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Chapter 6h- The Human Body

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Across
The nerves that carry sensations such as touch, taste, smell, heat, cold, and pain from the body to the central nervous system
Located in the upper brainstem; responsible for maintenance of consciousness, specifically one's level of arousal.
One of three bones (sacrum and two pelvic bones) that make up the pelvic ring; consists of five fused sacral vertebrae.
Fluid ejaculated from the penis and containing sperm
The connection point between the pelvis and the vertebral column.
The air that remains in the lungs after maximal expiration.
A cone-shaped area that collects urine from the kidneys and funnels it through the ureter into the bladder.
The amount of air that can be inhaled after a normal inhalation; the amount of air that can be inhaled in addition to the normal tidal volume.
Muscle that is attached to bones and usually crosses at least one joint; striated, or voluntary muscle.
The inhaling and exhaling of air; the physiologic process that exchanges carbon dioxide from fresh air.
The thick skin covering the cranium, which usually bears hair.
Storage sacs for sperm and seminal fluid, which empty into the urethra at the prostate.
The glands that produce saliva to keep the mouth and pharynx moist
A small glad that surrounds the male urethra where it merges from the urinary bladder; it secrets a fluid that is part of the ejaculatory fluid.
Down
All the structures of the body that contribute to the process of breathing, consisting of the upper and lower airways and their component parts.
Behind the abdominal cavity
An imaginary line where the body is divided into left and right parts
Cells that carry oxygen to the body's tissues; also called erythrocytes.
The shoulder blade.
Glands that produce an oily substance called sebum, which discharges along the shafts of the hairs.
The lowermost end of the colon.
A condition in which the circulatory system fails to provide sufficient circulation to maintain normal cellular functions; also called hypoperfusion
The bone on the thumb side of the forearm.
The wave of pressure created as the heart contracts and forces blood out the left ventricle and into the major arteries.