Title: The Human Body
1The Human Body
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2Did you Know??!!
- When you sneeze all body functions stop, even
your heart - Your brain is 80 water
- A human has 60,000 miles of blood vessels in
their body - The lining of your digestive system is shed every
3 days - More than half the bones in your body are found
in your hands and feet - Everyone is colour blind at birth
- 1.7 litres of saliva is produced each day
- About 8 million blood cells die in the human body
every second, and the same number are born each
second
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3 Body Systems
- THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM
- THE SKELETAL SYSTEM
- THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
- THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
- THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
- THE SENSES
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4THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM
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5TRIVIA!
- How many muscles are there in the human body?
- Answer 640 Muscles
- Muscles band together to form muscle groups which
work together - When the muscles contract, they pull on the
tendons which pull on the bones and cause our
limbs to move - Muscles can be either voluntary or involuntary
(consider your arm vs. your heart which beats 60
to 80 beats every minute without you having to
think about it!)
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6More TRIVIA!
- The longest muscle in the body is ___________
- Answer- The Sartorius
- The Sartorius runs from the outside of the hip,
down and across to the inside of the knee. It
twists and pulls the thigh outwards. - The smallest muscle in the body is __________
- Answer- The Stapedius
- The Stapedius is located deep in the ear. It is
only 5mm long and thinner than cotton thread. It
is involved in hearing. - The biggest muscle in the body is __________
- Answer- The Gluteus Maximus
- The Gluteus Maximus is located in the buttock. It
pulls the leg backwards powerfully for walking
and running.
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7There are about 60 muscles in the face.
- Smiling is easier than frowning.
- It takes 20 muscles to smile and over 40 to frown.
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8The Skeletal System
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9TRIVIA!
- How many bones are there in the human body?
- Answer 206 Bones
- When you were born, your skeleton had around 350
bones. By the time you become an adult, you will
only have 206 bones. This is because, as you
grow, some of the bones join together to form one
bone.
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10Inside a Bone-
- Our bones are alive- they have their own nerves
and blood vessels, and they do various jobs, such
as storing body minerals. - A typical bone has an outer layer of hard or
compact bone, which is very strong, dense and
tough. - Inside this is a layer of spongy bone, which is
like honeycomb, lighter and slightly flexible. - In the middle of some bones is jelly-called bone
marrow, where new cells are constantly being
produced for the blood.
11The Skeleton-
- The Skeleton is the name given to the collection
of bones that holds the rest of our body up. Our
skeleton is very important to us. It does three
major jobs - It protects our vital organs such as the brain,
the heart and the lungs. - It gives us the shape that we have. Without our
skeleton, we would just be a blob of blood and
tissue on the floor. - It allows us to move. Because our muscles are
attached to our bones, when our muscles move,
they move the bones, and we move.
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12Healthy Bones
- Most of the calcium in your body is stored in
your bones - Exercise and a good diet help to keep bones
strong - Vitamin D helps you absorb calcium so that your
bones can stay strong - Sources of vitamin D include milk, salmon,
cereal, beef and egg - When bones break they can heal themselves, and
they are stronger when they heal than they were
before they were - broken!
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13TRIVIA!
- Who discovered the X-ray?
- ANSWER
- Wilhelm Roentgen, a physicist at the University
of Wursburg, Germany, discovered radiation
X-rays on November 8, 1895. This discovery
altered the course of medicine. - Roentgen refused to patent his discovery or
realize financial gain from it, preferring
instead that the world benefit from his research. - Many fields have emerged in Diagnostic Imaging
since Roentgens discovery. The science has
expanded to include General Imaging, CT Scan, - Nuclear Medicine, Ultrasound and MR1
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14Careers-
- A Medical Radiologic Technologist works with a
wide range of machines, film processing units,
and accessory equipment to produce and record
images for visualizing the extent of disease or
injury to a patient. - A radiograph (X-ray) may be a routine film of the
chest or a broken finger or it may form part of
the sophisticated examinations used in the
detection of heart, blood vessel, or brain
abnormalities.
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15Activity
- Check out www.sait.ca and find out about the
different programs offered at SAIT that focus on - General Imaging
- CT Scan
- MRI
- Ultrasound
- Nuclear Medicine
- www.sait.ca
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16The Professionals
- Medical Radiologic Technologist
- TRIVIA! How many months for this diploma?
- Answer Medical Radiologic Technology is a 21
month diploma - Nuclear Medicine Technologist
- TRIVIA! What are the employment statistics?
- Answer Graduates enjoyed a 100 employment rate
- Diagnostic Medical Sonographer
- TRIVIA! What are the education requirements?
- Answer A High School Diploma, with over 60 in
English 30, - Bio 30, Math 30/31, Physics 30 and
Chemistry 20.
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17 The Circulatory System
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18Did you know?!The average person has 4-5
litres of blood
- The blood is the transport system by which oxygen
and nutrients reach the body's cells, and waste
materials are carried away. - In addition, blood carries substances called
hormones, which control body processes, and
antibodies to fight invading germs.
19______________________________________________Red
blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to all
the cells of the body while White blood cells are
like soldiers protecting the body._______________
_______________________________
TRIVIA!
- ARTERIES are vessels that carry blood
____________ the heart. - VEINS are vessels that carry blood _________ the
heart.
AWAY FROM
TOWARDS
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21The Heart
- Your heart is a muscle about the size of your
clenched fist. - It is located in the left side of your chest,
behind your rib cage and between your lungs - It has thick muscular walls and is divided into
two pumps. - Blood from the right side pump is dark red
(bluish) and low in oxygen. - This dark red blood travels along pulmonary
arteries to the lungs where it receives fresh
supplies of oxygen and becomes bright red. - The bright red blood then flows along pulmonary
veins back to the heart's left side pump - Blood leaves the left side of the heart and
travels through arteries which gradually divide
into capillaries. - In the capillaries, food and oxygen are released
to the body cells - The blood then travels in veins back to the right
side of the heart, and the whole process begins
again.
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22 The Human Heart
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23Did You Know??!!Blood is a liquid organ
- The heart beats around 3 billion times in the
average person's life - Your blood pressure is the measure of the force
of blood as it flows through the arteries of the
cardiovascular system - Within a tiny droplet of blood, there are
some 5 million red blood cells, 300 000 platelets
and 10 000 white cells. - It takes about 20 seconds for a red blood cell to
circle the whole body. - Microscopic View of Blood Cells
24About how many red blood cells are there in one
drop of blood?
TRIVIA!
- There are about 5,000,000 Red Blood Cells in ONE
drop of blood.
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25The Professionals
- Medical Laboratory Assistants
- Collect, Prepare and process patient specimens
- TRIVIA! What does phlebotomy mean?
- Answer Collecting Blood
- Medical Laboratory Technologists
- Responsible for a broad spectrum of lab testing
and procedures to diagnose, treat and prevent
disease - TRIVIA! This is Canadas ___ largest group of
health care professionals - Answer They are Canandas 3rd Largest group of
health care Professionals
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26The Digestive System
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27 What have you EATEN today??
- Food provides us with fuel to live, energy to
work and play, and the raw materials to build new
cells. - All the different varieties of food we eat are
broken down by our digestive system and
transported to every part of our body by our
circulatory system. - We eat about 500kg of food A Year!
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28- The main part of the digestive system is the
digestive tract. - This is like a long tube, some nine metres in
total, through the middle of the body. - It starts at the mouth, where food and drink
enter the body, and finishes at the anus, where
leftover food and wastes leave the body - Every day 11.5 litres of digested food, liquids
and digestive juices flow through the digestive
system, but only 100mls is lost as waste.
29- The Mouth- Teeth bite off and chew food which
mixes it with watery saliva, from 6 salivary
glands around the mouth and face - The Oesophagus- A muscular tube that takes food
from the mouth to the stomach. - Food moves through the oesophagus by a muscular
movement know as _____________ - This means that even if you stand on your head,
food will still reach your stomach!
TRIVIA!
Peristalsis
30The Stomach
- The stomach has a thick muscular wall that
contracts to mash up the food - Stomach acids and enzymes begin to break down the
nutrients in the food we eat, particularly the
proteins - The liquefied contents of the stomach enter the
small intestine for further processing - As the food is digested in the small intestine it
is dissolved into the juices from the pancreas,
liver, and intestine, - The contents of the intestine are mixed and
pushed forward to allow further digestion and
absorption of nutrients by the walls of the
intestine. - The waste products of this process include
undigested parts of the food, known as fiber, and
older cells shed from the lining of the stomach
and intestine. - These materials are propelled into the colon,
where they remain, usually for a day or two,
until the feces are expelled by a bowel
movement. - It takes about 20-30 hours to digest
- food completely
31The Respiratory System
- The primary function of the respiratory system is
to supply the blood with oxygen. - The respiratory system does this through
breathing. - When we breathe, we inhale oxygen and exhale
carbon dioxide. - When we inhale oxygen, it goes into our lungs and
is absorbed by the blood stream
32The Lungs-
- Inside each of your sponge-like lungs, tubes,
called bronchi, branch into even smaller tubes
much like the branches of a tree. At the end of
these tubes are millions of tiny bubbles or sacs
called aleoli. - They exchange the oxygen for waste products, like
carbon dioxide, which the cells in your body have
made and can't use. - Once they receive the oxygen, red blood cells
turn from purple to that beautiful red color as
they start carrying the oxygen to all the cells
in your body.
The branching out of the aleoli creates more
surface area which in turn allows for more oxygen
to be absorbed.
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34TRIVIA!
- When we eat, a flap called the ________ -- flops
down to cover the windpipe so that food doesn't
go down the wrong tube. - ANSWER- ___________
epiglottis
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