Title: PHYSIOLOGY
1PHYSIOLOGY
THE STUDY OF BODY FUNCTION
2Human Physiology
- Study of how the human body functions.
- How organisms accomplish tasks essential for
life. - Pathophysiology
- How physiological processes are altered in
disease or injury.
3History of PhysiologyAncient Greeks
- Aristotle (384 - 322 BC)
- Blood flows between arteries and veins
- The heart is the seat of intellect and a furnace
that heats the blood - The lungs ventilate the furnace and air acts as a
cooling agent
4History of PhysiologyAncient Greeks
- Herophilus (335 - 280 BC)
- Identified pulse as a function of heartbeat, and
showed that it varied when disease was present - Arteries are thicker walled than veins
- The brain is the seat of intellect
5History of PhysiologyAncient Greeks
- Erasistratus (310 - 240 BC)
- Postulated the existence of capillaries
- The brain is the origin of all nerves
- Blood is made in the liver from food, and air
(pneuma) is a living force that is transformed
into a vital spirit.
6History of Physiology
- Galen (130 - 201 AD)
- Dissection of Barbary apes was basis for his book
of human anatomy - stood as the authority for
1400 years - Known for his voluminous writings about
philosophy, medicine, and physiology.
7Galen's physiological teaching (after C.Singer
Greek Biology and Greek Medicine)
8- "In the universe there are four elements - fire,
air, water and earth and in the living body
there are four humours, black bile, yellow bile,
sanguine and phlegm. Out of the excess or
deficiency or misproportion of these four humours
there arise disease by restoring the correct
proportion diseases are cured"
9History of PhysiologyRenaissance Physiologists
- Andreas Vesalius (1514 - 1564)
- Dissected human cadavers while he lectured.
Introduced anatomical drawings. - De Humanis Corporis Fabrica (The Structure of the
Human Body) was the first anatomy text based on
human dissection.
10History of PhysiologyRenaissance Physiologists
- William Harvey (1578 - 1657)
- Proposed that the heart is a pump (not a furnace)
and that blood circulates (does not return along
the same pathways. - The blood flows from the right ventricle of the
heart to the lungs
11Robert Hooke (1635 - 1703)
British physicist who first observed and
described cells
12Schleiden Schwann
Cell Theory 1839
- All living things are
- comprised of cells.
Matthais Schleiden
Theodor Schwann
(1818-1882) German physiologist
(1804-1881) German microscopist
2. All cells come from pre-existing cells.
13History of PhysiologyModern Physiologists
- Claude Bernard (1813 - 1878)
- The advent of the thermometer allowed
physiologists to determine that the internal
temperature of all healthy human beings fell
withina narrow range - Bernard developed the concept of the milieu
interieur - a constant internal state
14History of PhysiologyModern Physiologists
- Walter Cannon (1871 - 1945)
- In his book The Wisdom of the Human Body, Cannon
coined the term homeostasis to describe this
internal constancy.
15Homeostasis
- Maintaining constancy of internal environment.
- Dynamic constancy.
- Within a certain normal range.
- Maintained by negative feedback loops.
- Regulatory mechanisms
- Intrinsic
- Within organ being regulated.
- Extrinsic
- Outside of organ, such as nervous or hormonal
systems. - Negative feedback inhibition.
16Feedback Loops
- Sensor
- Detects deviation from set point.
- Integrating center
- Determines the response.
- Effector
- Produces the response.
Fig 1.1 P. 7
17Negative Feedback
- Defends the set point.
- Reverses the initial deviation.
- Produces change in opposite direction.
- Examples
- Insulin decreases plasma glucose.
- Body temperature.
Fig 1.3 P. 8
18Negative Feedback
Fig 1.4 P. 8
Fig 1.6 P. 10
19Positive Feedback
- Action of effectors amplifies the changes.
- Is in same direction as change.
- Examples
- Oxytocin (parturition).
- Voltage gated Na channels (depolarization).
20Hierarchy of Life
Atom
Molecule
Cell
Tissue
Organ
Organ System
Organism
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22Muscle
- Elongated cells are highly specialized to
contract and produce most types of body movement - Three types of muscle tissue
- Skeletal Muscle
- Cardiac Muscle
- Smooth Muscle
23Nervous Tissue
- Found in the central nervous system (brain and
spinal cord) or peripheral nervous system
(nerves, sensory receptors, ganglia) - Two major cell populations
- Neurons specialized for the generation and
conduction of electrical impulses - Neuroglia supporting cells serve to protect,
support, and insulate neurons
24Epithelial Tissues
- Cells fit closely together to form membranes or
sheets - Covers surfaces the tissue has one free surface
- Avascular
- Functions include protection, absorption,
filtration and secretion
25Epithelial Tissues
- Classified by two criteria
- Cell shape
- Squamous - scale-like
- Cuboidal - cube-like
- Columnar - column-shaped
26Epithelial Tissues
- Number of layers
- Simple one cell layer
- Stratified two or more layers
27Fig 1.14 P. 15
28Connective Tissue
- The most abundant and widely distributed of the
tissue types - Large amount of noncellular material (matrix)
between the cells - With few exceptions (cartilages, tendons and
ligaments), connective tissues have a rich supply
of blood vessels - Functions include protection, support, and
binding together other tissues of the body
29Fig 1.21 P. 18
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