Title: Chapter 1 Major Themes of Anatomy
1Chapter 1Major Themes of Anatomy Physiology
- Structure and Function
- Origins of Biomedical Science
- Scientific Method
- Human Evolution
- Nature of Life
- Homeostasis
2Anatomy - The Study of Form
- Observation of surface structure
- Cadaver dissection is cutting separation of
tissues to study their relationships - Comparative anatomy is the study of more than one
species to analyze evolutionary trends - Physical examination
- palpation, auscultation, percussion
- Gross anatomy is what is visible with naked eye
- Histology is examination of cells with microscope
3Physiology - The Study of Function
- Study of bodily functions by use of methods of
experimental science - Comparative physiology involves the study of
different species - Basis for the development of new drugs and
medical procedures
4Beginnings of Medicine
- Physicians in Mesopotamia Egypt 3000 years ago
used herbal drugs, salts physical therapy - Greek physician Hippocrates established a code of
ethics urged physicians to seek causes of
disease - Aristotle called causes for disease physiologi
said that complex structures are built from
simpler parts - Galen, physician to the Roman gladiators, saw
science as a method of discovery - did animal dissections since use of cadavers
banned - wrote book advising followers to trust their own
observation
5Birth of Modern Medicine
- Little advancement during the Middle ages since
medicine was taught as dogma with no new ideas - Avicenna from Muslim world supported free inquiry
over authority - wrote The Canon of Medicine, used in medical
schools until 16th century - Vesalius accurately illustrated gross anatomy in
1543 - Harvey realized blood flow out from heart back
in 1628 - Leeuwenhoek invented microscope to look at
fabrics (1632-1723) - Hooke and Zeiss (1830)developed improved
compound microscope (wrote Micrographia in 1665) - Schleiden Schwann thought that all organisms
were composed of cells -- cell theory of 1839 - Clinical practice was in dismal state
- bleeding patients to remove toxins, operate with
dirty hands, no anesthesia for amputations
6Living in a Revolution
- Pioneers in establishing the scientific way of
thinking occurred in 19th 20th centuries - germ theory of disease
- mechanisms of heredity structure of DNA
- Now, on threshold of modern biomedical science
- Technology enhanced diagnostic ability
life-support strategies - Verge of a genetic revolution due to library of
the molecular structure of every human gene
7Scientific Method
- Bacon (1561-1626) and Descartes (1596-1650)
- were not scientists but did invent new habits of
scientific thought - scientific method as habits of disciplined
creativity, careful observations, logical
thinking analysis of observations - way of seeking trends drawing generalizations
- Convinced governments of England France to form
academies of science that still exist today - Scientific way of thinking based on assumptions
methods that are reliable, objective testable
8Inductive Method
- First described by philosopher Francis Bacon
- Making observations until capable of drawing
generalizations and making predictions - anatomy is a product of inductive method
- Proof in science can not go past proved beyond
reasonable doubt - reliable methods of observation
- tested and confirmed repeatedly
- not falsified by any credible observation
- In science, all truth is tentative
9Hypothetico-Deductive Method
- Physiological knowledge gained by this method
- Ask a question and formulate a hypothesis -- an
educated possible answer - Good hypothesis
- consistent with what is already known
- capable of being tested and falsified
- Falsifiability means that certain evidence would
prove something wrong - if nothing could prove it wrong, it is not a
scientific belief
10Proper Experimental Design
- Sufficient sample size to prevent chance event
- Control group receiving the same treatment except
for the variable being tested - Prevention of psychosomatic effects
- use of placebo in control group
- Experimenter bias
- prevented with double-blind study
- Statistical testing to be sure the difference
between groups was not random, but was due to
variable being tested
11Peer Review
- Critical evaluation by other experts in the field
- Ensures honesty, objectivity quality in science
12Facts, Laws and Theories
- Scientific fact is information that can be
independently verified by any trained person - iron deficiency leads to anemia
- Law of nature is a generalization about the way
matter and energy behave -- resulting from
inductive reasoning repeated observations - first law of thermodynamics is that energy can be
converted from one form to another but not
destroyed - Theory is an explanatory statement that makes
predictions and suggests areas for further study - sliding filament theory, fluid-mosaic theory,
cell theory
13Human Evolution
- Charles Darwin proposed the theory of natural
selection to explain how species originate and
change through time - On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection (1859) - The Descent of Man (1871) discussed human
evolution our relationships to other animals - Changed our view of our origin, our nature our
place in the universe - Good understanding of our evolutionary history
deepens our understanding of form function
14Evolution, Selection, and Adaptation
- Evolution is change in genetic composition of a
population of organisms - development of bacterial resistance to
antibiotics, new strains of AIDS virus and new
species - Theory of natural selection
- some individuals have hereditary advantages
(adaptations) enabling them to produce more
offspring - if they pass these characteristics on it brings
about a genetic change in the population
(evolution) - forces that favor some individuals over others
are called selection pressures -- climate,
disease, etc.
15Evidence of Human Evolution
- DNA hybridization suggests a difference of only
1.6 in DNA structure between humans
chimpanzees - Evolutionary developments help explain some
aspects of our anatomy - arrector pili muscle in the skin have no use
- auricularis muscles do not move in most people
- Evolutionary relationships help us chose animals
for biomedical research - rats mice used extensively
16Life in the Trees
- Origin of primates began 60 million years ago
- Squirrel-sized, insect-eating mammals became
arboreal probably due to safety, food supply
lack of competition - shoulder became more mobile (reach any direction)
- thumbs became opposable to be able to encircle
branches with thumb fingers (prehensile) - forward-facing eyes provide (depth perception)
- judge distances accurately to jump catch prey
- color vision to distinguish ripe fruit
- larger brains good memory to remember food
sources
17Walking Upright
- African forest became grassland 5 million years
ago - Bipedalism (standing walking on 2 legs) evolved
- spot predators, carry food or infants
- Adaptations for bipedalism
- pelvis, femur, knee, great toe, arch, skull,
vertebrae, etc. - Australopithecus (2.5mya) gave rise Homo habilis
- taller, larger brain volume, speech, tool-making
- Homo erectus (1.1mya) and Homo sapiens (.3mya)
- Homo sapiens include Neanderthal Cro-Magnon
18Primate Phylogeny
19What is Life?
- Properties that distinguish from nonliving
things - organization cellular composition
- biochemical composition (DNA, proteins, etc)
- metabolism is transformation of molecules into
others - responsiveness is ability to sense react to
stimuli - homeostasis is to maintain stable internal
environment - development is change over time (growth or
differentiation) - reproduction is producing copies of themselves
- evolution is genetic change between generations
- Clinical death is no brain waves for 24 hours
20What is a Human?
- Phylum Chordata
- Subphylum Vertebrata
- Class Mammalia
- Order Primates
- Family Hominidae
- Genus Homo
- Species Homo sapiens
Human classification within the kingdom Animalia.
21Our Chordate Characteristics
- Notochord
- flexible rod on upper side of body -- replaced
by vertebral column during development - Dorsal hollow nerve cord
- Gill pouches
- bulges in throat region develop into gills in
fish amphibians - Postanal tail
- GI tracts end before end of tail
- tail in humans visible only in embryo
22Our Vertebrate Characteristics
- Subphylum Vertebrata
- Characteristics of all
- internal skeleton
- jointed vertebral (spinal) column
- well developed brain sense organs
- cranium to protect the brain
23Our Mammalian Characteristics
- Class Mammalia
- Characteristics of all
- mammary glands for nourishment of young
- hair to retain body heat
- endothermy is ability to generate most of body
heat - heterodonty is possession of varied types of
teeth - single lower jawbone provides for better chewing
- 3 middle ear bones
24Primate Hominid Characteristics
- Order Primates
- Characteristics of all
- 4 upper and lower incisors for front cutting
- pair of clavicles (collarbones)
- only 2 mammary glands
- pendulous penis, attached only at base
- forward-facing eyes with stereoscopic vision
- flat nails in place of claws
- opposable thumbs
- Family Hominidae are only bipedal primates
- Homo sapiens are only surviving species
25Structure - A Hierarchy of Complexity
- Subatomic particles compose atoms
- Atoms compose molecules
- Molecules compose organelles
- Organelles compose cells
- Cells compose tissues
- Tissues compose organs
- Organs compose organ systems
- Organ systems compose the organism
26Homeostasis
- Hippocrates noted that body normally returns to a
state of equilibrium by itself - needs to detect the change oppose it
- Walter Cannon (1871-1945) coined the term
homeostasis indicating stable internal
environment - Internal environment described as dynamic
equilibrium - fluctuates within a range around a certain set
point
27Negative Feedback and Stability
- Mechanism to keep a variable close to its set
point - Body senses a change activates mechanisms to
reverse it
28Negative Feedback, Set Point
- Room temperature does not stay at set point of 68
degrees -- it only averages 68 degrees
29Human Thermoregulation
- Temperature sensing nerve cells in base of brain
control shivering, sweating vasomotor activity - vasodilation vasoconstriction
- Evaporation of water heat radiation occur
30Structures Needed for Feedback Loop
- Receptor structure that senses change
- stretch receptors in heart large blood vessels
send information of an elevated BP to integrator - Integrator control center
- cardiac center in brainstem that signals heart to
slow - Effector structures that carry out commands of
the control center - heart slows and BP decreases
31Positive Feedback Loops
- Self-amplifying cycle in which a physiological
change leads to an even greater change in the
same direction - Normal way of producing changes during birth,
blood clotting, protein digestion generation of
nerve signals
32Fever
- If temperature rises above 108 degrees
- metabolic rate increases causing body to produce
heat faster still - Temperature increases cycle repeats again
- Fatal at 113 degrees
33Review of Major Themes
- Unifying principles behind all aspects of human
anatomy and physiology - cell theory all structure function result from
the activity of cells - homeostasis maintaining stable conditions within
the body - evolution the body is a product of evolution,
molded by years of natural selection - hierarchy of structure levels of complexity
- unity of form and function physiology can not be
separated from anatomy
34Noninvasive Medical Imaging
- Radiography
- x-rays discovered by William Roentgen in 1885
- penetrate soft tissues of body darken
photographic film on other side of the body - Sonography
- handheld device produces high-frequency
ultrasound waves and receives echoes back from
internal organs - obstetrics uses to locate placenta, evaluate
fetal age, position and development - used medically in the 1950s but little value
until computers could develop differences in
echoes
35Noninvasive Medical Imaging
- Computed Tomography (CT scan)
- low-intensity X rays applied to the body
- computer analysis produces an image of a slice of
the body about as thin as a coin from which a
three-dimensional image of the body is
constructed - tumors, aneurysms, hemorrhages, kidney stones,
etc - Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- magnetic field aligns hydrogen atoms radio waves
realign the atoms when radio is turned off the
atoms give off energy depending on tissue type - computer analysis produces a slice type image
36Noninvasive Medical Imaging
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- assesses the metabolic state of a tissue
- injection of radioactively labeled glucose emits
positrons colliding positrons electrons give
off gamma rays that are analyzed by computer - color image which tissue were using glucose at
the moment - extent of damaged heart tissue
- activity of brain of neurology patients