Term
Animals are heterotrophs
reqire food for... |
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Definition
fuel (chemical energy)
carbon sources (organic molecuels)
essential nutrients |
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Term
three physiological needs of animals |
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Definition
provide fuel for all cellular work
provide organic raw materials for biosynthesis
provide essential nutrients |
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Definition
substances that the animal cannot make for itself
essential amino acids
essential fatty acids
vitamins
minerals |
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# of amino acids to make protien |
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Definition
20, half can be made, half is essential amino acids
8 required for human diet |
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not enough essential amino acids?
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Definition
protein deficiency, the most common type of malnutrition among humans |
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Definition
organic molecules with diverse functions that are required in the diet in very small amounts. |
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4 basic feeding approaches |
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Definition
1. herbivores; eat mainly autotrophs (plants and algae)
2. carnivores; eat other animals
3. parasites; feed on but don't kill host
4. omnivores; consume animals and producers |
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Definition
suspension feeders
substrate feeders
deposit feeders
fluid feeders
bulk feeders |
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Definition
sift food from water; humpback whale-baleen |
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Definition
live in or on food, eat their way through it
caterpiller |
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Definition
eat partially decayed food along with substrate |
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eat fluids from host; aphids |
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eat large pieces of food-predators (humans) |
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___ from oxidation of complex organic molecules
(food for fuel) |
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Definition
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Term
_____provide 2X calories than CHOs or proteins
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Definition
fats!
4.5 cal/g carbs
9 cal/gram protien fat |
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Definition
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Definition
undernourishment (too few calories)
malnourishment (poor balance of nutrients)
obesity (increased disease risk)-over nourishment |
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Definition
the study of human health and disease at the population level |
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Definition
world health organization
obesity is a major global health problem |
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Definition
diabetes
cardiovascular disease
(-arteriosclerosis=hardening of arteries, not w/obesity w/cronic HPB
-artherosclerosis=clogged arteries diet high fat)
increased risk of colon and breast cancer
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Term
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Definition
act of eating
requires specialized food capture adaptations
-teeth
-cilia
-tongue |
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Definition
food is broken down into molecules small enough for the body to absorbe
-breaking food into smaller molecules
-chemical
~enzymatic cleavage (macromolecules-->monomers)
~hydrolysis (water breaking apart) the most commmon
method
-mechanical
~chewing mixing |
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Term
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Definition
uptake of small monomers by small intestine (primarily)
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Definition
undigestion material passed out of body |
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Term
four stages of food processing |
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Definition
ingestion
digestion
absorption
elimination |
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Definition
protein-amino acid
sugar-glucose
fat-fatty acid, glyceral |
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Term
sated
ghrelin
insulin
pyy
leptin |
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Definition
ghrelin-feel hungry
insulin-full
pyy-counters ghrelin, full
leptin-full |
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Term
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Definition
hormone
mouse studies
-those that inherit a dect in the gene for this become very obese |
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Definition
normally become obese as chicks
theory; fat hoarding was a means of survival (obesity and evolution) |
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Definition
carbon skeletons needed for body to construct complex organic molecules
essential nutrients in preassembled form
an animal that is ___ is missing one or more essential nutrients in its diet
malnutrition is much more common than under-nutrition in human populations |
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Definition
amino acids in diet can be interconverted to other amino acids
fats can be made from CHOs and proteins |
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Term
essential nutrients for humans
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Definition
8 essential amino asids-->kwashiorkor if lacking
essential fatty acid; linoleic acid--> cell membranes (deficiencies are rare) |
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Definition
individuals who eat only plant proteins need to eat a variety to get all essential amino acids because most plant proteins are incomplete in amino acid makeup |
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Term
8 essential amino acids for human adults |
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Definition
methionine
valine
threonine
phenylalanine
leucine
isoleucine
tryptophan
lysine
(corn and beans) |
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Definition
organic molecules required in very small quantities
act as cayalysts (coenzymes)
deficiencies can be severe
water soluble vitamines-->not stored CB
lipid soluble vitamins (ADEK) stored-->can overdose easily
13 human essential vitamins |
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Term
1. water soluble vitamins
2. fat soluble vitamins |
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Definition
1. B1 thiamine
B2 riboflavin
B3 niacin
B6 pyridoxine
B5 pantothenic acid
B9 folic acid
B12
Biotin
Vitamin C ascorbic acid
(BC)
2. vitamin A retinol
vitamin D
Vitamin E tocopheral
(ADEK)
Vitamin K phylloquinone |
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Definition
inorganic nutrients required in diet in small quantities
strucctural (Ca, P)-bone
enzymes Cu
blood Fe hemoglobin |
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Definition
most animals process food in specialized compartments (segmentation)
reduce risk of self digestion |
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Definition
food vacuoles with enzymes
protozoans
sponges-all digestion is intracellular, unique to multi-celled animals
other multicelled animals use both intra and extra cellular digestion |
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Term
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Definition
the breakdown of food particles outside of cells
occurs in compartments that are continuous with the outside of the animals body |
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Definition
simple
single opening
found in cnidarians, platyhelminthes
process enzyme hydrolysis,phagocytic absorption
extracellular first then intracellular |
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Term
alimentary canal:Gastrointestinal tract
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Definition
two openings
digestive canal
allows for stepwise digestion along length
more efficient |
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Term
mammalian digestive system
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Definition
alimentary canal (GI tract)
oral cavity (buccal cabity)
pharynx
esophagus
stomach
small intestine
large intestine
accessory glands
hormones
water reclamation |
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Definition
most water is absorbed in stomach and small intestine
colon and kidneys regulate how hydrated you are |
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Definition
salivary glands
pancreas
liver
gall badder-stores bile (liver product for digestion) |
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Definition
physical and chemical
saliva-salivary amylase (enzyme)
tongue
teeth |
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Definition
air food
epiglottis; blocks airway while swallowing (cartilage) |
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Definition
peristalsis (smooth muscle contractions)
regulated by sphincters |
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Definition
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Definition
-controlled by ANS (automatic nervous system) and gastrin (hormone activates digestive system)
-mucous cells, mucin, gastirn(stimulates further secretion)
-chief cells, pepsinogen (a zymogen)
-parietal cells
*HCL
*pH 1-4 av. 2.5 stomach
*kills bacteria
*denatures protein
*convers pepsinogen->pepsin (protease-enzyme breaks down proteins)
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Term
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Definition
lesions in the lining
80%caused by the bacterium Helicobacter pylori |
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Definition
18' long humans
digestion absorption |
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Term
major organ for chemical digestion
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Definition
small intestine (duodenum) |
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Term
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Definition
food that has entered digestive system |
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Term
small intestine absorption |
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Definition
*villi increase surface area
*capillaries and lacteals transport absorbed nutrients
*brush border (icrovillar surface) exposed to lumen
*absorption; diffusion or active transport
-aa and sugars; blood -->liver (interconverted, stored)
-glycerol+fatty acids; recombined, coated with proteins-> chylomicrons->lacteals to blood vessels |
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Term
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Definition
proteases, lipases, CHO(carbohydrates) enzymes, nucleases
bicargonate buffer (rais pH)
put sodium bicarbonate on acid spills |
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Definition
bile (gall bladder)
bile salts emulsifies fat
pigments from destroyed RBCs (bilirubin) |
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Definition
taking a large lipid and aggragation and breaking it down |
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Definition
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Definition
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Definition
anal irritation of some sort |
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Definition
activated in a low pH and then forms trypsin |
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Term
produces a couple proteases |
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Definition
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Definition
colon
recover water
feces more solid
houses e. coli
80% feces is bacteria, 20% is undigested food |
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Term
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Definition
fermentation chambers (as many as four gastric chambers)
bacteria, protists produce cellulase
structures where this occurs
*cecum (horses)
*cecum and colon (rabit)
*chambered stomachs (ruminants) |
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Term
circulation in animals transports |
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Definition
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Term
invertebrates circ system open |
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Definition
hemolymph; blood and interstitial fluid
hemolymph bathes internal organs
moves through sinuses via dorsal heeart and body muscle contractions
arthropoda, most molluscs |
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Term
invertebrates circ system closed |
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Definition
heart pumps into vessels
branch into smaller vessels-tissues
annelida, cephalopoda, vertebrata |
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Term
vertebrates; cardiovascular system; all closed |
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Definition
heart, blood vessels, blood
1-2 atria (receive blood)
1-2 ventricles (pump blood out)
arteries; carry bood away from heart
veins carry blood to heart (small = venules)
cappillaries; microscopic vessels diameter=RBC diameter
-site of chemical exchange between blood and interstitial fluid |
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Term
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Definition
2 atria, 1 ventricle
double circulation (pulmonocutaneous and systemic circuits)
-ventricle->lung/skin (O2 in, CO2 out)->left atrium->ventricle->all other orgnas (O2 out, CO2 in)->right atrium->repeat
-some mixing of O2 and deO2 blood in ventricle by minimized by anatomical shape |
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Term
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Definition
2 atria, 1 ventricle
ventricle partially divided
double circulation (pulmonary and systemic circuits)
-ventricle->lungs (O2 in, CO2 out)->left atrium->ventricle->body (O2 out, CO2 in)->rt. atrium->ventricle->repeat
partially divided ventricle minimizes mixing of O2 deO2 blood |
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Definition
2 atria, 2 ventricles
double circulation
no mixing of O2 and deO2 blood in heart
increases O2 deliver (higher metabolic rates) |
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Term
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Definition
beats/min
HR inversely proortional to size
humans 60-70 at rest
elephants 25
shrews 600 |
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Definition
sequence of contractions and relaxations
systole; contraction
diastole; relax, chambers fill w blood |
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Definition
amount of blood flowing thru heart in 1 min
CO=HR X SV
SV=the amount of blood pumped out w contraction |
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Definition
sinoatrial node (myogenic=self-excitable), pacemaker
-location in R atrium wall
-muscle with neuron characteristics
-initiates atrial contraction together (l and r)
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Term
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Definition
receives AP action potential from atria
base of atria
impulse transmitted to ventricles-->contraction |
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Definition
used to measure electrical changes in heart |
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Term
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Definition
sympathetic (speeds up)
parasympathetic (slows down)
hormones, epinephrine speeds up HR (adrenaline
body temp=HR up
aerobic fitness up=HR down
age, baby/elderly=up, adult=down
gener, f=up, m=down
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Term
Nervous system: somatic vs autonomic
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Definition
somatic= voluntary
autonomic=involuntary |
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Definition
heart stopes for various reasons |
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Term
blood vessel structure
3 types
3 layers
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Definition
types;arteries, veins, capillaries
layers;
outer elastic connective tissue layer
middle smooth muscle elastic connective
inner endothelium |
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Definition
outer layer thicker (higher BP)
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Definition
lower BP
thinner walls
one-way valves
muscle contractions help move blood, breathing |
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Definition
endothelium only
allow diffusion |
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Definition
50 cm.s in aorta
100x slower in capillaries
as blood spreads out from arteries into capillaries, cross sectional area increases
velocity inversely proportional to x sectonal area-slows down
resistance higher in capillaries-KE-heat, slows down
speed increases in venules and veins (smaller x sectional area) |
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Definition
hydrostatic pressure drives blood through vessels
-=the force of blood against the vessel wall
-determined by CO
peripheral resistance opposes flow
-stress->vasoconstriction->increased resistance |
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Definition
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blood flow through capillaries |
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Definition
controlled by
1. arteriole wall smooth muscle
2. precapillary sphincters
e.g.
blood shunted to digestive system after meal
exercis; blood to muscle |
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Term
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Definition
endo-cells draw materials inside by engulfing
exo-opposite |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
similar to interstitial fluid
moves via valves and muscels contractions squeezing the vessels (like veins)
returnfluid and some proteins to blood from leaky capillaries
fat transport
immunity
vessels drain inot subclavian veins near shoulders |
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Definition
filter lymph
attack viruses and bacteria
swollen nodes due to rapid lymphocye reproduction |
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Definition
4-6 L average human
45%o volume is formed (cellular) elements
55% of volume=plasma (liquid part) |
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Term
ions (blood electrolytes) |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
albumin
fibrinogen
immunoglobulins |
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Term
substances transported by blood |
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Definition
nutrients (glucose, fatty acids, vitamins)
waste products of metabolism
respiratory gases (O2 and CO2)
hormones
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Term
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Definition
transport oxygen and help transport carbon dioxide
biconcave disks-increase surface area
lack nucleii and mitochondria in mammal
contains hemoglobin in cell membrane Fe containing prorein
medium of 3 |
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Definition
basophil
neutrophil
eosinophil
lymphocyte
monocyte
=defense and immunity
largest |
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Term
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Definition
blood clotting
fragments of megakaryocytes from red bone marrow
no nucleii
smallest |
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Definition
plasma w clotting factors removed hemopheliac needs |
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Definition
buffer blood
osmotic balance
viscosity
transport lipids
clotting factors |
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Definition
1. prothrombin to thrombin
2. thrombin catalyzes finbrinogen to fibrin
3. fibrin threads capture formed elements to clot
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Definition
cerribro vascular accident
stroke 1. hemorrhagic-leak
stroke 2. ischemic-block |
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air advantages over water |
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Definition
higher O2 concentration
faster diffusion rates of o2 and co2
respiratory surfaces require less ventilation
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Definition
mantle-lungs;land snails
book lungs; arachnids
lunfish; espophageal pockets (develope from swim bladder)
amphibians; simple balloon like
reptiles, more complex
birlds (1 way) mammals (2 way) |
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