Funeral Pathology (FSE 217)
Eleven major systems of the body - answer Lymphatic, integumentary, nervous,
circulatory, skeletal, muscular, urinary, respiratory, digestive, endocrine, reproductive
Lymphatic system - answer Lymph vessels, lymph nodes, spleen, and thymus
Lymphatic system functions - answer Redistribute extra tissue fluid, complete
maturation of lymphocytes, help defend against invaders
Integumentary system - answer Skin, hair, nails, and glands
Integumentary system functions - answer Forms physical barrier against invasion,
thermoregulation, sense pain, temperature, pressure, and touch
Nervous system - answer Brain, spinal cord, nerves, and sense organs
Neurons - answerFunctional units of the nervous system
Central Nervous System - answerBrain and spinal cord
Peripheral Nervous System - answerNerves that connect the CNS to other body parts
Divisions of the PNS - answerSomatic, autonomoc
Somatic PNS - answerCommunicate with the skin and skeletal muscles
Autonomic PNS - answerCommunicate with visceral organs
Divisions of the Autonomic PNS - answerSympathetic, parasympathetic
Sympathetic division - answerThoracolumbar division
Parasympathetic division - answerCraniosacral division
Circulatory system - answerHeart, arteries, capillaries, veins, and blood
Circulatory system function - answerProvide blood throughout the system and to the
lungs; carrying nutrients, hormones, antibodies, vitamins, O2, and CO2
Leukocytes (WBCs) - answerGranulocytes, agranulocytes
Granulocytes - answerNeutrophils, eosinophils, basophils
,Agranulocytes - answerMonocytes, lymphocytes
T-lymphocytes - answerRecognize and destroy invaders
Helper T Cells - answerRecognize invaders and activate killer T cells
Killer T Cells - answerDestroy foreign microbes
Skeletal system - answer206 bones, ligaments, and cartilages
Skeletal system function - answerFramework and protective shield for organs
Muscular system - answerMuscles
Muscular system function - answerMove the body
Skeletal (striated) muscle - answerVoluntary; moves the body
Cardiac muscle - answerInvoluntary; striated; forms and pumps the heart
Smooth muscles - answerInvoluntary; lacks striation; moves visceral organs
Urinary system - answerKidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, urethra
Urinary system function - answerProduce and excrete urine
Respiratory system - answerNasal cavity, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs
External respiration - answerExchange of air at the lungs
Cellular (internal) respiration - answerExchange of gases within the organs
Respiratory system function - answerFacilitates the intake and output of gases
Digestive system - answerMouth, tongue, teeth, salivary glands, pharynx, esophagus,
stomach, gallbladder, liver, pancreas, small and large intestines
Digestive system function - answerConvert food molecules into absorbable forms
Endocrine system - answerPituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, adrenals, pancreas, ovaries,
tested, pineal, thymus
Endocrine system function - answerSecrete hormones
Reproductive system function - answerProduce offspring
, Connective tissue - answerBinds and supports
Muscle tissue - answerCauses movement by contraction
Origin - answerEnd that is attached to an immovable part of the body
Insertion - answerEnd that is attached to a movable part of the body
Epithelial tissue - answerCovers the surface of the body and organs, lines cavities and
vessels
Nervous tissue - answerComposes brain, spinal cord, and nerves
Pathology - answerStudy of disease, its causes, mechanisms, and effects
Pathological anatomy - answerGross Pathology, histopathology
Gross Pathology (morbid anatomy) - answerObserving changes visible to the naked eye
Histopathology (pathologic histology) - answerObserving changes in tissues
(microscopically)
Surgical Pathology - answerStudy of tissue that has been removed from body during a
surgical procedure
Clinical Pathology - answerLab procedures used to make a diagnosis
Pathophysiology - answerStudy of functional changes with diseases and disorders
Forensic pathology - answerDetermining the cause of death
General pathology - answerLooking at the body as a whole; studies diseases in different
organs
Specific Pathology - answerStudy of particular diseases that occur in particular organs
Lesion - answerPathological or traumatic change in the structure or function of a part
Examples of lesions - answerWound, infection, tumor, abscess, chemical abnormalities
Diagnosis - answerDetermination of the nature of a particular disease
Prognosis - answerForecast of the probable outcome of a disease
Symptoms - answerIndications of disease experienced by the sufferer
Eleven major systems of the body - answer Lymphatic, integumentary, nervous,
circulatory, skeletal, muscular, urinary, respiratory, digestive, endocrine, reproductive
Lymphatic system - answer Lymph vessels, lymph nodes, spleen, and thymus
Lymphatic system functions - answer Redistribute extra tissue fluid, complete
maturation of lymphocytes, help defend against invaders
Integumentary system - answer Skin, hair, nails, and glands
Integumentary system functions - answer Forms physical barrier against invasion,
thermoregulation, sense pain, temperature, pressure, and touch
Nervous system - answer Brain, spinal cord, nerves, and sense organs
Neurons - answerFunctional units of the nervous system
Central Nervous System - answerBrain and spinal cord
Peripheral Nervous System - answerNerves that connect the CNS to other body parts
Divisions of the PNS - answerSomatic, autonomoc
Somatic PNS - answerCommunicate with the skin and skeletal muscles
Autonomic PNS - answerCommunicate with visceral organs
Divisions of the Autonomic PNS - answerSympathetic, parasympathetic
Sympathetic division - answerThoracolumbar division
Parasympathetic division - answerCraniosacral division
Circulatory system - answerHeart, arteries, capillaries, veins, and blood
Circulatory system function - answerProvide blood throughout the system and to the
lungs; carrying nutrients, hormones, antibodies, vitamins, O2, and CO2
Leukocytes (WBCs) - answerGranulocytes, agranulocytes
Granulocytes - answerNeutrophils, eosinophils, basophils
,Agranulocytes - answerMonocytes, lymphocytes
T-lymphocytes - answerRecognize and destroy invaders
Helper T Cells - answerRecognize invaders and activate killer T cells
Killer T Cells - answerDestroy foreign microbes
Skeletal system - answer206 bones, ligaments, and cartilages
Skeletal system function - answerFramework and protective shield for organs
Muscular system - answerMuscles
Muscular system function - answerMove the body
Skeletal (striated) muscle - answerVoluntary; moves the body
Cardiac muscle - answerInvoluntary; striated; forms and pumps the heart
Smooth muscles - answerInvoluntary; lacks striation; moves visceral organs
Urinary system - answerKidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, urethra
Urinary system function - answerProduce and excrete urine
Respiratory system - answerNasal cavity, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs
External respiration - answerExchange of air at the lungs
Cellular (internal) respiration - answerExchange of gases within the organs
Respiratory system function - answerFacilitates the intake and output of gases
Digestive system - answerMouth, tongue, teeth, salivary glands, pharynx, esophagus,
stomach, gallbladder, liver, pancreas, small and large intestines
Digestive system function - answerConvert food molecules into absorbable forms
Endocrine system - answerPituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, adrenals, pancreas, ovaries,
tested, pineal, thymus
Endocrine system function - answerSecrete hormones
Reproductive system function - answerProduce offspring
, Connective tissue - answerBinds and supports
Muscle tissue - answerCauses movement by contraction
Origin - answerEnd that is attached to an immovable part of the body
Insertion - answerEnd that is attached to a movable part of the body
Epithelial tissue - answerCovers the surface of the body and organs, lines cavities and
vessels
Nervous tissue - answerComposes brain, spinal cord, and nerves
Pathology - answerStudy of disease, its causes, mechanisms, and effects
Pathological anatomy - answerGross Pathology, histopathology
Gross Pathology (morbid anatomy) - answerObserving changes visible to the naked eye
Histopathology (pathologic histology) - answerObserving changes in tissues
(microscopically)
Surgical Pathology - answerStudy of tissue that has been removed from body during a
surgical procedure
Clinical Pathology - answerLab procedures used to make a diagnosis
Pathophysiology - answerStudy of functional changes with diseases and disorders
Forensic pathology - answerDetermining the cause of death
General pathology - answerLooking at the body as a whole; studies diseases in different
organs
Specific Pathology - answerStudy of particular diseases that occur in particular organs
Lesion - answerPathological or traumatic change in the structure or function of a part
Examples of lesions - answerWound, infection, tumor, abscess, chemical abnormalities
Diagnosis - answerDetermination of the nature of a particular disease
Prognosis - answerForecast of the probable outcome of a disease
Symptoms - answerIndications of disease experienced by the sufferer