Ch. 1 Anatomy and Physiology for
Emergency Care Exam Questions
and Answers
What does thermoregulation involve? - Answer- Altering the relationship between heat
loss and heat production.
How does your body regulate temperature if it rises? - Answer- The thermoregulatory
control center in located in the brain. Temperature receptors are located in the skin and
in cells in the control center. Normal temp is 98.6. If it rises, the control center tragets
two effectors: (1) smooth muscles in the walls of blood vessels that supply the skin and
(2) sweat glands. The muscle tissue relaxes and blood vessels widen that inturn
increases blood flow and the sweat glands accelerate their secretion. Skin acts like
radiator and loses heat to environment and evaporation of sweat speeds process. Temp
returns to normal, thermoregulator center becomes inactive till needed again.
How does the body regulate temp. if it drops? - Answer- The control center targets the
same two effectors but this time the blood flow declines and sweat activity decreases.
This combo reduces the rate of heat loss to the environment. Due to heat production
still continuing in the body the temp. balance with level and everything goes back to
normal resting levels.
What is positive feedback? - Answer- It is the initial stimulus produced from a response
that reinforces that stimulus.
What is an example of positive feedback? - Answer- Blood clotting. When you get
injured and your recieve a cut, the damaged blood vessel wall releases chemicals that
begin the multistep process of blood clotting. As clotting gets underway, each step
releases chemicals taht accelerate the process. That accelerated process is a positive
feedback.
What does that Latin word Brachium mean and what does it refer to? - Answer- "to
embrace" , Brachium refers to the arm
What are the four Abdominopelvic quadrants? - Answer- RUQ,LUQ, RLQ, LLQ
RLQ pain is indicative of? - Answer- Appendicitis
RUQ pain is indicative of? - Answer- gallbladder or liver problems
, The Abdominopelvic regions are how many and what? - Answer- 9 regions. From pt
right to left, top to bottom(1)right hypochondriac region (2) Epigastric region (3) left
hypochondriac region (4) Right lumbar region (5) umbilical region (6) left lumbar region
(7) right inguinal region (8) hypogastric(pubic) region (9) left inguinal region
These regions hold what?
Cephalic
Cervical
Thorasic
Abdominal
Pelvic
Lumbar
Gluteal
Pubic
Inguinal
Axillary - Answer- Cephalon (head)
cervicis (neck)
Thoracis(thorax or chest)
Abdomen
Pelvis
Loin (lower back)
Buttock
Pubis (anterior pelvis)
Groin
Axilla (armpit)
These structures are in what region?
Brachium
Antebrachium
Manus
Thigh
Leg (anterior)
Calf
Pes (foot)
Planta (sole) - Answer- Brachial region
Antevrachial region
Manual region
Femoral region
Crural region
Sural region
Pedal region
Plantar region
The sagital plane divides the body into what portions and how does it run? - Answer-
Left and right, runs across the body's midline vertically
Emergency Care Exam Questions
and Answers
What does thermoregulation involve? - Answer- Altering the relationship between heat
loss and heat production.
How does your body regulate temperature if it rises? - Answer- The thermoregulatory
control center in located in the brain. Temperature receptors are located in the skin and
in cells in the control center. Normal temp is 98.6. If it rises, the control center tragets
two effectors: (1) smooth muscles in the walls of blood vessels that supply the skin and
(2) sweat glands. The muscle tissue relaxes and blood vessels widen that inturn
increases blood flow and the sweat glands accelerate their secretion. Skin acts like
radiator and loses heat to environment and evaporation of sweat speeds process. Temp
returns to normal, thermoregulator center becomes inactive till needed again.
How does the body regulate temp. if it drops? - Answer- The control center targets the
same two effectors but this time the blood flow declines and sweat activity decreases.
This combo reduces the rate of heat loss to the environment. Due to heat production
still continuing in the body the temp. balance with level and everything goes back to
normal resting levels.
What is positive feedback? - Answer- It is the initial stimulus produced from a response
that reinforces that stimulus.
What is an example of positive feedback? - Answer- Blood clotting. When you get
injured and your recieve a cut, the damaged blood vessel wall releases chemicals that
begin the multistep process of blood clotting. As clotting gets underway, each step
releases chemicals taht accelerate the process. That accelerated process is a positive
feedback.
What does that Latin word Brachium mean and what does it refer to? - Answer- "to
embrace" , Brachium refers to the arm
What are the four Abdominopelvic quadrants? - Answer- RUQ,LUQ, RLQ, LLQ
RLQ pain is indicative of? - Answer- Appendicitis
RUQ pain is indicative of? - Answer- gallbladder or liver problems
, The Abdominopelvic regions are how many and what? - Answer- 9 regions. From pt
right to left, top to bottom(1)right hypochondriac region (2) Epigastric region (3) left
hypochondriac region (4) Right lumbar region (5) umbilical region (6) left lumbar region
(7) right inguinal region (8) hypogastric(pubic) region (9) left inguinal region
These regions hold what?
Cephalic
Cervical
Thorasic
Abdominal
Pelvic
Lumbar
Gluteal
Pubic
Inguinal
Axillary - Answer- Cephalon (head)
cervicis (neck)
Thoracis(thorax or chest)
Abdomen
Pelvis
Loin (lower back)
Buttock
Pubis (anterior pelvis)
Groin
Axilla (armpit)
These structures are in what region?
Brachium
Antebrachium
Manus
Thigh
Leg (anterior)
Calf
Pes (foot)
Planta (sole) - Answer- Brachial region
Antevrachial region
Manual region
Femoral region
Crural region
Sural region
Pedal region
Plantar region
The sagital plane divides the body into what portions and how does it run? - Answer-
Left and right, runs across the body's midline vertically