Final Exam True/False
1) The "all or none" phenomenon as applied to nerve
conduction states that the whole nerve<br>cell must be
stimulated
for conduction to take place.</p>
FALSE
2) Reflexes are rapid, automatic responses to stimuli.</p>
TRUE
3) Efferent nerve fibers may be described as motor nerve fibers.
TRUE
4) Saltatory conduction occurs because of the presence of salt (NaCl)
around the neuron.
FALSE
5) Cell bodies of sensory neurons may be located in ganglia lying
outside the central nervous<br>system.</p>
TRUE
7) During depolarization, the inside of the neuronʹs membrane becomes
less negative.
TRUE
8) Neurons in the CNS are organized into functional groups.
TRUE
9) Strong stimuli cause the amplitude of action potentials generated
to increase.
FALSE
10) The oligodendrocytes can myelinate several axons.
TRUE
11) Enkephalins and endorphins are peptides that act like morphine.
TRUE
13) In myelinated axons the voltageregulated sodium channels are concentrated at the nodes of Ranvier.
TRUE
14) Action potentials can be generated by virtually all cells of the body because all cells possess cell membranes.
FALSE
15) Voltage is always measured between two points and may be called
the potential between these two points.
TRUE
16) Neurons that are far away from the center of the neuron pool and
that are not easily excited by an incoming stimulus are in the
discharge zone
FALSE
17) Acetylcholine is not a biogenic amine.
TRUE
18) The two major classes of graded potentials are transmitter
potentials and receptor potentials
FALSE
19) A graded potential that is the result of a neurotransmitter released into the synapse between two neurons is called a postsynaptic potential.
TRUE
20) Large diameter nerve fibers conduct impulses much faster than small diameter fibers.
TRUE
21) The nodes of Ranvier are found only on myelinated, peripheral
neural processes.</p>
FALSE
22) Unipolar neurons have axons structurally divided into peripheral
and central processes.
TRUE
23) A stimulus traveling toward a synapse appears to open calcium channels at the presynaptic end, which in turn promotes fusion of synaptic vesicles to the axonal membrane.
TRUE
24) A positive feedback cycle is the main force in the generation of graded potentials at receptor ends.
FALSE
25) If bacteria invaded the CNS tissue, microglia would migrate to the area to engulf and destroy them.
TRUE
1) The meningeal branch of a spinal nerve actually reenters the vertebral canal to innervate<br>the meninges and blood vessels.</p>
TRUE
2) In the somatosensory system there are no third order neurons in the cerebellum.
TRUE
3) There are 41 pairs of spinal nerves.
FALSE
4) The glossopharyngeal nerve is the only cranial nerve that contains sensory fibers.
FALSE
5) The musculocutaneous nerve is a major nerve of the brachial plexus.
TRUE
6) The second cranial nerve forms a chiasma at the base of the brain for partial crossover of neural fibers.
TRUE
7) The only cranial nerves to extend beyond the head and neck region are the vagus nerves.
TRUE
8) The dorsal ramus consists only of motor fibers bringing information to the spinal cord.
FALSE
9) Dermatomes are skin segments that relate to sensory innervation regions of the spinal<br>nerves.
TRUE
10) Dorsal and ventral rami are similar in that they both contain sensory and motor fibers.
TRUE
11) Irritation of the phrenic nerve may cause diaphragm spasms called hiccups.
TRUE
12) The obturator nerve branches from the sacral plexus.
FALSE
13) Reciprocal inhibition means that while one sensory nerve is stimulated, another sensory neuron for synergistic muscles in the same area is inhibited and cannot respond.
FALSE
14) External strabismus and ptosis could be caused by damage to the oculomotor nerve.
TRUE
15) In order to regulate motor activity, to start and stop movements, and to coordinate postural<br>movements, the cerebellum and basal nuclei are involved.</p>
TRUE
1) Since the ANS is a visceral motor system, afferent pathways are of
no importance and
actually are rarely found.
FALSE
2) The rami communicantes are associated only with the sympathetic division of the ANS.
TRUE
3) The gray rami communicantes consist of myelinated postganglionic fibers.
FALSE
4) Splanchnic nerves are mixed motor and sensory nerves.
FALSE
5) The autonomic nervous system may cause activation or inhibition,
depending on the
division that is active and the target that is affected.
TRUE
6) The celiac ganglion is primarily associated with the sympathetic division.
TRUE
7) The sympathetic chain is composed of collateral ganglia.
TRUE
8) Thermoregulatory responses to increased heat are mediated by the sympathetic nervous division.
TRUE
9) Most disorders of the autonomic nervous system reflect
abnormalities of smooth muscle
control.
TRUE
10) Alphaadrenergic
effects are usually stimulatory and mediatory.
TRUE
11) The adrenal medulla is considered a ʺmisplacedʺ sympathetic ganglion by some.
TRUE
12) Acetylcholine is the substance released by the axonal endings of
the somatic efferent fibers and
by the parasympathetic nerve
fiber endings.
TRUE
13) Most body organs are innervated by only the sympathetic division of the nervous system.
FALSE
14) Through direct neural stimulation, the sympathetic division
promotes many metabolic
effects via hormone release.
TRUE
15) Cranial nerves VII, IX, and X contain postganglionic fibers of
the parasympathetic
nervous system.
FALSE
16) In contrast to the parasympathetic division, the sympathetic
division has numerous
postganglionic neurons in the gray matter
of the spinal cord.
FALSE
17) Norepinephrinereleasing
fibers are called cholinergic fibers.
FALSE
18) The parasympathetic division is a branch of the somatic nervous system.
FALSE
19) The craniosacral division is another name for the parasympathetic division.
TRUE
20) The chain ganglion, like the dorsal root ganglion, contains soma from sensory neurons.
FALSE
21) Most blood vessels are innervated by the sympathetic division alone.
TRUE
22) The blood vessels of the skin are one of the few areas of the
body where the vessels are
innervated by both the sympathetic and
parasympathetic divisions.
FALSE
23) Events recorded in a lie detector examination are controlled by the sympathetic division.
TRUE
24) All splanchnic nerves are sympathetic.
FALSE
25) Splanchnic nerves pass through the abdominal aortic plexus.
TRUE
26) The structures that specifically exhibit vasomotor tone are
mostly under sympathetic
control.
TRUE
27) Since many of the same cardiac cells are innervated by both
parasympathetic and
sympathetic fibers, the influence of the two
divisions on the heart is synergistic.
FALSE
βadrenergic
receptors are the only receptors found on the heart.
FALSE
29) Autonomic reflex centers occur in the spinal cord, medulla, and midbrain.
TRUE
In humans, melatonin may inhibit sexual maturation.
TRUE
2) The antagonistic hormones that regulate the blood calcium level are calcitoninparathormone.
TRUE
3) The hormone that raises blood sugar levels is insulin.
FALSE
4) The endocrine structure that develops from the nervous system is the anterior pituitary.
FALSE
5) Both ʺturn onʺ factors (hormonal, humoral, and neural stimuli) and
ʺturn offʺ factors
(feedback inhibition and others) may be
modulated by the activity of the nervous system.
TRUE
6) ACTH stimulates the adrenal cortex to release corticosteroid hormones.
TRUE
7) LH is also referred to as a gonadotropin.
TRUE
8) The only known effect of prolactin in humans is to produce impotence in males.
FALSE
9) Oxytocin is a strong stimulant of uterine contractions.
TRUE
10) Follicle cells of the thyroid gland produce thyroglobulin, while
follicle cells of the parathyroid
produce calcitonin.
FALSE
11) The thyroid gland is embedded in the parathyroid tissue.
FALSE
12) The prime metabolic effect of cortisol is gluconeogenesis.
TRUE
13) The beta cells are the pancreatic islet cells that produce insulin.
TRUE
14) Most Type II diabetics do not produce insulin.
FALSE
15) Peptide hormones enter the target cells and elicit a response by
mediating neurotransmitter
effects.
FALSE
16) Calcitonin is a peptide hormone that has destructive effects on the skeletal system.
FALSE
17) Aldosterone is the most potent mineralocorticoid produced in the adrenals but the least abundant.
FALSE
18) Atrial natriuretic peptide is a hormone that controls blood
pressure in part by increasing the
urinary excretion of sodium.
TRUE
19) While glucagon is a small polypeptide, it is nevertheless very
potent in its regulatory
effects.
TRUE
20) The thyroid gland is a large gland that controls metabolic
functions throughout the life
of an individual.
TRUE
21) Many hormones synthesized in the gastrointestinal tract are
chemically identical to
brain
neurotransmitters.
TRUE
22) All of the following hormones are secreted by the
adenohypophysis: ACTH, FSH, and
LH.
TRUE
23) Iodine is an essential element required for the synthesis of thyroxine.
TRUE
24) The endocrine gland that is probably malfunctioning if a person
has a high metabolic
rate is the parathyroid.
FALSE
25) Growth hormone always exerts its influence by targeting other
endocrine glands to produce
hormones.
FALSE
26) Diabetes insipidus and diabetes mellitus are both caused by a
genetic mutation involving
the synthesis of insulin.
FALSE
27) The stimulus for calcitonin release is usually excessive amounts
of growth hormone
synthesis
FALSE
28) Glucocorticoids are steroid hormones that usually enhance the
immune responses when
an individual is suffering from severe stress.
FALSE
29) Direct gene activation involves a secondmessenger system.
FALSE
29) Direct gene activation involves a second messenger system.
TRUE
30) All peptide hormone synthesis requires gene activation that produces mRNA.
TRUE
31) All adenohypophyseal hormones except GH affect their target cells
via a cyclic AMP
secondmessenger.
TRUE
1) The primary source of RBCs in the adult human being is the bone marrow in the shafts of the long bones.
FALSE
2) Leukemia refers to cancerous conditions of white blood cells.
TRUE
3) The immediate response to blood vessel injury is clotting.
FALSE
4) The process of fibrinolysis disposes of bacteria when healing has occurred.
FALSE
5) The RB graveyard is the liver.
FALSE
6) Hemorrhagic anemias result from blood loss.
TRUE
7) White blood cells are produced through the action of colonystimulating
factors.
TRUE
8) Hemoglobin is made up of the protein heme and the red pigment globin.
FALSE
9) Each heme contains an atom of iron and can transport one molecule of oxygen.
TRUE
10) Each hemoglobin molecule can transport two molecules of oxygen.
FALSE
11) Diapedesis is the process by which red blood cells move into tissue spaces from the interior of blood capillary
FALSE
12) Positive chemotaxis is a feedback system that signals leukocyte migration into damaged areas.
TRUE
13) A condition of leukocytosis indicates over 11,000 white blood cells per cubic millimeter in the blood.
TRUE
14) Basophils increase in number when parasitic invasion occurs.
FALSE
15) Leukopenia is an abnormally low number of leukocytes.
TRUE
16) A person with type B blood could receive blood from a person with either type B or O blood.
TRUE
17) Leukocytes move through the circulatory system by amoeboid motion.
FALSE
18) Granulocytes called neutrophils are phagocytic and the most numerous of all white blood cell types.
TRUE
19) All lymphocytes are leukocytes, but not all leukocytes are lymphocytes.
TRUE
20) Myelocytic leukemia involves a cancerous condition of lymphocytes.
FALSE
1) The myocardium receives its blood supply from the coronary arteries.
TRUE
2) Cardiac muscle has more mitochondria and depends less on a
continual supply of oxygen
than does skeletal muscle.
FALSE
3) Anastomoses among coronary arterial branches provide collateral
routes for blood delivery to
the heart muscle.
TRUE
4) Congestive heart failure means that the pumping efficiency of the
heart is depressed so
that there is inadequate delivery of blood
to body tissues.
TRUE
5) Tissues damaged by myocardial infarction are replaced by connective tissue.
TRUE
6) The left side of the heart pumps the same volume of blood as the right.
TRUE
7) Chronic release of excess thyroxine can cause a sustained increase
in heart rate and a
weakened heart.
TRUE
8) Arterial blood supply to heart muscle is continuous whether the
heart is in systole or
diastole.
FALSE
9) Trabeculae carneae are found in the ventricles and never the atria.
TRUE
10) The "lub" sounds of the heart are valuable in diagnosis
because they provide information
about the function of the
heart's pulmonary and aortic valves.
FALSE
11) Autonomic regulation of heart rate is via two reflex centers found in the pons.
FALSE
12) The papillary muscles contract after the other ventricular
muscles so that they can take
up the slack on the chordae
tendineae before the full force of ventricular contractions sends
blood
against the AV valve flaps.
FALSE
13) An ECG provides direct information about valve function.
FALSE
14) As pressure in the aorta rises due to atherosclerosis, more
ventricular pressure is
required to open the aortic valve.
TRUE
15) Proxysmal atrial tachycardia is characterized by bursts of atrial
contractions with little
pause
between them.
TRUE
1) The adjustment of blood flow to each tissue in proportion to its
requirements at any point in
time is termed autoregulation.
TRUE
2) Arterial pressure in the pulmonary circulation is much higher than
in the systemic circulation
because of its proximity to the heart.
FALSE
3) Osmotic pressure is created by the presence in a fluid of small
diffusible molecules that easily
move through the capillary membrane.
FALSE
4) The cerebral arterial circle (circle of Willis) is an arterial anastomosis.
TRUE
5) The outermost layer of a blood vessel is the tunica intima.
FALSE
6) The thick walled arteries close to the heart are called muscular arteries.
FALSE
7) Hypotension is generally considered systolic blood pressure that is below 100 mm Hg.
TRUE
8) A precapillary sphincter is a cuff of smooth muscle that regulates
the flow of blood into
the capillaries.
TRUE
9) The carotid sinus reflex protects the blood supply to the brain,
whereas the aortic reflex is
more concerned with maintaining
adequate blood pressure in the systemic circuit as a
whole.
TRUE
10) Vasodilation is a widening of the lumen due to smooth muscle contraction.
FALSE
11) The pulmonary circulation does not directly serve the metabolic needs of body tissues.
TRUE
12) In infants and young people, congenital vascular problems are
less common than
congenital heart disease.
TRUE
13) The most common form of shock is hypovolemic shock.
TRUE
14) Every minute, about 1.5 ml of fluid leaks out of the capillaries.
TRUE
15) The pancreas is an example of an organ with arteries that do not anastomose.
FALSE
16) An obstruction in the superior vena cava would decrease the flow
of blood from the head
and neck to the heart.
TRUE
17) Arteries supplying the same territory are often merged with one
another, forming arterial
anastomoses.
TRUE
18) An increase in blood viscosity will cause an increase in peripheral resistance.
TRUE
19) The first major branch of the femoral artery is the dorsalis pedis artery.
FALSE
20) The azygos vein originates in the abdomen.
TRUE
21) Whereas diffusion is more important for solute exchange between
plasma and interstitial
fluid, bulk flow is more important for
regulation of the relative volumes of blood and interstitial
fluid.
TRUE
1) Food is contained in the gastrointestinal tract from the time of
ingestion until it is
completely digested and the waste prepared
for elimination.
TRUE
2) The circular folds of the small intestine enhance absorption by
causing the chyme to
spiral, rather than to move in a straight
line, as it passes through the small intestine.
TRUE
3) As food passes through the digestive tract, it becomes less
complex and the nutrients are
more readily available to the body.
TRUE
4) Some of the microbes that often invade other organs of the body
are rarely found in the
stomach. The reason for this is the
presence of HCl.
TRUE
5) Kupffer cells are found in the liver and are responsible for
removing bacteria and wornout
cells.
TRUE
6) The pharyngealesophageal phase of swallowing is involuntary and is controlled by the swallowing center in the thalamus and lower pons
FALSE
7) All the chemical and mechanical phases of digestion from the mouth
through the small
intestine are directed toward changing food
into forms that can pass through the epithelial
cells lining the
mucosa into the underlying blood and lymphatic vessels.
TRUE
8) Pepsinogen is the precursor to the gastric enzyme for protein
digestion and is secreted by
the parietal cells.
FALSE
9) The main chemical activity of the stomach is to begin the digestion of proteins.
TRUE
10) The major role of absorption in the ileum is to reclaim bile
salts to be recycled back to
the liver.
TRUE
11) The peritoneum is the most extensive serous membrane in the body.
TRUE
12) Peyer's patches are found in the submucosa of the distal end of the small intestine.
TRUE
13) The myenteric nerve plexus provides the major nerve supply to the
GI tract wall and
controls GI motility.
TRUE
14) The first teeth to appear are the deciduous teeth.
TRUE
15) Dentin anchors the tooth in place.
FALSE
16) The digestive function of the liver is to produce bile.
TRUE
17) The pancreas has both an endocrine and an exocrine function.
TRUE
18) Another term for swallowing is deglutition.
TRUE
19) The intrinsic ability of visceral smooth muscle to exhibit the stress relaxation response is termed platicity
TRUE
20) The stomach's contractile rhythm is set by pacemaker cells found in the spinal cord.
FALSE
21) The major stimulus for production of intestinal fluid is
distention or irritation of the
intestinal mucosa by hypertonic
or acidic chyme.
TRUE
22) Most nutrients are absorbed through the mucosa of the intestinal
villi by active
transport.
TRUE
23) Ionic iron is actively transported into the Mucosal cells, where it binds to the protein ferritin, a phenomenon called the mucosal iron barrier.
TRUE
24) Mumps is an inflammation of the parotid glands caused by myxovirus.
TRUE
25) Fats significantly delay the emptying of the stomach.
TRUE
26) The soft palate rises reflexively to open the nasopharynx when we swallow food.
FALSE
1) If the GFR is too low, needed substances may pass so quickly
through the renal tubules
that they are not absorbed and instead
are lost in the urine.
FALSE
2) In the kidneys, the countercurrent mechanism involves the
interaction between the flow
of filtrate through the loop of
Henle of the juxtamedullary nephrons (the
countercurrent
multiplier) and the flow of blood through the
limbs of adjacent blood vessels (the countercurrent
exchanger).
This relationship establishes and maintains an osmotic gradient
extending from
the cortex through the depths of the medulla that
allows the kidneys to vary urine concentration
dramatically
TRUE
3) The ureter transports urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder.
TRUE
4) Water reabsorption through the proximal convoluted tubule is
termed obligatory water
reabsorption, whereas water reabsorption
through the distal convoluted tubule is termed
facultative water reabsorption.
TRUE
5) The position of the kidneys behind the
peritoneal lining of
the abdominal cavity is described by the term retroperitoneal.
TRUE
6) The entire responsibility for urine formation lies with the nephron.
TRUE
7) Urine is 95% water by volume.
TRUE
8) The act of emptying the bladder is called voiding.
TRUE
9) Glomerular filtration is an ATPdriven
process.
FALSE
10) In the absence of hormones, the distal tubule and collecting
ducts are relatively impermeable
to water.
TRUE
11) The collecting duct is impermeable to water in the presence of ADH.
FALSE
12) The urethra contains an internal sphincter of smooth muscle.
TRUE
13) Angiotensin II is a substance made by the body to lower blood pressure during stress.
FALSE
14) Aldosterone is a hormone that causes the renal tubules to reclaim
sodium ions from the
filtrate.
TRUE
15) Blood pressure in the renal glomerulus is lower than in most parts of the body in order to conserve body water.
FALSE
16) The proximal convoluted tubule is the portion of the nephron that
attaches to the
collecting
duct.
FALSE
17) Urea is reabsorbed in the loop of Henle.
FALSE
18) Incontinence is the inability to control voluntary micturition.
TRUE
19) The myogenic mechanism reflects the tendency of vascular smooth muscle to stretch.
FALSE
20) An excessive urine output is called anuria.
FALSE
21) Tubular secretion is effective in controlling blood pH.
TRUE
22) The trigone is so named because of the shape of the urinary bladder.
FALSE
23) Atrial naturetic peptide inhibits sodium reabsorption.
TRUE
24) The macula densa cells are chemoreceptors that respond to changes
in the urea content
of the filtrate.
FALSE
25) Blood in the urine may be a symptom of bladder cancer.
TRUE
26) Obligatory water reabsorption involves the movement of water along an osmotic gradient.
TRUE
27) Having a kinked ureter is called renal ptosis.
FALSE
1) It is necessary for the testes to be kept below body temperature.
TRUE
2) The prostate atrophies as a man ages, and it usually causes no health problems.
FALSE
3) The hormone oxytocin combines with enzymes in semen to enhance sperm motility.
FALSE
4) When a couple is having difficulty conceiving a child, it is
necessary to investigate the sperm
of the male.
TRUE
5) The amount of testosterone and sperm produced by the testes is
dependent on the influence of
FSH alone.
FALSE
6) Ovarian follicles contain mature eggs.
FALSE
7) Sexually transmitted infections are the most important cause of reproductive disorders.
TRUE
8) Reproduction is not possible in males or females until one year after puberty has begun.
FALSE
9) The smaller cell produced by oogenesis meiosis I, called the first polar body, is essentially a packet of discarded nuclear material.
TRUE
10) Pain during ovulation is called dysmenorrhea.
FALSE
11) A human egg or sperm contains 23 pairs of chromosomes.
TRUE
12) The Pap smear is a test to detect cancerous changes in cells of the cervix.
TRUE
13) The adenohypophyseal hormone that triggers ovulation is estrogen.
FALSE
14) The male urethra serves the urinary system only.
FALSE
15) Both tetrads and crossovers are seen during meiosis.
TRUE
16) Failure to attain erection is called impotence.
TRUE
17) Ovulation occurs near the end of the ovarian cycle.
FALSE
18) The corpus luteum secretes progesterone only.
FALSE
19) Female orgasm is required for conception.
FALSE
20) The first sign of puberty in females is budding breasts.
TRUE
21) The primary function of the testes is to produce testosterone.
FALSE
22) The stage in meiosis where chromosomal exchange takes place is telophase.
FALSE
23) The diamondshaped
area between the coccyx, pubic arch, and
ischial tuberosities in the female is the vulva.
FALSE
24) The soft mucosal lining of the uterus is the endometrium.
TRUE
25) A scrotal muscle that contracts in response to cold environmental
temperature is the
cremaster.
TRUE
26) The secretions of the bulbourethral glands neutralize traces of
acidic urine in the urethra and
serve as a lubricant during
sexual intercourse.
TRUE
27) The zona pellucida is formed as the follicle becomes a secondary follicle.
TRUE
28) The molecule that enhances the ability of testosterone to promote
spermatogenesis is
inhibin.
TRUE
1) Conceptus is a term used to describe the developing human offspring.
TRUE
2) The period from fertilization through week eight is called the embryonic period.
TRUE
3) Fertilization occurs while the egg is still in the ovarian follicle.
FALSE
4) Freshly deposited sperm are not capable of penetrating an oocyte.
TRUE
5) By 72 hours after fertilization, the egg has divided into more
than 160 cells and is called
the morula.
FALSE
6) Implantation begins six to seven days after ovulation.
TRUE
7) A pregnancy test involves antibodies that detect GH levels in a woman's blood or urine.
FALSE
8) The body systems of the developing embryo are present in at least
rudimentary form at
eight weeks.
TRUE
9) Of the three germ layers, the mesoderm forms the most body parts.
TRUE
10) A pregnant woman urinates more often than usual because the
uterus compresses the
bladder, and she must also dispose of fetal
metabolic wastes.
TRUE
The "fluidfilled,
hollow ball of cells" stage of
development is the blastocyst.
TRUE
12) The embryonic stage lasts until the end of the eighth week.
TRUE
13) The embryo is directly enclosed in and protected by the amnion.
TRUE
14) In fetal circulation, one way in which blood bypasses the
nonaerated lungs is by way of
the foramen ovale.
TRUE
15) An episiotomy is an incision made to widen the vaginal orifice, aiding fetal expulsion.
TRUE
16) The placenta and its attached fetal membranes are collectively called the afterbirth.
TRUE
17) Human placental lactogen initiates labor.
FALSE
18) Surfactant production in premature infants is rarely a factor in
providing normal
respiratory activity.
FALSE
19) A blastocyst is a hollow ball of cells, while the morula is a solid ball of cells.
TRUE
20) A zygote is usually formed within the uterus.
FALSE
1) NREM sleep normally exhibits four distinct stages, which appear to alternate.
TRUE
2) Petit mal seizures found in children generally go away with age.
TRUE
3) NREM sleep episodes are frequently associated with erection of the penis.
FALSE
4) A flat EEG is a good indication of deep sleep.
FALSE
5) Theta waves are a brain wave pattern that can be seen during deep
sleep and during
anesthesia.
FALSE
6) One disorder of the substantia nigra is Parkinsonʹs disease.
TRUE
7) Cell bodies of the somatic motor neurons of the spinal nerves are
located in the ventral
horn of
the spinal cord.
TRUE
8) Meningitis is the most accurate term for inflammation of neurons.
FALSE
9) The spinal cord ends between L1 and L2.
TRUE
10) Cerebrospinal fluid circulates within the ventricles of the brain
and in the subarachnoid
space outside the brain.
TRUE
12) The RAS is comprised of specific pathways primarily in the limbic system.
FALSE
13) Nondeclarative memories preserve the circumstances in which they are learned.
FALSE
14) The first obvious sign that the nervous system is forming in the
embryo is the thickening
of the
surface ectoderm to form the
neural plate.
TRUE
15) The left cerebral hemisphere is usually dominant.
TRUE
16) The limbic system acts as our emotional, or affective, brain.
TRUE
17) The canal connecting the third and fourth ventricles and running
through the midbrain
is the
foramen of Monro.
FALSE
18) Commissural fibers form the corpus striatum.
FALSE
19) A disturbance of posture, muscle tremors at rest, and
uncontrolled muscle contraction
are all
symptoms of damage
to the basal nuclei.
TRUE
20) Projection fibers in the brain mainly connect the right and left hemispheres.
FALSE
21) Most of the ascending and descending pathways to and from the
brain cross over from
one
side of the body to the other.
TRUE
22) The primary visual cortex contains a map of visual space.
TRUE
23) One functional center found within the medulla oblongata is a
respiratory center
involved in
the control of the rate and
depth of breathing.
TRUE
24) Sorting of sensory information and relaying it to the appropriate
cerebral sensory area
occurs
in the hypothalamus.
FALSE
25) Sensory areas of the cortex for the genitals are located deep in the postcentral gyrus.
TRUE
26) Embryonic damage to the mesencephalon could result in improper
formation of the
midbrain
TRUE
1) Adipose tissue is one of the most hydrated of all tissues in the human body.
FALSE
2) The most abundant cation in intracellular fluid is sodium.
FALSE
3) Electrolytes determine most of the chemical and physical reactions of the body.
TRUE
4) Solutes, regardless of size, are able to move freely between
compartments because water
carries them along the osmotic gradients.
FALSE
5) The thirst center in the brain is located in the hypothalamus.
TRUE
6) Dehydration can be caused by endocrine disturbances such as
diabetes mellitus or
diabetes
insipidus.
TRUE
7) It is impossible to overhydrate because people need as much water
as they can drink to
carry
out ordinary body functions.
FALSE
8) Water imbalance, in which output exceeds intake, causing an
imbalance in body fluids, is
termed dehydration.
TRUE
9) Salts are lost from the body in perspiration, feces, and urine.
TRUE
10) Hypoproteinemia reflects a condition of unusually high levels of
plasma proteins and
causes
tissue edema.
FALSE
11) While the sodium content of the body may be altered, its
concentration in the ECF
remains
stable because of immediate
adjustments in water volume.
TRUE
12) Sodium is pivotal to fluid and electrolyte balance and to the
homeostasis of all body
systems.
TRUE
13) When aldosterone release is inhibited, sodium reabsorption cannot
occur beyond the
collecting
tube.
TRUE
14) Aldosterone stimulates the reabsorption of sodium while enhancing potassium secretion.
TRUE
15) Pressure diuresis decreases blood volume and blood pressure.
TRUE
16) Aldosterone is secreted in response to low extracellular potassium.
FALSE
17) To remain properly hydrated, water intake must equal water output.
TRUE
18) The main way the kidney regulates potassium ions is to excrete them.
TRUE
19) Atrial natriuretic peptide reduces blood pressure and blood
volume by inhibiting nearly
all
events that promote
vasodilation and potassium and water retention.
FALSE
20) Premenstrual edema may be due to enhanced reabsorption of sodium chloride.
TRUE
21) Heavy consumption of salt substitutes high in potassium can
present a serious clinical
problem when aldosterone release is
not normal.
TRUE
22) Hypercalcemia causes muscle tetany.
FALSE
23) The two hormones responsible for the regulation of calcium are
pituitary hormone and
calcitonin.
FALSE
24) Calcitonin targets the bones and causes the release of calcium
from storage when serum
levels
are low.
FALSE
25) The normal pH of blood is 7.35 7.45.
TRUE
26) Most acidic substances (hydrogen ions) originate as
byproducts
of cellular metabolism.
TRUE
27) Weak acids are able to act as chemical buffering systems for the
body because they
partially dissociate.
TRUE
28) The phosphate buffer system is relatively unimportant for buffering blood plasma.
TRUE
29) The single most important blood buffer system is the bicarbonate buffer system.
TRUE
30) One of the most powerful and plentiful sources of buffers is the protein buffer system.
TRUE
31) As ventilation increases and more carbon dioxide is removed from
the blood, the
hydrogen
ion concentration of the blood decreases.
TRUE
32) Regulation of the acidbase
system is accomplished mainly
through respiratory control,
and the kidneys also play a small role.
FALSE
Severe damage to the respiratory system rarely will result in acidbase
imbalances.
FALSE
34) Respiratory acidosis results when lungs are obstructed and gas exchange is inefficient.
TRUE
35) Prolonged hyperventilation can cause alkalosis.
TRUE