Showing posts with label subject. Show all posts
Showing posts with label subject. Show all posts
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Movement is....
Move of organs from one position to another position

Mention 3 of movement organs
Skeleton, muscle, joint

Canaliculi and blood capillaries are in part number....

A) Canaliculi number ....(3)
B) Blood capillaris number ....(1)
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This video will show about many kind of joint, like:
  • Pivot joint
  • Hinge joint
  • Ball and socket joint, etc
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This video show joint:
  • Ball and socket joint
  • Hinge joint
  • Gliding joint
  • Pivot joint

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Goal
Knowing name of bones and joints which compose human skeleton and classifying it based on place and its shape
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Why some people get liquid feces?
a. Because the small intestine can’t absorb water well
b. Because the small intestine to much absorb the water
c. Because the intestinum crasum to much absorb the water
d. Because the intestinum crasum can’t absorb water well
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Skull

    The skull is made up of 22 different bones. The cranial bones protect your brain. Just like there are joints in your knees and elbows, there are also joints in your skull between the various bones. However, the joints in your skull are immovable. They are called sutures. The sutures are noticeable on an infant; they comprise the soft spots on the baby's skull that will harden with age. In addition to cranial bones, your skull has facial bones. They provide the structure for your jaw, cheeks and nose. Some of the names of cranial bones include mandible, maxilla, palatine and lacrimal.

Sternum

    The sternum is an essential part of your ribcage. It is a flat bone that is shaped like a dagger. The sternum is located in the middle of your ribcage. It protects your vital organs, such as your heart and lungs. Your ribs connect to it with cartilage. There are three parts to your sternum, which are fused together. The manubrim, or handle, is at the top. The body, also known as the blade, is below the manubrim. Below the body is the xiphoid process, also known as the tip. The xiphoid process is comprised of cartilage, which grows more bony as you age.

Ribs

    Your ribcage consists of flat, thin bones. Your ribs are slightly curved and connect to the sternum in the middle of your chest. These 24 bones protect your vital organs. There are names for three different groups of ribs. The first group of ribs is called true ribs. These seven ribs connect to your spine in the back and to the sternum in the front with cartilage. The second group is called false ribs. These three pairs of ribs also connect to the spine in the back. However, in the front they connect to your lowest true rib. Finally, your floating ribs are the smallest ribs. These two pairs of ribs connect in the back to the spine, but do not connect to any body part in the front.

Vertebral Column

    The vertebral column is more commonly referred to as the spine or the backbone. A total of 33 irregular bones form the spine. These bones are called vertebrae and they are classified into five different groups, depending on their location. The cervical vertebrae are at the top. They support your head. Going down the spine, the cervical vertebrae are followed by the thoracic vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae, the sacrum and the coccyx. The sacrum is actually a group of vertebrae that become fused together as you age. The coccyx is your tailbone, which also consists of fused vertebrae.
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Tongue is muscle tissue whose fixed end is in the back of the mouth base. It can move freely. The tongue helps pushing the food from the mouth cavity to esophagus. In the base there are tonsil, which functions as body defense from diseases

We can find salivary gland at our mouth. They produces saliva and releases it to the mouth cavity.
Saliva is liquid containing amilase enzime (ptialin). It function to digesting starch (amylum)
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Function of skeleton:
  • Giving body shape
  • Protecting important body organs, such as brain, heart, and lung
  • The producing blood cells take place
  • The place of muscle stick on
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The human skeleton consists of both fused and individual bones supported and supplemented by ligaments, tendons, muscles and cartilage. It serves as a scaffold which supports organs, anchors muscles, and protects organs such as the brain, lungs and heart. The biggest bone in the body is the femur in the thigh and the smallest is the stapes bone in the middle ear. In an adult, the skeleton comprises around 30-40% of the total body weight, and half of this weight is water.

Fused bones include those of the pelvis and the cranium. Not all bones are interconnected directly: there are three bones in each middle ear called the ossicles that articulate only with each other. The hyoid bone, which is located in the neck and serves as the point of attachment for the tongue, does not articulate with any other bones in the body, being supported by muscles and ligaments.