All Human Anatomy and Physiology Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #311 : Human Anatomy And Physiology
Which of the following is not a carpal bone?
Sphenoid
Hamate
Lunate
Pisiform
Trapezoid
Sphenoid
The sphenoid is located in the skull. All others are carpal bones.
Example Question #313 : Human Anatomy And Physiology
Which of these bones is classified as a long bone?
Vertebrae
Ulna
Ribs
Carpals
Ulna
Bones are classified according to shape. Long bones include the humerus, radius, ulna, tibia, femur, fibula, phalanges, and metacarpals. The carpal and tarsal bones are short bones, which are cuboid-shaped. The ribs are flat bones. Lastly, the vertebrae are irregular bones, meaning they are of mixed shapes.
Example Question #315 : Human Anatomy And Physiology
Which bone is considered the upper arm bone?
Clavicle
Ulna
Humerus
Scapula
Radius
Humerus
The humerus makes up the upper arm. The clavicle and scapula create the shoulder girdle in which the humerus joins with. Finally the radius and Ulna make up the forearm bones.
Example Question #31 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which bones make up the shoulder girdle?
Clavicle and scapula
Scapula and humerus
Scapula, humerus, and sternum
Scapula, humerus, sternum, and clavicle
Clavicle and humerus
Clavicle and scapula
The shoulder girdle (or what bones keep the arm attached the the body) is made up of the clavicle and scapula, which together create the frame for the joint space for the upper arm, as well as muscle attachment.
Example Question #32 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which bone of the shoulder is commonly known as the collar bone?
Clavicle
Radius
Sternum
Scapula
Humerus
Clavicle
The clavicle is commonly known as the collar bone. Hint: the collar of your shirt lies against this bone.
Example Question #32 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which bones create the elbow joint?
Humerus and scapula
Ulna and carpals
Radius, ulna, and humerus
Tibia and femur
Radius and humerus
Radius, ulna, and humerus
The radius and ulna make up the forearm bones, which meet with the humerus of the upper arm to create the elbow joint. All other options only include one or some of these bones, which make them incorrect.
Example Question #33 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which of these is not present on the scapula?
Suprascapular notch
Rim of glenoid cavity
Coracoid process
Infraspinous fossa
Coronoid process
Coronoid process
The coronoid and coracoid processes are easily confused. While the coracoid process lies on the superior lateral portion of the scapula, the coronoid process is found on other bones such as the mandible and ulna.
Example Question #34 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which is a feature of the distal posterior end of the humerus?
Styloid process
Olecranon fossa
Capitulum
Radial fossa
Intertubercular groove
Olecranon fossa
The humerus articulates with the olecranon of the ulna in the olecranon fossa.
The capitulum and radial fossa are on the anterior side of the humerus; the intertubercular groove is proximal rather than distal; and the styloid process is a projection of the ulna rather than the humerus.
Example Question #111 : Bones
A patient has AB positive blood. Which of the following blood types, if transfused, would cause agglutination?
A positive
AB negative
B negative
O negative
None of these
None of these
An AB positive patient is known as a universal recipient because they can receive blood from any blood type. The recipient's antibodies are what will attack foreign antigens. Type AB positive patients produce no antibodies, because any antibody produced would attack their own antigens, causing agglutination. Because type AB patients patients do not produce antibodies, they cannot attack any antigens and they can receive any blood type.
Example Question #41 : Identifying Bones Of The Upper Extremities
Which is the largest, longest bone of the upper limb?
radius
ulna
humerus
femur
humerus
The humerus is the largest, longest bone of the upper limb. The radius and ulna — neither as large as the humerus — make up the forearm, while the femur is analogous to the humerus in the lower limb.
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