The endocrine system function
Nervous system function
respiratory system function
excretory system function
skeletal system function
Bones are made of what
What makes up the skeletal system
What are the 3 types of muscles
How do muscles and bones work together to move you
What is a neuron
what is an impulse
How do messages get sent
what is a biofeedback loop
what is the endocrine gland
what is a pathogen
what is an antibody
what is the difference between the 2 types of white blood cells
what makes up the circulatory system
what happens in the alveoli
what makes up the respiratory system
what is an enzyme
what is the process of digestion
controls internal conditions, growth, development, and reproduction
controls body movement, thought and behavior
provides the body with oxygen and removes gas wastes from the body
removes wastes from blood
provides the body protection and support; interacts with muscles to allow movement
living tissues and nonliving materials deposited by bone cells
bones and cartillage
cardiac, smooth, skeletal
the muscles attach on either end of the bone. one muscle contracts pulling the bone up. the other muscle relaxes. movement results in the direction of the pulling muscle
nerve cells that pass messages
message sent by neuron
the neuron has a cell body with short branches attached. the message enters the dendrite, passes through the cell body and exits to the next neuron through the axon
a circular pathway that sends information back and forth throughout the body
an organ that releases chemical substances directly into the blood
organisms such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi that cause disease
chemicals that kill specific pathogens
one type will attack any pathogen entering the body, the other targets specific pathogens
blood, heart, blood vessels
oxygen enters the blood and carbon dioxide is removed
lungs, nose, trachea, and bronchial tubes
chemicals that help break down food into nutrients
mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine