Term
Where is smooth muscle found? |
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Definition
In blood vessels and the urinary, respiratory, reproductive, and gastrointestinal tracts. |
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Term
How does smooth muscle differ from striated muscle? |
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Definition
Uninucleate, no striations |
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Term
What are caveoli, and what are their functions? |
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Definition
pockets in the smooth muscle cell's plasma membrane that sequester Calcium ions. |
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Term
What are the types of smooth muscle? |
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Definition
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Term
How is single unit smooth muscle different from multiunit? |
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Definition
Gap junctions contracts as a unit myogenic (doesn't need nervous system stimulation) |
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Term
Where is multiunit smooth muscle found? |
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Definition
Hair erectors, large blood vessels, large airways, iris |
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Term
Where is single unit smooth muscle found? |
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Definition
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Term
What system sends signals to smooth muscle? |
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Definition
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Term
What ion causes depolarization in smooth muscle cells? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the relationship between partial pressure and concentration of a gas? |
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Definition
They are directly proportional. |
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Term
Which is more soluble, CO2 or O2? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens to solubility as temperature increases? Salinity increases? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the relationship between a gas's partial pressure and the amount of that gas dissolved in a solution? |
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Definition
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Term
In what medium do gases diffuse faster? |
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Definition
air (as opposed to water) |
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Term
How do gases diffuse in relation to concentration and partial pressure? |
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Definition
Gases diffuse from high to low partial pressure. NOT necessarily high to low concentration. |
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Term
What is the significance with a gas molecule combining with another? |
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Definition
It then does not contribute to that gas's partial pressure. |
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Term
What is convective transport of gases? |
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Definition
A fluid (gas or liquid) flows, carrying gas molecules. Examples: breathing, pumping of blood. Both cost energy. |
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Term
Gas transport in mammals involves what two processes? |
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Definition
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Term
Describe how oxygen enters the blood stream from the lungs. |
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Definition
Oxygen enter the lungs, and makes its way to the alveoli. Since there is high O2 partial pressure in the alvoli and low partial pressure in the blood, oxygen diffuses across the alvolar epithelium and the capillary epithelium. It then combines with hemoglobin in red blood cells. |
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Term
What does the rate of O2 consumption depend on? |
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Definition
The difference in oxygen partial pressures of capillaries and mitochondria. |
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Term
What steps of respiration are convection? |
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Definition
Inhalation of air, flow of arterial blood to capillaries |
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Term
what steps of respiration are diffusion? |
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Definition
Diffusion from alveoli to capillaries, from capillaries to tissues. |
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Term
What parts of the lungs are respiratory airways? |
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Definition
respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, and alveolar sacs. |
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Term
What is the tidal volume? |
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Definition
volume of air inhaled/exhaled per breath. |
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Term
What is the expiratory reserve volume? |
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Definition
The volume that can be exhaled past resting exhalation. |
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Term
What is the inspiratory reserve volume? |
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Definition
The volume of air that can be inhaled beyond resting inspiratory leve. |
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Term
What is the vital capacity? |
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Definition
The maximum possible tidal volume |
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Term
What intercostal muscles are used during inhalation? |
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Definition
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Term
What intercostal muscles are used during exhalation? |
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Definition
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Term
Where are the neurons that initiate breathing located? |
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Definition
In the Pre-Botzinger complex of the medulla. |
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Term
Where in the body are O2 levels sensed? |
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Definition
carotid bodies (humans, mammals) and aortic bodies (other mammals) |
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Term
What is the physiological basis of asthma? |
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Definition
Bronchiorestriction, mucous, inflammation of airways |
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Term
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Definition
destruction of alveolar tissue. |
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Term
How does cigarette smoke cause emphysema? |
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Definition
chemicals induce macrophages and leukocytes to secrete proteolytic enzymes that destroy lung tissue. |
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Term
What factors affect rate and depth of breathing? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the average concentration of oxygen in the blood? |
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Definition
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Term
What are respiratory pigments? |
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Definition
metalloproteins that undergo reversible combination with O2. |
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Term
What are the characteristics of hemoglobins? |
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Definition
contain heme (iron group). Have 4 binding sites. |
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Term
What are vertebrate muscle hemoglobins? What properties do they give muscle? |
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Definition
Myoglobins. They give muscle some of the red color. |
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Term
How is hemoglobin different in a fetus/baby? |
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Definition
Hemoglobin has gamma globulin instead of beta globulin. |
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Term
How can the antarctic ice fish survive with no hemoglobin? |
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Definition
The cold water has increased O2 solubility, so it can absorb it directly. |
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Term
What is the venous reserve? |
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Definition
The amount of oxygen in the blood available during exercise (or when needed). |
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Term
What characteristic accounts for the steep initial curve of the oxygen dissociation curve? |
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Definition
When oxygen binds to hemoglobin, it stimulates other molecules to join. |
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Term
An increase in CO2 or a decrease in pH (more acidic) causes a shift in the oxygen dissociation curve in which direction? What does that mean? |
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Definition
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Term
Temperature increase causes what kind of shift in the oxygen dissociation curve? |
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Definition
Right shift (lower affinity) |
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Term
What is the dominant form in which CO2 exists in the blood? |
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Definition
Bicarbonate (H2CO3/ H+ HCO3-) |
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Term
What accelerates the conversion of CO2 to HCO3- ? |
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Definition
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Term
Where is carbonic anhydrase located? What effect does this have on hydrogen and chlorine ions? |
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Definition
It is located in the red blood cell. As CO2 becomes HCO3- and diffuses into the plasma, chlorine ions enter the RBC. Hydrogen ions combine with hemoglobin in the RBC. |
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Term
What happens to CO2/bicarbonate as the blood is oxygenated? |
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Definition
O2 binds to hemoglobin, causing H+ ions to be displaced and form H2CO3. The bicarbonate decomposes to water and CO2, carbon dioxide diffuses to lung alveoli. |
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Term
What happens to remedy acidosis? |
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Definition
increased ventilation (lowers CO2-> decreases H+) kidneys export H+ and retain HCO3- |
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Term
What happens to remedy alkalosis? |
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Definition
Decrease ventilation (raise CO2-> increases H+) excrete HCO3- (kidneys) |
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Term
Trace the path of blood from the right atrium (including valves) |
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Definition
Right atrium Right AV valve Right ventricle Pulmonary valve Pulmonary artery Lungs Pulmonary vein Left atrium Left AV valve Left ventricle Aortic valve Aorta body Vena Cava Right Atrium |
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Term
What are the 5 phases of the heart cycle? |
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Definition
Atrial Systole Isovolumetric contraction Ventricular ejection Isovolumetric relaxation Ventricular filling |
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Term
What is cardiac output? What is it measured in? |
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Definition
The volume of blood pumped by a heart per unit of time. It is measured in mL/min. |
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Term
How is cardiac output calculated? |
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Definition
heart rate (bpm) x stroke volume (mL/beat) |
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Term
Cardiac output refers to which chamber of the heart? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the normal adult cardiac output? |
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Definition
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Term
How does exercise affect heart rate and stroke volume(when not exercising) ? |
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Definition
Lower heart rate, greater stroke volume |
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Term
What about the heart muscle allows quick depolarization of neighboring cells? |
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Definition
Gap junctions on intercalated disks |
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Term
What is the pacemaker of the heart? |
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Definition
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Term
How does the SA node cause heart contraction? |
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Definition
SA node depolarization causes atrial contraction and depolarization of the AV node. The AV node's atrioventricular bundle (bundle of His) carries the depolarization to the ventricles, which then contract from the bottom up. |
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Term
Are vertebrates myogenic or neurogenic? |
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Definition
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Term
Depolarization of the SA node is caused by what? |
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Definition
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Term
Voltage gate activation in the SA node causes influx of what? |
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Definition
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Term
What system causes an increase in heart rate? |
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Definition
Sympathetic (epinephrine) |
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Term
What system causes a decrease in heart rate? |
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Definition
parasympathetic (acetylcholine) |
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Term
How is a cardiac potential difference from a skeletal muscle potential? |
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Definition
Longer contraction, no absolute refractory period, no summation |
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Term
What causes repolarization of heart cells? |
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Definition
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