LEVEL 3 - blood/ tissue/ muscle

?
What is connective tissue?
It's tissue which lies underneath the epithelial tissue, connecting different parts of the internal structure
1 of 20
What is Matrix?
Matrix can be liquid, jelly, hard or in cartilage. It carries various different cells, inc blood cells around the body.
2 of 20
What is Plasma?
Plasma is a yellow like liquid, Plasma carries water, salts and enzymes. Plasma helps take nutrients, hormones, and proteins to the parts of the body that need it.
3 of 20
What is the role of plasma?
blood clotting, transport, defence over invading organisms
4 of 20
What is arterial blood?
Flows away from the heart and is bright red as it is oxygenated
5 of 20
What is venous blood?
flows towards the heart, usually dark red as it is deoxygenated
6 of 20
What is another name for White blood cells?
Lymphocytes
7 of 20
What is the role of cartlidge?
protect the bone of friction during movement
8 of 20
What are the 2 main components of bone?
Calcium Salts- they form around collagen fibres and give bone its hardness
Collagen Fibres- offer ability to bend under strain and prevent bones from being to brittle and likely to fracture
9 of 20
What is another name for bone cells?
Osteocytes
10 of 20
What is Areolar tissue?
sticky, white material which binds muscle groups, blood vessels and nerves together.
11 of 20
What is Collagen?
Structural protein in the form of fibres for extra strength
12 of 20
What is Adipose tissue?
Fatty tissue
13 of 20
What are the 3 types of muscle?
- striated
- non striated
- cardiac
14 of 20
What is striated muscle?
-it is attached to the bones
- contracts when it receives nerve impulses from the CNS
- voluntary movement
15 of 20
What is non- striated muscle?
- Smooth, thin muscle
- It isn't controlled voluntarily. An example of a non- striated muscle is the bladder, stomach, uterus.
16 of 20
What is Cardiac Muscle?
- a type of muscle which is only found in the four chambers of the heart
-contacts without any stimuli
17 of 20
What is nervous tissue?
- only found in the nervous system
- receives stimuli from internal and external sources, then it co-ordinates communication in different parts of the body.
18 of 20
what is nervous tissue consisting of?
- neurones (specialised nerve cells that transmit nervous impulses)
- neuroglia (connective tissue cells
19 of 20
What is Homeostasis?
- the process of maintaining a constant internal environment despite changing circumstances.
20 of 20

Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

Matrix can be liquid, jelly, hard or in cartilage. It carries various different cells, inc blood cells around the body.

Back

What is Matrix?

Card 3

Front

Plasma is a yellow like liquid, Plasma carries water, salts and enzymes. Plasma helps take nutrients, hormones, and proteins to the parts of the body that need it.

Back

Preview of the back of card 3

Card 4

Front

blood clotting, transport, defence over invading organisms

Back

Preview of the back of card 4

Card 5

Front

Flows away from the heart and is bright red as it is oxygenated

Back

Preview of the back of card 5
View more cards

Comments

No comments have yet been made

Similar Health & Social Care resources:

See all Health & Social Care resources »See all Anatomy and physiology resources »