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Chapter 1 The Human Body: An Orientation

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Title: Chapter 1 The Human Body: An Orientation


1
Chapter 1 The Human Body An Orientation
  • J.F. Thompson, Ph.D.

2
Anatomy and Physiology Overview
  • Anatomy and Physiology
  • Anatomy structure how it is constructed
  • Physiology function - how it works
  • Topics of Anatomy
  • Gross anatomy
  • Regional anatomy
  • Systemic anatomy
  • Surface anatomy
  • Microscopic anatomy
  • cytology internal cell structure
  • histology tissues composed of different cell
    types
  • Developmental anatomy

3
Anatomy and Physiology Overview
  • Topics of Physiology at the System Level
  • Neurophysiology
  • Renal
  • Cardiovascular
  • Respiratory
  • Endocrine
  • Muscle
  • Gastrointestinal
  • Reproductive
  • Topics of Physiology at various Organizational
    Levels
  • Cellular Physiology
  • Animal Physiology
  • Pathophysiology

4
Essential Concepts The Complimentarity of
Structure and Function
  • Function dependent on Structure
  • mineral deposits harden bones teeth
  • valves in heart keep blood flow unidirectional
  • Function is also specific to Location
  • cartilage is flexible and smooth ears, nose,
    joints
  • actin/myosin interacts in muscle fibers
  • hairs skin, scalp, axillae, nose, etc.

5
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Chemical
  • Cellular
  • Tissue
  • Organ
  • Organ System
  • Organismal

6
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Chemical
  • Atoms bonds
  • Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, etc.
  • I. Molecules
  • small inorganic
  • small organic
  • proteins
  • carbohydrates
  • lipids
  • nucleic acids
  • II. Cells cytoplasm and organelles assembled
    from various molecules

7
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Cellular level
  • Cells the basic structural and functional units
    of the organism
  • Cells are specialized for particular functions,
    e.g., muscle cells are specialized for
    contracting
  • Cell organelles are subcompartments with
    specialized tasks

8
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Tissue level
  • Groups of different cell types cooperate to
    perform specific functions
  • Organ level - two or more different tissue types
    are organized to perform specific functions

9
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Organ system level - connected organs that
    cooperate in related function(s)

10
Essential Concepts The Hierarchy of Structural
Organization
  • Organismal level - all of the organ systems
    working together to maintain life constitute the
    living organism

11
Necessary Life Functions
  • Maintaining Boundaries - keeping the inside
    separate/different from the outside
  • Movement - motion of the whole body, individual
    cells, organelles or material inside the
    body/cells
  • walking/running
  • food moving from the mouth throughout the GI
    tract
  • white blood cells patrolling the body to fight
    infection
  • mitochondria moving in the cell in response to
    oxygen
  • Responsiveness detecting and responding to
    changes in the internal/external environments
  • nerve cells
  • muscle cells
  • endocrine cells

12
Necessary Life Functions
  • Digestion - breaking down ingested food to simple
    molecules to be absorbed
  • Metabolism - all biochemical processes in the
    body
  • catabolism breakdown reactions
  • anabolism synthetic reactions
  • Excretion - removing wastes from the body
  • Reproduction - formation of new cells for growth,
    repair, replacement or a new organism
  • Growth
  • increase in size, complexity
  • due to increased cell number or increased cell
    size

13
Survival Needs
  • Things required for an organisms survival
  • Nutrients
  • Oxygen
  • Water
  • Normal body temperature
  • Atmospheric pressure for gas exchange
  • All, except E above, must be maintained within
    fairly narrow ranges

14
Essential Concept Homeostasis
  • Homeostasis is the ability to maintain relatively
    stable internal conditions even though the
    outside world changes continuously
  • Important for maintaining physiological limits
  • multiple organs and systems are working all the
    time
  • cells and organs need a relatively constant
    internal environment for survival
  • the internal environment stays within those
    limits due to the stability of body fluid
    composition

15
Homeostatic Systems
  • Three Basic Components
  • Receptor
  • detects change in a variable (stimulus/stress)
  • sends input (information) to a control center
  • Control Center
  • assesses input sends output to effector(s)
  • Effector
  • causes response, i.e., an effect which is
    triggered by output

16
Negative Feedback Control
  • Results in a return to homeostatic equilibrium
    because the response reduces stimulus (stress)
  • Examples
  • Regulation of blood glucose
  • Regulation of body temperature
  • Most other physiological mechanisms

17
Positive Feedback Control
  • Results in a shift to a new homeostatic
    equilibrium because the response increases the
    stimulus level (stress) snowball effect
  • Examples
  • Blood clotting
  • Pregnancy/Childbirth
  • Immune responses
  • A few others
  • Most are responses to special conditions
    resulting in a new, temporary physiologic state

18
Homeostatic Imbalances
  • Pathological processes with a particular set of
    characteristics in which some or all parts of the
    body are not functioning correctly
  • diseases or injuries may be local or systemic
  • different systemic changes are present and may
    suggest a cause
  • symptoms - subjective changes in body function,
    not observable reported by the individual, e.g.,
    pain
  • signs - objective changes which are observable,
    e.g., temperature, pulse

19
The Language of Anatomy
  • Anatomical position a constant reference point
  • Directional terms Table 1.1, pg. 13
  • Regional terms
  • Figure 1.7, pg. 14
  • Axial
  • Appendicular

20
Body Planes and Sections
  • Sagittal
  • Frontal
  • Transverse (cross)

21
Body Cavities
  • Dorsal body cavity
  • cranial
  • vertebral or spinal
  • Ventral body cavity
  • thoracic
  • pleural
  • mediastinum
  • Abdominopelvic
  • abdominal
  • pelvic

22
Membranes in the Ventral Cavity
  • Like a Fist in a balloon
  • Membrane inside a membrane with a narrow enclosed
    space in between
  • parietal
  • the outer membrane
  • on the body wall
  • visceral
  • the inner membrane
  • on the organ wall
  • space filled with watery fluid
  • Body cavity lined with serous membrane (serosa)
    which produces the serous fluid
  • Membrane named depending on its position, and the
    cavitys organs inside
  • parietal pericardium
  • visceral pericardium

23
The Language of Anatomy
  • The following slides and tables from your text
    are part of the subject matter of Lab 1 be
    familiar with them
  • See your Lab Guide (on the web) and your Lab
    Manual as well

24
Figure 1.7A Regional terms for body areas
25
Figure 1.7B Regional terms for body areas
26
Abdominopelvic Regions
27
Table 1.1A Orientation Directional Terms
28
Table 1.1B Orientation Directional Terms
29
Table 1.1C Orientation Directional Terms
30
End of Chapter 1
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