Rio Salado Bio 201 Exam 2
What do all vertebrae possess? - answer transverse process and vertebral foramen
What is the longest and strongest bone of the face? - answer Mandible
The temporal bone riddled with sinuses - answer Mastoid Process
What is a Colle's Fracture? - answer A break in the distal end of the radius
What is the most common site for fractures in the Humerus? - answer surgical neck
Sagittal Suture - answer Right and Left Parietal
Lambdoid Suture - answer Occipital and Parietal Bone
Squamosal Suture - answer temporal and parietal Bone
Coronal Suture - answerParietal and Frontal Bone
Cervical Vertebrae - answer
Thoracic Vertebrae - answer
Lumbar Vertebrae - answer
What is the only vertebrae that does not have a body? - answeratlas
Where is the pituitary gland housed? - answersella turcica of the sphenoid
Where are the Paranasal sinuses found? - answermaxillae
Where is the location of the center of gravity of the body? - answerit is 1 cm posterior to
the sacral promontory
Thoracic vertebrae T2 through T8 differ from the others in that? - answerthey have
superior and inferior demifacets
The antebrachium is composed of which two bones? - answerthe radius and the ulna
The short bone that attaches to the third metacarpal is the - answercapitate
, The bone in direct contact with the first metatarsal (big toe) is the - answermedial
cuneiform
Why are the paranasal sinuses at greater risk for infection? - answertheir location
adjacent to the middle ear cavity often creates a high risk for infection
The tibia is in contact with which tarsus? - answertalus
Ostealgia - answerpain in the bone
Carpal bones - answertrapezium, trapezoid, capitate, hamate, scaphoid, lunate,
triquetrum, pisiform
Tarsal bones - answercalcaneus, talus, navicular, medial cuneiform, Intermediate
cuneiform, lateral cuneiform, cuboid
Chondromalacia patellae - answersoftening of the posterior patella surface
Fibrous Joints - answerjoined by fibrous tissue, lack a joint cavity
Suture - answerType if fibrous joint, immovable, only in skull
Snydesmosis - answertype of fibrous joint, slightly moveable
Gomphosis - answertype of fibrous joint, peg in socket
Cartilaginous joints - answerjoints united by cartilage, lack a joint cavity
Synchondroses - answerType of cartilaginous joint, united by hyaline cartilage
Symphyses - answertype of cartilaginous joint, united by fibrocartilage
synovial joints - answerfound where articulating bones are separated by a fluid-
containing joint cavity, freely moving joints
rheumatoid arthritis - answeraccumulation of synovial fluid
skeletal muscle - answermultinucleate cells, attach to bone
cardiac muscle - answerwalls of the heart, branching chains of uni or binucleate cells
Smooth muscle - answerwalls of hallow organs, uninucleate, no striations, no presence
of myofibrils of t tubules
Organization of skeletal muscles from microscopic to gross anatomy -
answerMyofilaments create a sarcomere. Bundled together, myofilaments form
What do all vertebrae possess? - answer transverse process and vertebral foramen
What is the longest and strongest bone of the face? - answer Mandible
The temporal bone riddled with sinuses - answer Mastoid Process
What is a Colle's Fracture? - answer A break in the distal end of the radius
What is the most common site for fractures in the Humerus? - answer surgical neck
Sagittal Suture - answer Right and Left Parietal
Lambdoid Suture - answer Occipital and Parietal Bone
Squamosal Suture - answer temporal and parietal Bone
Coronal Suture - answerParietal and Frontal Bone
Cervical Vertebrae - answer
Thoracic Vertebrae - answer
Lumbar Vertebrae - answer
What is the only vertebrae that does not have a body? - answeratlas
Where is the pituitary gland housed? - answersella turcica of the sphenoid
Where are the Paranasal sinuses found? - answermaxillae
Where is the location of the center of gravity of the body? - answerit is 1 cm posterior to
the sacral promontory
Thoracic vertebrae T2 through T8 differ from the others in that? - answerthey have
superior and inferior demifacets
The antebrachium is composed of which two bones? - answerthe radius and the ulna
The short bone that attaches to the third metacarpal is the - answercapitate
, The bone in direct contact with the first metatarsal (big toe) is the - answermedial
cuneiform
Why are the paranasal sinuses at greater risk for infection? - answertheir location
adjacent to the middle ear cavity often creates a high risk for infection
The tibia is in contact with which tarsus? - answertalus
Ostealgia - answerpain in the bone
Carpal bones - answertrapezium, trapezoid, capitate, hamate, scaphoid, lunate,
triquetrum, pisiform
Tarsal bones - answercalcaneus, talus, navicular, medial cuneiform, Intermediate
cuneiform, lateral cuneiform, cuboid
Chondromalacia patellae - answersoftening of the posterior patella surface
Fibrous Joints - answerjoined by fibrous tissue, lack a joint cavity
Suture - answerType if fibrous joint, immovable, only in skull
Snydesmosis - answertype of fibrous joint, slightly moveable
Gomphosis - answertype of fibrous joint, peg in socket
Cartilaginous joints - answerjoints united by cartilage, lack a joint cavity
Synchondroses - answerType of cartilaginous joint, united by hyaline cartilage
Symphyses - answertype of cartilaginous joint, united by fibrocartilage
synovial joints - answerfound where articulating bones are separated by a fluid-
containing joint cavity, freely moving joints
rheumatoid arthritis - answeraccumulation of synovial fluid
skeletal muscle - answermultinucleate cells, attach to bone
cardiac muscle - answerwalls of the heart, branching chains of uni or binucleate cells
Smooth muscle - answerwalls of hallow organs, uninucleate, no striations, no presence
of myofibrils of t tubules
Organization of skeletal muscles from microscopic to gross anatomy -
answerMyofilaments create a sarcomere. Bundled together, myofilaments form