AND PHYSIOLOGY NEWEST 2025 ACTUAL EXAM
COMPLETE 100 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS (VERIFIED ANSWERS) |ALREADY GRADED
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What do all vertebrae possess?
transverse process and vertebral foramen
What is the longest and strongest bone of the face?
Mandible
The temporal bone riddled with sinuses
Mastoid Process
What is a Colle's Fracture?
A break in the distal end of the radius
What is the most common site for fractures in the Humerus?
surgical neck
Sagittal Suture
Right and Left Parietal
Lambdoid Suture
Occipital and Parietal Bone
Squamosal Suture
temporal and parietal Bone
Coronal Suture
Parietal and Frontal Bone
Cervical Vertebrae
Thoracic Vertebrae
Lumbar Vertebrae
What is the only vertebrae that does not have a body?
atlas
, Where is the pituitary gland housed?
sella turcica of the sphenoid
Where are the Paranasal sinuses found?
maxillae
Where is the location of the center of gravity of the body?
it is 1 cm posterior to the sacral promontory
Thoracic vertebrae T2 through T8 differ from the others in
that?
they have superior and inferior demifacets
The antebrachium is composed of which two bones?
the radius and the ulna
The short bone that attaches to the third metacarpal is the
capitate
The bone in direct contact with the first metatarsal (big toe)
is the
medial cuneiform
Why are the paranasal sinuses at greater risk for infection?
their location adjacent to the middle ear cavity often creates a
high risk for infection
The tibia is in contact with which tarsus?
talus
Ostealgia
pain in the bone
An individual has just ingested a chemical that binds
irreversibly to the ACh receptors in the sarcolemma. By itself
it does not alter membrane potential, yet prevents normal
neurotransmitter binding. Ignoring the effects on any other
system, the consequence to skeletal muscle would be
no contraction at all by nervous mechanisms, but contraction if
stimulated by an external electrode
prime movers
a muscle that has the major responsibility for producing a specific
movement
Antagonist