7A REVIEW Circulatory, Respiratory & Excretory Systems.

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Transcript of 7A REVIEW Circulatory, Respiratory & Excretory Systems.

7A REVIEWCirculatory, Respiratory & Excretory

Systems

1. Which part of the human blood:a. is the most numerous? b. contains a nucleus?c. is produced in the bone marrow?

d. consists mainly of water?

wbc’s

rbc’s

rbc’s, wbc’s, platelets

plasma

YZ

2. Identify structures X, Y, and Z.

red blood cell

white blood cell

platelet

3. Identify the part of blood being described.

a. Most numerous blood cell.• Red blood cellsb. Carries enzymes.• plasmac. Involved in blood clotting.• plateletsd. Carries oxygen.• Red blood cells

3. Identify the part of blood being described.

e. Largest blood cell.• White blood cellsf. Made up of 90% water.• plasmag. Involved in blood clotting.• plateletsh. Protect the body against disease.• White blood cellsi. Carries hormones.• plasma

4. What component of blood is important in healing wounds on the skin?  

a.  red blood cells  b.  urea  c.  platelets  d.  white blood cells 

5. What is a pickup function of blood?  

a. picks up urine from the bladder  b. picks up undigested food from

the large intestine  c. picks up carbon dioxide from

the air in the lungs   d. picks up carbon dioxide waste

from cells.

19. Which statement best describes the activities of the parts of the blood shown in the diagram below?

a. A and B kill germs, and C carries oxygen. b. A, B, and C produce hemoglobin. c. B and C kill germs, and A carries nutrients. d. A carries oxygen, B starts clotting, and C

kills germs.

A

B

C

6.

20. What part of the blood carries minerals, vitamins, sugar, and other foods to the body's cells? a. plasma b. red blood cells c. white blood cells d. platelets 21. What would happen to people who have an open wound and whose blood did not clot naturally? a. Nothing. Clotting is not important. b. They would have to take special clotting drugs. c. They would bleed to death. d. They would need a transfusion of plasma.

7.

8.

9. Describe the function of plasma.• Transports materials (blood cells,

hormones, wastes…)

10. Describe the function and shape of red blood cells.• Disc shaped, no nucleus, carries oxygen

& carbon dioxide

11. What do red blood cells contain?• Hemoglobin (red protein that allows them

to carry oxygen)

12. A patient has blood type A+.a. What antigens are found on their right blood cells?• A antigensb. What antibodies are found in their plasma?• Anti-B antibodiesc. What does the + sign mean?• They have the Rh factor (extra proteins on

their red blood cells.d. If this person needs a blood transfusion, what type of blood can they receive?• A, O

13. A patient has blood type AB-.a. What antigens are found on their right blood cells?• A and B antigensb. What antibodies are found in their plasma?• No antibodiesc. What does the - sign mean?• They do not have the Rh factor (no extra

proteins on their red blood cells.d. If this person needs a blood transfusion, what type of blood can they receive?• A, B, AB, O

14. Which blood type is known as the universal donor?• Type Oa. What blood types can they give blood to?• All blood typesb. What blood types can they take blood from?• Only blood type O.

15. Explain the difference between arteries and veins. •Arteries carry blood AWAY from heart.

Veins carry blood to the heart.

•Arteries are larger, more muscular and elastic than veins.

•Arteries carry blood under higher pressure than veins. •Veins have valves to prevent the backflow of blood. Arteries do not have valves.

16. Explain what occurs in capillaries and why.

The exchange or diffusion of substances into or out of the capillary.

Capillaries are extremely small and have a VERY thin lining that allows for diffusion to occur.

O2

glucos

e

O2

glucose

glucose

O2

O 2

glucose

CO

2

CO

2

CO

2

17.The diagram represents a capillary near some cells. a. Identify the substances diffusing out of the capillary and into cells. b. Identify the substances diffusing out of cells into the capillary.

18. Identify the blood vessel described.a. Carry blood towards the heart.• veinsb. Thickest blood vessel.• arteriesc. Where the diffusion of substances occurs.• capillariesd. Contain valves.• veins

18. Identify the blood vessel described.e. Blood vessel used when measuring pulse rate.• arteriesf. Thinnest blood vessel• capillariesg. Blood flows through with a lot of pressure.• arteriesh. Very elastic.• arteries

Arteries

Capillaries

Veins

19. Identify the blood vessels below:

left ventricle

right ventricle

left atrium

right atrium

20. Identify the structures below.

aorta

Upper vena cava

Pulmonary artery

Pulmonary vein

21. When blood passes through the heart from the left atrium (D) to the left ventricle (E), it must first pass through a

valve

22. In which structures does deoxygenated blood pass through?

23. Where is this blood being sent to?

H,I,G,F

The lungs

24. Explain the function of the circulatory system. • Transport materials through the body25. Describe the four chambers of the heart.• right atrium & right ventricle – pump

deoxygenated blood from cells to lungs• Left atrium & left ventricle – pump oxygenated

blood from lungs to cells26. Explain the importance of valves in the heart.• Prevent blood from moving backwards27. Why is the septum so important?• Prevents blood in right and left sides from

mixing

28. Where is deoxygenated blood pumped to?• The lungs29. Where is oxygenated blood pumped to?• To body cells30. Identify the largest artery in the body. Where does it pump blood to? Oxygenated or deoxygenated? • Aorta, to all body cells, oxygenated

31.Identify the part of the heart being described.

a. Chamber that receives oxygenated blood.• Left atriumb. Wall that separates the right and left side of the heart.• septumc. Chamber that pumps out deoxygenated blood.• Right ventricle

31. Identify the part of the heart being described.

d. Chamber that receives deoxygenated blood.• Right atriume. Prevents the backflow of blood between atria and ventricles.• valvesf. Chamber that pulps out oxygenated blood.• Left ventricles

Lower vena cava

upper vena cava

Left ventricle

Right ventricle

Pulmonary vein

Pulmonary vein

Pulmonary artery

aorta

Pulmonary artery

32.

Pulmonary artery

33. Which is the correct sequence for the path of oxygen through the respiratory system?

Nasal cavityPharynxLarynxTracheaBronchiBronchiolesAlveoli

34. The tubes that branch from the trachea are the

35. The dome shaped muscle below the chest cavity is called the

36. During swallowing, the air passage of the pharynx is covered by the

37. Alveoli in the lungs are connected to the bronchi by a network of tiny tubes called

bronchi

diaphragm

epiglottis

bronchioles

38. Explain what happens to gases during gas exchange in the alveoli.

Oxygen in alveoli diffuses into capillaries (blood).

Carbon dioxide in capillaries (blood) diffuses into alveoli.

39. Where are the vocal cords located in the body?

40.What prevents the trachea from collapsing?

41. Where does the actual exchange of gases occur?

42. During gas exchange where does the oxygen and carbon dioxide go?

larynx

rings of cartilage

alveoli

O2 diffuses into capillaries. CO2 diffuses out of capillaries and into alveoli.

43. The ______ is a long straight tube that carries air from the back of the throat to the lungs.

trachea

44. What structures trap foreign particles and bacteria in the nose and trachea?

a)pharynx       b)epiglottis      c)cilia        d)trachea

45. The order of air movement with in the lungs is best described as

a) bronchioles to bronchi to alveoli      

b) bronchi to bronchioles to alveoli c) trachea to bronchi to alveoli       d) bronchi to alveoli to bronchioles

46. Where are the vocal cords located in the body?

Larynx

47. During swallowing, the air passage of the pharynx is covered by the

epiglottis

48. The FIRST branches off the trachea are called

  bronchi     

49. What prevents the trachea from collapsing?

     rings of cartilage   

50. Alveoli in the lungs are connected to the bronchi by a network of tiny tubes called

a) arterioles         b) venules       c) capillaries          d) bronchioles

51. Inside the alveoli, carbon dioxide and oxygen

a) are transported along microscopic tubules

b) are exchanged between air and blood  

c) are produced inside cells       d) are exchanged for other gases

52. Humans breathe more rapidly during exercise than before it because during exercise the blood contains

1.an increased level of oxygen2.a decreased number of red blood

cells3.an increased level of carbon

dioxide4.a decreased amount of

hemoglobin

43. What happens to each of the following during inhalation?

a. Diaphragm

b. Rib cage

c. Pressure in chest cavity

contacts (pulls down)

expands

decreases

44. What happens to each of the following during exhalation?

a. Diaphragm

b. Rib cage

c. Pressure in chest cavity

relaxes (moves up)

relaxes

increases

55. Identify the structures labeled in the diagram.

A – nasal cavityB – pharynxC – larynxD – tracheaE – bronchiF – bronchiolesG – lungH - diaphragm

A

BC

D

EF

G

H

56. Explain the function of the respiratory system.

To carry out gas exchange between the external and internal environment

A

BC

D

EF

G

H

57. Identify the structure described.

a. Contain a ciliated mucus membrane

b. Voice box

c. Aids in breathing

d. Throat

e. Windpipe

A

BC

D

EF

G

H

Nasal cavity and trachea

larynx

diaphragm

pharynx

trachea

58.

59.

60.

61.

62.

circulatory

It came from the lungs.

63.

64.

Oxygen moves from the alveoli (respiratory system) into the capillaries (circulatory) while carbon dioxide moves from the capillaries into the alveoli.

65.

66.Identify A, B, and D.

lung

liver

kidney

67. Which organ produces urea?

68. What is the function of D?

B - liver

•Filter wastes from blood•Regulate water concentration of blood.•Produce urine

69. What does organ A excrete?

70. Which organ detoxifies the blood?

•CO2 and H2O vapor

•B - Liver

71. What are metabolic wastes? Examples?

•Wastes from your cells.

•CO2, H2O, salts, urea

72. Identify structures A, B, C, and D.

Kidney

Ureter

Urinary bladderUrethra

73. Which structure produces urine?

74. What is the path of urine?

A - Kidneys

Kidneys ureters urinary bladder urethra

75. What stores urine?

76. What is the function of D?

C - Urinary bladder

Releases urine from the body.

77. Which human excretory structure aids in the maintenance of normal body temperature?

78. Why is the skin also an excretory organ?

Skin

It excretes water, salts and small amounts of urea in the form of perspiration.