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Life Science for Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) Study Guide (page 5)

By LearningExpress Editors
LearningExpress, LLC
Updated on Jul 5, 2011

Skeletal System

The skeleton provides the structure of the body. Comprised of 206 bones, along with cartilage and ligament, the skeletal system is rigid yet flexible. Joints are points where bones meet and may or may not move against each other. The cartilage is the flexible but strong substance found in joints, nose, and ears. The ligaments, made of softer, flexible tissue, attach bones to each other.

The skeletal system has the following functions:

  • providing mechanical support
  • protecting body organs
  • making body movement possible (along with the muscles)
  • storing calcium in the bones, which contain marrow for production of red and white blood cells and platelets

Muscular System

Muscles are made of sheets or bundles of cells. Muscles can do work only by contracting; expansion is passive. Therefore, skeletal muscles are usually attached to a bone in opposing pairs—one to contract while the other expands. There are three major types of muscles:

  • Voluntary (or striated) muscles can be controlled by conscious thought.
  • Involuntary (or smooth) muscles cannot be controlled by the will.
  • Cardiac (or heart) muscles exist only in the heart. They contract spontaneously without needing nervous stimulation.

Tendons attach muscles to the skeleton.

Circulatory System

The circulatory system consists of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems, including:

  • the heart
  • blood components such as red blood cells and platelets
  • blood vessels, including arteries, veins, and capillaries
  • lymphatic vessels and nodes
  • lymph

The circulatory system circulates blood throughout the body, making the body's other functions possible by bringing oxygen and other materials to the cells and carrying away waste products and other secretions.

Immune System

The immune system is the body's protective mechanism. It consists of the lymphatic system; the white cells of the blood and bone marrow; antibodies; the thymus gland; and the skin.

The basic characteristics of the immune system include the concepts of:

  • Specificity: the capacity to recognize and get rid of antigens by producing lymphocytes and antibodies. An antigen (literally meaning "antibodygenerating") can include anything "foreign" to the body, such as viruses, bacteria, pollen, and, unfortunately, tissue that has been transplanted.
  • Diversity: the capacity to respond to millions of kinds of invaders.
  • Self/nonself recognition: the ability to distinguish the body's own molecules ("self ") from antigens ("nonself ").
  • Memory: the capacity to "remember" previously encountered antigens and react more quickly when exposed again. This process is called acquired immunity.

The immune system's basic function is to protect the body from disease and injury.

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