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Test your basic knowledge |
PCAT Biology Muscles And Locomotion
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Subjects
:
pcat
,
biology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Striations of light and dark bands of skeletal muscle
Flagella
Compact Bone
Striated Muscle
Myofibrils
2. Involved in blood cell formation
Red Marrow
Concentric Contraction
Striated Muscle
Cori Cycle
3. After the contraction period - this is a brief relaxation period in which the muscle is unresponsive to a stimulus
Flagella
Striated Muscle
Osteoblasts
Absolute Refractory Period
4. Serve as bone to bone connectors
Latent period
I band
Ligaments
Compact Bone
5. Responsible for voluntary movements and is innervated by the somatic nervous system
Skeletal Muscle
Tonus
Extension
Isotonic Contraction
6. Condition where the muscles contract and become rigid - even without action potentials which is caused b an absence of adenosiine triphosphate - which is required for the myosin heads to be released from the actin filaments
Spicules
Creatine Phosphate and ARginine Phosphate
Endoskeleton
Rig Mortis
7. The cavities in between the spicules are filled with yellow or red bone marrow
Spicules
Compact Bone
Osteoclasts
Osteon
8. Achieve movement by means of the power stroke -a thrusting movement generated by the sliding action of microtubules
Thin filaments
Chorondytes
Extrapyramidal System
Flagella
9. Concentric circles of bony matrix
Lamellae
Thin filaments
Sarcomeres
Segmented Worms (Annelids)
10. A hard skeleton that covers all muscles and organs of some invertebrates -found principally in arthropods -composed of noncellular material secreted by the epidermis
Z line
Bone Formation
Endoskeleton
Exoskeleton
11. Dense bone that does not appear to have any cavities when observed with the naked -bony matrix is deposited in structural units called osteons
Rig Mortis
Compact Bone
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
Absolute Refractory Period
12. Occurs by either endochondral ossification or by intramembranous ossification
Osteon
Bone Formation
Cartilage
Extension
13. Time between stimulation and the onset of contraction
Bone Formation
Latent period
Simple Twhich
Smooth Muscle
14. State of partial contraction
Tonus
Cori Cycle
Muscle Contraction
Thin filaments
15. Mesenchymal (embryonic or undifferentiated) connective tissue is transformed into - and replaced by - bone
Osteoclasts
Pyramidal System
Rig Mortis
Intramembranous Ossification
16. Large - multinucleated cells involved in bone resorption
Endoskeleton
Cartilage
Osteoclasts
Osteoblasts
17. Runs down the center of the sarcomere
Fiber
A Band
Rig Mortis
M line
18. Spans the entire length of the thick filaments and any overlapping portions of the thin filaments
Z line
Eccentric Contraction
A Band
Cori Cycle
19. Skeletal muscle - smooth muscle - and cardia muscle
Myofibrils
Osteon
Muscles in Mammals
Isotonic Contraction
20. Much less dense and consists of an interconnecting lattice of bony spicules
Spongy Bone
Dynamic Contraction
Endochondral Ossification
A Band
21. Define the boundaries of a single sacromere and anchor the thin filaments
Sarcomere
Rig Mortis
Z line
I band
22. Type of dynamic contraction where the muscle fibers shorten and the tension on the muscle increases
ATP
Concentric Contraction
Intramembranous Ossification
Ligaments
23. Occurs whne a muscle shortens against a fixed load while the tension on that remains constant
Dynamic Contraction
Isotonic Contraction
Thick Filaments
ATP
24. Stimulated by a message from the somatic nervous system sent via a motor neuron
Spicules
Skeletal Muscle
Muscle Contraction
Eccentric Contraction
25. Point of attachment of a muscle to a stationary bone (the proximal end in limb muscles)
Simple Twhich
Tonus
Muscle Contraction
Origin
26. The basic framework of the body - consisting of the skull - vertebral column - and the rib cage
Segmented Worms (Annelids)
Creatine Phosphate and ARginine Phosphate
Myoglobin
Axial Skeleton
27. Refers to a bending of a joint
Axial Skeleton
Sarcomeres
Flexion
A Band
28. Existing cartilage is replaced by bone
Endochondral Ossification
Spicules
Tonus
Temporal Summation
29. Point of attachment of a muscle to the bone that moves (distal end in limb muscles)
Extrapyramidal System
Insertion
Sarcomere
Compact Bone
30. Advance principally by the action of muscles on a hydrostatic skeleton
Compact Bone
Segmented Worms (Annelids)
Intramembranous Ossification
Endochondral Ossification
31. Move by beating cilia or flagella
Pseudopodia
Unicellular Locomotion
I band
Flatworms
32. Cells responsible for synthesizing cartillage
Fiber
Chorondytes
Ligaments
Intramembranous Ossification
33. Synthesize and secrete the organic constituents of the bone matrix; once they have become surrounded by their matrix - they mature into osteocytes
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
Sarcomeres
Osteoblasts
Eccentric Contraction
34. Region containing thick filaments only
M line
H zone
Bone Formation
Spongy Bone
35. Responsible for involuntary actions and is innervated by the autonomic nervous system -found in the digetive tract - bladder - uterus - and blood vessel walls - among other places
Endochondral Ossification
Bone
Flagella
Smooth Muscle
36. Composed of organized bundles of myosin molecules
Eccentric Contraction
Thick Filaments
Skeletal Muscle
Tetanus
37. Multinucleated cell created by the fusion of several mononucleated embryonic cell
Rig Mortis
Neuromuscular Junction
Osteoclasts
Fiber
38. Able to provide rapid commands to the skeletal muscles and variious other organs
Ligaments
Endoskeleton
Pyramidal System
Tendons
39. When fibers of a muscle are expoed to a very frequent stimuli - the muscle can't fully relax and the contractions begin to combine - becoming stronger and more prolonged
Spongy Bone
Red Marrow
Bone
Temporal Summation
40. Attach skeletal muscle to bones and bend the skeleton at the movable joints
Tendons
Latent period
Thin filaments
Rig Mortis
41. Contraction that becomes continuous when the stimuli are so frequent that the muscle can't relax and is stronger than a simple twith of a single fiber
Tetanus
Cori Cycle
Isotonic Contraction
Red Marrow
42. Filaments embedded in fibers of muscles - which are divided into sarcomeres
Thick Filaments
Myofibrils
Insertion
Osteoblasts
43. Consists of a central microscopic channel called a Haversian Canal - surrounded by a number of lamellae
Osteon
Cardiac Muscle Fibers
Simple Twhich
Isotonic Contraction
44. Occurs when both ends of the muscle are fixed and no change in length occurs during the contraction - but the tension increases
Muscle Contraction
Smooth Muscle
Isometric Contraction
Thick Filaments
45. Amoeba use for locomotion where the advancing cell membrane extends forward
Isotonic Contraction
Thin filaments
Pseudopodia
Ligaments
46. In vertebrates and some invertebrates - particularly echinoderms - energy can be temporarily stored in a high-energy compound
Thin filaments
Endochondral Ossification
Creatine Phosphate and ARginine Phosphate
Tendons
47. Muscles contract against the resistance of the incompressible fluid within the animal's tissues (this fluid is termed the hydrostatic skeleton)
Flatworms
Insertion
Dynamic Contraction
Chorondytes
48. Modified endoplasmic reticulum that stores calcium ions that envelop myofibrils
Spongy Bone
Osteoblasts
Sarcoplasmic Reticulum
Absolute Refractory Period
49. The region containing thin filaments only
Lamellae
I band
Sarcomeres
Cardiac Muscle Fibers
50. Chains of actin molecules
Lamellae
Thin filaments
Flagella
Isometric Contraction