympathetic chain and ganglia] ; splanchnic nerve; from thoracic lumbar or sacral region  
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Where do the preganglionic neurons of the parasympathetic nervous system come from?   CN III, VII, IX, and X [oculomoter, facial, glossopharyngeal, vagus] or pelvic splanchnics  
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How do postganglionic neurons of the sympathetic NS going to viscera travel?   they run with blood vessels to organ  
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Other than the ligamentum nuchae what other feature of the neck is importatnt in animals?   platysma  
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What is the roof of the posterior triangle ?   investing layer of deep cervical fascia; most superficial part of the deep cervical fascia and it encloses the whole neck  
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What 3 fascias make up the carotid sheath?   pretracheal, investing layer, prevertebral layer  
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What is the floor of the posterior triangle?   prevertebral layer of deep cervical fascia  
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The ansa cervicales has two parts. What are they and where do they come from?   Decendens cervicales from C2 and decendens hypoglossal from C1  
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What is in the carotid sheath?   common carotid A, internal jugular V, vagus N  
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What is the brachial plexus between?   anterior and middle scalene  
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What separates the subclavian A and subclavian V?   anterior scalene M  
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What divides the subclavian into 3 parts?   anterior scalene  
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Why is the hyoid important?   maintains airway; widest part of airway is around the hyoid bone  
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What is Pierre Robin Sequence?   jaw bone does not form during development so you can surgically take the mandible and move forward to elevate the hyoid bone to create a better airway; the tongue is back [glossoptosis] , cleft palate, can't breath  
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What is the 1st branchial arch from?   Trigeminal N [sensation of the face] CN V  
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What is the 2nd branchial arch from?   CN VII, facial nerve [motor and sensory]  
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What is the mylohyoid shaped like?   diaphragm, and pelvis  
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Which of the 6 subtriangles does not have a right and left?   submental  
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What does the anterior digastric get its nerve supply from?   CN V, trigeminal  
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What does the posterior digastric get its nerve supply from?   CN VII, facial N  
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What is another name for the submandibular tirangle?   digastric triangle  
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What innervates the larynx?   Recurrent laryngeal off the Vagus N  
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What does the carotid body sense? What is it?   chemo receptor e.g. lack of O2, excess CO2, inc H+  
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What does the Carotid sinius sense?   changes in blood pressure; baroreceptor  
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What is Carotid Sinus Syncope?   temporary loss of consciousness or fainting caused by diminished cerebral blood flow; caused by hypersensitive carotid sinus  
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What is the order of brachial plexus distribution?   roots, trunks, divsions, cords [randy travis drinks cold beer]  
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What are the boundaries of the carotid triangle?   superior belly of the omohyoid M, sternocleidomastoid, posterior belly of the digastric M  
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What is in the Carotid triangle?   carotid A and branches  
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What are the boundaries of the muscular triangle?   Midline of neck, hyoid bone, superior belly of the opohyoid, sternocleidomastoid M  
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What are the contents of the muscular triangle?   thyrohyoid, omohyoid, sternohyoid, sternothyroid  
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What are the boundaries of the Omoclavicular triangle?   inferior belly of the omohoid, sternoclediomastoid, clavicle  
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What are thecontents of the omoclavicular tirangle?   suprascapular A, External jugular V, subclavian A [3rd part]  
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What are the boundaries of the submandibular triangle?   anterior belly of the digastric, posterio belly of the digastric, mandible  
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What are the contents of the submandibular triangle? And what's another name for it?   digastric triangle; mylohyoid M, hypoglossus N,  
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What are the boundaries of the submental triangle?   anterior belly of the digastric M, hyoid  
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What are the contents of the submental triangle?   anterior jugular V, mylohyoid M  
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What are the boundaries of the occipital triangle?   sternocleidomastoid M, omohyoid M, trapezius  
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What are the contents of the occipital triangle?   accessory N, scalene MM, transverse cervical A, occipital A, hypoglossal N  
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What are the 6 subtirangles of the neck?   submental, submandibular, occipital, muscular, carotid, omoclavicular  
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What is neurovascular compression syndrome?   nerve compression of brachial plexus and subclavian vessels caused by abnormal insertion of the anterior and middle scacle MM or cervical rib; can correct by cutting rib or scalene  
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What is waiter's tip?   damage to upper turnk of brachial plexus caused by a violent separation of the head from shoulder, arm is medially rotated and can not laterally rotate; it can be caused by stretching an infant's enck during delivery- birth palsy  
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What is torticoolis and another name for it?   wryneck; spasmadic contraction or shortening of the neck MM causing a swistin gof the neck due to injury of the sternocleidomastoid or accessory N  
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What is Eagle Syndrome?   elongation of the styloid process or excessive calcification of the styloid process; could compress the glossopharyngeal N or place pressure on the carotid AA; treat with styloidectomy  
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What root does the suboccipital N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C1, Motor, suboccipital region  
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What root does the Ansa Cervicales come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C1; motor, anterior neck MM  
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What root does the Greater Occipital N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C2; Sensory; semispinalis capitis; from dorsal root  
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What root does the Lesser Occipital N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C2; sensory; from ventral root; comes from the anterior of the neck around to the back; cutaneous ininervation  
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What root does the Great Auricular N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C2/C3; Sensory; Auricle and parotid region  
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What root does the Transverse Cervical N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C2/C3; Sensory; anterior and lateral parts of the neck  
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What root does the Third Occipital Nerve come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C3; skin of lower head; sensory  
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What root does the Supraclavicular N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C3/C4; Sensory; skin above and below clavicle; skin of pectoral, deltoid and outer trapezius  
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What root does the Phrenic N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C3, C4, C5 ; Motor and Sensory; diaphragm; mainly arises from C4; lays on anterior scalene  
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What root does the Dorsal Scapular N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C5; rhomboids and levator scapulae; motor  
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What root does the Subclavius N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C5; subclavius M; Motor  
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What root does the Suprascapular N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C5/C6; from superior trunk; supraspinous and infraspinous MM; Motor  
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What roots does the superior trunk come from?   C5/C6  
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What roots does the Middle trunk come from?   C7  
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What roots does the Inferior trunk come from?   C8/T1  
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What root does the Long thoracic N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   C5/C6/C7; serratus anterior M; motor  
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What roots innervate the thyroid gland?   C5 and T1  
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What root does the Posterior cord come from? What are it's branches?   C5-T1; upper subscapular [subscapularis M]; thoracodorsal [latissimus dorsi] lower subscapular N [Subscapularis M]; Axillary N; Radial N  
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What roots does the lateral cord come from and what are its branches?   C5-C7; Musculocutaneous, Lateral root of Median N; Lateral Pectoral N  
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What roots does the inferior cord come from and what are it's branches?   C8/T1; Medial pectoral N; Medial cutaneous N of arm and forearm; Ulnar N; Median N  
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What root does the Right Recurrent Laryngeal N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   T1/T2; branch of Vegas; motor;  
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What root does the Left Recurrent Laryngeal N come from? Is it involved in Motor or Sensory? What does it innervate?   T4/T5; branch of Vegas  
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CN 5 has divisions some are sensory and some are motor. What are they?   Opthalamic N [Sensory]; Maxillary N [Sensory] Mandibular N [Sensory and Motor]  
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IF you damage the long thoracic N what is the symptom?   waiter's tip hand  
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Musculocutaneous N is from which roots?   C5/C6  
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Radial N is from which roots?   C5/C6  
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Axillary n is from which roots?   C5/C6  
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Medial Cutaneous N of the arm is from which roots?   C8/T1  
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What symptoms would you have if you removed the parathyroid during athyroidectomy?   tinglin gandnumbness in face and limbs as well as craps and spasms in hands  
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What is another name for the adam's apple?   laryngeal prominence  
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Where is the thyroid gland located?   C5-T1  
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Where is the hyoid located?   C3  
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Where is the thyroid cartilage located?   C4;  
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What kind of cartilage is thyroid cartilage?   hyaline  
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Where is the cricoid cartilage located?   C6  
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What divides the retropharngeal space?   alar fascia  
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How might an infection of the neck spread to the posterior mediastinum?   through the retropharyngeal space  
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What does the investing fascia enclose?   sternocleidomastoid and trapezius  
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What does the prevertebral fascia fuse with inferiorly?   anterior longitudinal ligament  
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What does the prevertebral fascia extend laterally as?   axillary sheath  
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What does the carotid sheath not house?   EXTERNAL carotid A and sympathetic trunk  
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What is a Pneumomediastinum?   air in mediastinum from ruptured trachea, bronchus, esophagus; hear a grating or crackling sound [crepitance]  
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What does the Ansa Subclavius loop around? Subclavian A and connects middle and inferior cervical sympathetic ganglia    
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What does the thyroid gland secrete?   thyroxine and thyrocalcitonin [calcitonin]  
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What innervatres the thyroid gland?   superior, middle, and inferior cervical sympathetic ganglia  
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What controls the thryoid gland?   pituitary gland through the thyroid stimulating hormone  
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What does thyroxine do?   involved in rate of metabolism [T4]  
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What does calcitonin do?   reduce calcium in blood; opposes parathyroid hormone  
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What controlls the parathyroid gland?   pituitary and hypothalamus  
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What does parathyroid gland do?   regulates Ca and phophorus  
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What results with removal fo parathyroid glands?   tetany [involuntary contractions of MM] and death  
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What does thoe thoracic duct empty into , what does it drain and where is it located?   L brachiocephalic at junciton of fsubclavianand IJV, drains entire bodye except R side of head an dneck, r upper limb, r thorax, L side  
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What is the other lymphatic duct besides the thoracic?   right lymphatic duct  
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What is a goiter?   Swelling in the thyroid gland leading to swelling of the neck; caused by iodine insufficiency; can treat with radioactive iodine or thyroidectomy  
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How many people have a pyramidal lobe?   50%  
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What are thyroglossal duct remnants called?   thyroglossal cysts,  
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What is Grave's disease?   hyperthryoidism is characterized by a goiter  
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What is Hashimoto's disease?   hypothyroidism is characterized by a goiter  
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What is another name for a pyramidal lobe?   accessory lobe  
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What is an ectopic thyroid?   Find thyroid in the middle of the tongue; Generally underdeveloped thyroid; Hypothryoidism  
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What is exophthalmos?   bulging of the eye  
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What is Barrett's esophagus?   lower esophagus become damaged, usually from repeated exposure to stomach acid. damage causes changes to the color & composition of esophagus cells; causes dysphagia [difficulty swallowing]; silent until large & metastaic; poor prognosis  
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What is Horner's Syndrom?   Tumor in apex of lung causin gcompression on the sympathetic trunk. Signs: Miosis [ pupilary constriction], Ptosis [drooping of eyelid], Anhidrosis [absense of sweating], Enopthalmos [sunken eye]  
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Difference between Bell's and Horner's?   drooling; loss of taste and sensation on part of tongue; lack of lacrimation  
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What might you injure with thyroid surgery and what is the symptom?   recurrent laryngeal injury; hoarsness  
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Which artery passes through the submandibular gland or is posterior?   facial A  
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What N controls the intrinsic M of tongue?   hypoglossal  
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What is a synctium?   multinucleated; skeletal M  
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What is epimysium?   surrounds muscle  
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What is perimysium?   Ct separates MM into fascicles  
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What is endomysium?   CT separates fascicles into fibers; highly vascularized  
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What causes the striations?   organization of actin and myosin  
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Where are the nuclei in a muscle cell?   below the sarcolemma  
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What continues as a tendon at the end of the M? endomysium and perimysium [dense regular connective tissue]    
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What is released in the synaptic clef and causes depolarization?   acetylcholine  
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How many nuclei does a cardiac cellhave?   1  
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What are eintercalated disks?   special junctional complexes that have gap junctions and macula adherens [desmosomes]; no tight junctions; this helps synchronized contraction of cardiac tissue  
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What is in a sarcoplasmic cone?   mitochondria and glycogen  
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How do smooth M cells communicate?   gap junctions  
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What has no blood, makes the fetal skeleton , and is made of chondrocytes and extracellular matrix?   cartilage  
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What is hyaline cartilage made of?   type II collagen, GAGS, proteoglycans  
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What is elastic cartilage made of?   elastic fibers' and Type II collagen  
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What is fibrocartilage made of?   type I and II collagen  
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Where are chondrocytes located?   potential spaces called lacunae  
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What is territorial matrix?   matrix immediately surrounding lacunae  
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What is interterritorial matrix?   matrix between groups of chondrocytes  
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What is perichondrium?   dense irregular CT surrounding cartilage  
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What are isogenous groups?   cells that have recently divided  
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Which cartilage is a homogenous matrix?   hyaline cartilage  
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Name some types of hyaline cartilage.   cricoid and thyroid cartilage, articular cartilage, fetal skeleton, epiphyseal paltes  
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Name some types of elastic crrtilage?   external ear, auditory meatus, eustachian tube, epiglotitis  
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What is fibrocartilage?   combination of hyaline cartilage and dense regular CT; you can see Type I collagen bundles; isogenous groups; there is no perichondirum  
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Where is fibrocartilage found?   menisci, intervertebral disks, articular disks,  
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What is bone tissue?   specialized CT with a mineralized extracellular matrix  
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What is bone tissue made of?   Type I collagen [90%] and ground substance [10%]  
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What is deposited on the extracellular matrix?   hydroxyapatie crystals  
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What are anastomosing spicule of bone tissue called and where is it found? And what is in them?   trabeculae; spongy bone. Bone marrow and blood vessels. Found primarily at the ends of long bones and in the center of flat and irregular bones  
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Where is compact bone found?   dense layer on outside of bone  
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What are the units of mature boen called?   osteons are cylindrical units. They replace woven bone which was deposited rapidly  
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What are osteoblasts formed from?   mesenchymal cells  
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When do ostebolasts turn into osteocytes?   when they beocme incased in the matrix that they secrete. The cell is now sensecent and will reside in a lacuna  
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What controls the osteoclasts?   parathyroid hormone. They are large multinucleated phagocytes formed by the fusion of monocytic cells  
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What is another name for an osteon?   haversion system  
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What is lacunae?   empty space which has a canal with blood vessels and stuff in it  
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What are interstitial almellae?   remnants of previous concentric lamellae  
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What are inner circumferential lamellae?   deposited by endosteum, more interior  
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Qwhat are outer circumferential lamellae?   deposited by periosteum, outside  
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What are canaliculi?   channels that connect osteocytes via gap junctions  
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What are volkmann's canals?   conenct blood vessels of adjacent haversian canals  
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Wshat are osteoprogenitor cells?   stem cells of periosteum and marrow cavity  
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What are bone lining cells?   quiescent [inactive] osteoblasts of the endosteum and periostuem  
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What can osteoprogenitor cells form ?   osteoblasts or osteoclasts  
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What shape are osteoblasts? And what is pH?   c uboidal or polygonal; basophilic  
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What do osteoblasts do?   synthesize osteoid [unmiuneralized bone matrix] and mineralize osteoid  
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What can osteocytes do?   they hav ea livmited ability to produce and resorb bone  
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What do osteoprogenitor cells come from?   mesenchymal stem cells; they are located in the periosteum and early endosteum  
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What are bone lining cells?   quiescent osteoblasts; simple squamous cells on bone surface; connected via gap junctions  
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What is howshi's lacunae?   shallow indentation caused by the degradation of bone by osteoclasts  
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What is the environment like around an osteoclast?   acidic environment which demineralizes osteoid and provides optimal activity of acid hydrolases  
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What is intramembranous ossification?   bone formed directly by condensation of mesenchymal cells; e.g. flat bones of skull, clavicle, mandible  
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What is endochondral ossification?   bone formed from cartilage model, axial skeleton and bones fo extremeties  
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Describe the order of endochondral ossification.   cartilage model; periosteal bone collar [dense layer outside; chondrocytes hypertroph-->Type II collagen; Cartilage matrix calcifies & chondrocytes degernate; blood vessels invade by osteoprogenitor & hemnopoietic cells; bone matrix-->calcified cartilage  
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Describe how an epiphyseal plate is formed.   there are 2 centers of ossification and the plate forms between. chondrocyte proliferation ceases and epiphyseal closes after maximal grow is achieved  
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Wher is the primary center of ossification?   shaft  
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Where is the secondary center of ossification and when does it start?   heads; shortly after birth  
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Wshat is the epiphyseal plate?   responsible for longitudinal growth of bones  
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Where is the artiuclar cartilage?   on the ends  
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