Title: Human Physiology
1Human Physiology
2Human Physiology
- Structure and function of the human body!
3STRUCTURE
HOW IT IS BUILT
FUNCTION
WHAT IT DOES
4- Pathophysiology
- - How physiological processes are altered in
disease or injury. - Comparative physiology
- - Other animals.
5- Symbols and such!
- i.e. that is, id est
- e.g. for example, exempli gratia
- . Therefore
- Then, leads to
- -l inhibits
6- Same as
- ? Different from
- ? Something that can flow either way
- ? Increase
- Decrease
- Change
- NB Nota Bene (note well )
7Green titles
- Blue important!
- Pink examples, extra info
8- Lecture map
- Process of science
- Homeostasis, positive and negative
- feedback
- - Tissues
9 10The Scientific Method
- Make OBSERVATION- notice the world around us!
- Pose QUESTION
- Propose HYPOTHESIS
- - Potential explanation for observation/answer to
question - - Must lead to testable predictions
- Design execute EXPERIMENTS
- - Collect data
- Draw CONCLUSION (yes or no to hypothesis)
- Start over with new questions!!!
11CREATIVITY AND CHANCE
- Alexander Fleming, 1920
- - Culture dish of bacteria became contaminated
with mold-GOOD/BAD LUCK - - NOTICED no bacteria grew near the mold.
- - THOUGHT OUTSIDE THE PETRI DISH
- - Hypothesis this mold inhibits bacterial
growth. - - Data fluid extracted from mold inhibited
bacterial growth. - - Conclusion yes!
- Later, the fluid was isolated as penicillin.
- CHANGED THE WORLD (gave you 30 extra years in
YOUR life!)
12CAUSE -gt EFFECT
13Science
- Looks for the truth!
- Investigates reality.
- Descriptive
- Cause-gt effect
- Predictive!
- Necessary/sufficient
- Logic and intuition
14 15 16PROOF
- Reproducible!!!
- Proper controls!!!
17Rodolfo and the mystery yeast
18Rodolfo and the mystery yeast
a tale of good controls!!!
19Do Expt look for effect (or no effect), caused
(or not) by the variable you are testing. NB
data results facts CONTROLS show that your
result is specific to the cause tested, and is
not due to other variables. C- Negative
control shows that you can get NO effect.
Especially good when experimental variable did
yield an effect. C Positive control
shows that you CAN get an effect. Especially
good when experimental variable did not yield an
effect.
20Theories in BIOLOGY
- Theory the solid truth as best we know it now!
Something that has been tested and proven (so
far)!
21Types of data
- Qualitative - observations
- Quantitative - measurements
22Some tools
- Double blind expts.
- Statistics!
23Process
- Labs groups
- Collaboration!
- Literature.
- Oral Presentations (posters, talks).
- Peer reviewed journals.
- Funding National Institutes of Health (NIH).
- Biotech and pharmaceutical companies.
24Types of expts.
- in vivo in organisms
- in vitro in glass
25Development of New Drugs
- First cellular models, i.e. in vitro.
- Then animal models, i.e. in vivo.
26Development of New Drugs
- CLINICAL TRIALS
- Phase I
- Drug tested on healthy human volunteers.
- Determine safety
- Phase II
- Drug tested on target population, for efficacy.
- Phase III
- Large number of participants, both safety and
efficacy. - If passes trials, goes to FDA for
approval!!! - Phase IV
- Test for other uses of the drug.
27- Clinical trials
- - Very few womyn and ethnic minorities in
clinical trials until the past few years. - - Informed consent.
- Tuskegee syphillis study.
- Vioxx companies as clients of FDA
28 29Homeostasis
- What?
- Homeostasis maintaining constancy of internal
environment. - aka Dynamic constancy!!!
- - Within a certain normal set point/range.
- - See table 1.2!
- A live system lots of constant changes to stay
the same!
30Homeostasis
31Homeostasis
- Set point desired homeostatic value
- e.g. 37 o C for human body temperature!
32Homeostasis
- Homeostasis means staying the same.
- Organized systems disintegrate.
- Preventing disintegration requires energy (ATP).
- Ex Sweating when hot shivering when cold.
33Homeostasis
- How?
- Homeostasis is maintained mostly by negative
feedback LOOPS.
34Homeostasis
- Regulatory mechanisms
- - Intrinsic
- Within organ being regulated, through various
proteins and other molecules. - - Extrinsic
- Outside of organ, through nervous or hormonal
systems.
35 36Negative Feedback Loops
- Negative Feedback loops defend the set point
- by producing a change in the OPPOSITE direction
to the change.
37Roles in a negative feedback loop
- Sensor or sensors
- Detects deviation from set point.
- e.g. thermoreceptor cells in skin
- Integrating center or centers
- Decides the response.
- e.g. neural circuits
-
- Effector or effectors
- Produces the response.
- e.g. sweat glands
38Negative Feedback Loops
effector
effector
Sensors are triggered
temp.
set point
time
Sensors are triggered
effector
39Negative feedback
- Sensitivity the point at which a deviation from
the set point is detected by the sensor as a
change! - e.g.
- Set point 72o F
- Sensitivity .5o F
- Normal range 72o /- .5o F
40Negative Feedback Loops
effector
effector
temp.
sensitivity
range
sensitivity
set point
time
effector
41Homeostasis
- Note in a real system, rather than seeing a set
point, we actually see more of a homeostatic
range (due to sensitivity of the sensors, the
effectiveness of the effectors, and other factors
in the system).
42Negative Feedback
43Antagonistic effectors
- Antagonistic effectors
- Effectors which operate on the same system, but
have antagonistic (i.e. opposite) effects. - a system with antagonistic effectors usually
maintains homeostasis more consistently than one
without them. Why? See lab! - Push-pull
- - Ex. shower temperature room temp. with a
heater and AC unit hot plate in lab.
44Negative feedback
- Inhibition of negative feedback
- effector shuts off when set point is
re-achieved (so as not to overshoot the set
point!). - e.g. endocrine system working to maintain
homeostatic hormone levels biochemical pathways
working to maintain homeostatic levels of the end
product
45-
- Positive feedback cascades
46Positive Feedback
- - Action of effectors amplifies the changes.
- - Is in same direction as change.
- - Positive feedback cascades (not loops!).
- - Can be part of overall negative feedback!
- Ex. blood clotting, induction of labor.
47Structure of our body
- What types of tissues constitute our bodies?
48Primary Tissues
- The body composed of 4 different primary tissues
- - Nervous, epithelial, muscle, connective.
- Organs
- - Composed of at least two primary tissues.
- Systems
- - Organs that are located in different regions of
the body and perform related functions.
49Nervous Tissue
- Neurons (nerve cells)
- Specialized for action potential conduction.
- Dendrites
- - Receive input.
- Cell body
- - Nucleus.
- - Metabolic center.
- - Integrate inputs.
- Axon
- - Conducts nerve impulses output.
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52Nervous Tissue
- Glial cells
- - Provide support andare stem cells?!
53Epithelial Tissue
- Provides barrier and regulates transport between
external and internal environments. - Types Simple
- - One cell layer thick.
- - Transport.
- Stratified
- - Many layers of cells.
- - Protection.
54Epithelial Tissue
- Stratified can be
- keratinized, e.g. epidermis (tougher!).
- nonkeratized
55Epithelial Tissue
- Shapes squamous, columnar, cuboidal.
56Epithelial Tissue
57Epithelial Tissue
- - Many junctions between cells
- - Apical/basolateral specialization of pm.
- - Basement mb.
- - High rate of turnover.
- - Form glands.
58Exocrine Glands
- Epithelial cells.
- - Secretions are released through ducts.
- - Simple tubes or acini.
- E.g.
- - Tear glands.
- - Sweat glands.
59Endocrine Glands
- Epithelial cells.
- - Lack ducts.
- - Secrete hormones into capillaries/lymphatic
system. - - May be discrete organs.
60Muscle Tissues
- Specialized for contraction.
- 3 types of muscle tissue
- - Skeletal.
- - Cardiac.
- Smooth.
- Skeletal and cardiac muscle have similar
mechanisms of contraction.
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62Striated muscle (skeletal)
63Skeletal Muscles
- Striated.
- Voluntary.
- Attached to bones by tendons.
- Fibers arranged in parallel.
- Produce graded contractions.
64Cardiac Muscles
- Striated.
- Found only in the heart.
- Co-ordinated contractions.
- Intercalated discs couple cells together.
65Smooth Muscles
- Not striated.
- Automatic.
- Internal organs.
66Connective Tissue
- Large amounts of extracellular material in the
spaces between connective tissue cells. - 4 types of connective tissue
- - Connective tissue proper.
- - Cartilage.
- - Bone.
- - Blood.
67Connective Tissue Proper
- Loose connective tissue
- Scattered collagen and tissue fluid.
- - Dermis of skin.
- - Adipose tissue
- Dense fibrous connective tissue
- - Regularly arranged.
- - Collagen oriented in same direction.
- E.g. tendons.
- - Irregularly arranged.
- - Resists forces applied in many directions.
- E.g. sheaths.
68Connective Tissue
69Connective Tissue
70Connective Tissue
- Cartilage
- Chondrocytes.
- - Elastic, supportive, protective.
- - Joints.
71Connective Tissue
- Bone
- - Osteoblasts form bone
- - Osteocytes are trapped (maintenance)
- - Osteoclasts resorb bone
- Blood
- - WBC, RBC, plasma.
72Connective Tissue
73Connective Tissue
74Body-Fluid Compartments
- Intracellular compartment
- Fluid inside cells. (2/3 of body H20!)
- Extracellular compartment
- - Blood plasma.
- - Interstitial fluid.
- Note 65-75 of total body weight is H20!
75Organ systems
76Organ skin!
77Organ skin!
78Organ skin!