Title: Human Body Systems
1Human Body Systems
2Human Body SystemsTHE DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER WAY
- Digestive
- Respiratory
- Integumentary
- Immune
- Lymphatic
- Muscular
- Circulatory
- Skeletal
- Nervous
- Endocrine
- Excretory
- Reproductive
And Levels of Organization
3Believe it or not, you are organized!
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- The main levels of organization are
- Cells, Tissues, Organs, Organ Systems, and You
(the Organism).
4Can you identify label the 3 levels of
organization shown here?
Well, at least your body is!
5Levels of Organization The Human Body has
several layers of organization beginning with
the simplest and becoming more complex.
Answers to previous slide cell, tissue, organ
(small intestine).
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ls.jpg
6Here They Are Your Body Systems (Part 1).
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7And Your Body Systems (Part 2)
http//www.agen.ufl.edu/chyn/age2062/lect/lect_19
/lect_19.htm
8So Lets Begin!
9DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER PresentsYour Digestive System
10Your digestive system is like a complicated
chemical processing plant, and performs many
functions.
11What major tasks does your digestive system help
you accomplish?
12Your Digestive System
- breaks down food into molecules the body can
absorb. - passes these molecules into the blood to be
carried throughout the body. - works to eliminate solid wastes from the body.
13The Parts of Your Digestive System
How well do you know them?
14Label the parts of your digestive system on your
handout then correct them using the following
slide.
15Parts of Your Digestive System
16Now for the Digestive Journey
17The Digestive Journey
- Digestion begins in your mouth with action of
your teeth and tongue (mechanical digestion) and
your salivary glands (chemical digestion). - The salivary glands produce enzymes that are
mixed with the food, breaking down the starches.
Peristalsis is the muscular action that moves the
food through the esophagus and into your stomach
after you swallow.
18Your Stomach
The food moves into your stomach, which contains
chemicals that break down biomolecules like
proteins and lipids. Your stomach releases these
materials into the upper small intestine
(duodenum), where digestion is completed. Your
stomach also has a thick coating of mucus to
protect it form the acids and to keep it from
digesting itself!
19By the way, your stomach really does look like a
muscular bag!
20Your Liver, Pancreas, and Gall Bladder
Located in the upper portion of your abdomen,
your liver is the largest organ of your body. It
is like a busy chemical factory that plays many
roles such as breaking down toxins and producing
bile--a substance that helps break down fat. The
bile is stored in the gall bladder. The pancreas
lies between the stomach and the duodenum and
produces enzymes that flow into the small
intestines, helping to break up complex starches,
proteins, and fats.
21Your Small Large Intestines
After the solid food has been digested it passes
into the small intestines. In the small
intestines all the nutrients are absorbed leaving
undigestible wastes. These wastes pass into the
large intestines, where water is removed. Then
the wastes are stored in the rectum until they
are released by the anus as feces.
22Cross Section of Your Intestines
The Villi add surface area to increase absorption
of food and nutrients. On the left you see how
the villi line your small intestines, and on the
right you see 1 villi with its capillaries.
23Its a (Intestinal) Gas, Baby!
- The human large intestine, or colon, is home to
many microorganisms, such as the bacterium
Escherischia coli (E. coli). Certain foods
contain large amounts of carbohydrates that our
digestive enzymes cannot break down. - When these carbohydrates reach the large
intestine, our gut microbes respond by "having a
party (reproducing rapidly, giving off gases
such as methane and hydrogen sulfide as natural
by-products of their activities). This is the
cause of the discomfort and flatulence associated
with eating beans, cabbage, and other
gas-promoting foods.
Web Sources and Resources http//www.colorado.e
du/epob/academics/web_resources/cartoons/gas.html
24DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER PresentsYour Respiratory
System
25The Functions of Your Respiratory System
- Your respiratory system moves oxygen from the
outside environment into your body. It also
removes carbon dioxide and water from your body
(this image shows all the tiny bronchioles that
carry air into your alveoli for gas exchange).
26The Path of Air
Please label the parts of your respiratory system
on your handout. Can you describe the path that
air takes as it enters and leaves your body?
27Check Your Answers Here.
28How You Breathe 1 The Diaphragm
29How You Breathe 2 The Alveoli
30The Respiratory and Circulatory Systems Working
Together.
- Working together the respiratory and circulatory
systems form the cardio-pulmonary system, which
is an integral connection between the heart and
lungs.
31The Cardio-Pulmonary System
32Respiratory Disease Pneumonia
- Pneumonia is an inflammation or infection of the
lungs most commonly caused by a bacteria or
virus. Pneumonia can also be caused by inhaling
vomit or other foreign substances.
Web Sources and Resources www.medimagery.com/Respi
ration/ lungs.html
33Respiratory Disease Lung Cancer
The cancerous lung (right) shows how much damage
smoking can do over time to your respiratory
system.
34X-Rays can help detect cancer, and surgery and
radiation are some treatments for the disease.
Web Sources and Resources www.smm.org/heart/lesson
s/ lesson11.htm
35Please Take Care of Your Lungs and Dont Smoke
Web Sources and Resources Usborne Science
Encyclopedia pgs. and Quicklink Images
36DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER PresentsYour Integumentary
System
(Its Your Skin!)
37Your skin .
- Covers your body
- Prevents water loss
- Protects the body from injury and infection
- eliminates wastes
38Your skin .
- gathers information about the environment
- produces vitamin D
- Helps regulate body temperature
- The skin is organized into two main layers, the
epidermis and the dermis.
39Can You Name the Parts of Your Skin?
40Skin Anatomy
41What is Botox?
Botox is the commercial name given to a toxin
which is produced from botulism toxin. Botox is
injected into a muscle to cause temporary
(months) paralysis of that muscle. This helps
prevent the appearance of wrinkles.
42DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER PresentsYour Immune System
43Your Immune System
- Your Immune system protects you from foreign
invaders. Special cells react to each kind of
pathogen with a defense targeted specifically at
that pathogen.
http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1996/illpre
s/introduction.html
44Your Immune System Has Many Specialized Cells!
- White blood cells that target specific pathogens
are called lymphocytes. There are two major kinds
of lymphocytesT cells and B cells. - T cells identify pathogens.
- B cells produce chemicals called antibodies.
45How Your Immune System Works
- Our immune system protects us against threats.
These include viruses, bacteria and parasites
causing infectious diseases, from ordinary flu to
full-blown malaria. The white blood cells of the
defense system are produced in the marrow of our
bones. The cells are carried in the blood to
specialized organs, where they develop and
communicate to launch immune responses against
infections. - http//www.nobel.se/medicine/laureates/1996/illpre
s/introduction.html
46DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Lymphatic
System
47The Functions of Your Lymphatic System
- Your lymphatic system and the cardiovascular
system are closely related systems that are
joined by a capillary system. The lymphatic
system is important to the body's defense
mechanisms. It filters out organisms that cause
disease, produces certain white blood cells and
makes antibodies. It is also important for the
distribution of fluids and nutrients in the body,
because it drains excess fluids and protein so
that tissues do not swell up.
48DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Muscular System
49Types of Muscles
- Your body has three types of muscle
tissueskeletal muscle, smooth muscle, and
cardiac muscle.
50Skeletal Muscle
- Skeletal muscles are attached to the bones of
your skeleton. A tendon is a strong connective
tissue that attaches muscle to bone. Note
ligaments connect bones together.
51Smooth Muscle
- Smooth muscles are called involuntary muscles
because they work automatically.
52Cardiac Muscle
- Cardiac muscles are involuntary muscles found
only in the heart. Cardiac muscles do not get
tired.
A Cardiac Muscle Cell
53Voluntary Muscles
- The muscles that you directly control are called
voluntary muscles. Smiling and turning the pages
in a book are actions of voluntary muscles
54Involuntary Muscle Action
- The muscles that are not under your conscious
control are called involuntary muscles. Your
colon (left) is lined with smooth muscle, and
your heart (right) is comprised of cardiac muscle
which works automatically pumping blood around
your body.
55How Do Muscles Work?
- Muscles work by contracting, or becoming shorter
and thicker. Because muscle cells can only
contract, not extend, skeletal muscles must work
in pairs. While one muscle contracts, the other
muscle in the pair returns to its normal length. - For example, in order to move the lower arm, the
biceps muscle contracts to bend the elbow. To
straighten the elbow, the triceps muscle
contracts while the biceps returns to normal.
56Anatomy Of A Muscle
57Can You Name the Major Muscles of your Body. Try
It!
58Some More Muscles
59Some Major Voluntary Muscles
60Some Really Big Muscles!
61DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Skeletal System
62Your Skeletons Functions
- Your skeleton has five major functions
- provides shape and support
- enables you to move
- protects your internal organs
- produces blood cells
- stores certain materials until your body needs
them
63The Structure of Bone
- A thin, tough membrane covers all of a bone
except the ends. Blood vessels and nerves enter
and leave the bone through the membrane. Beneath
the membrane is a layer of compact bone, which is
hard and dense, but not solid. Small canals run
through the compact bone, carrying blood vessels
and nerves from the bones surface to the living
cells within the bone. Just inside the compact
bone is a layer of spongy bone, which has many
small spaces within it.
64Bone Anatomy
Bone cells are called osteocytes
65Cartilage
- Cartilage provides a smooth surface between bones
or sometimes a more flexible extension of bone,
as in the tip of your nose. As an infant, much of
your skeleton was cartilage. By the time you stop
growing, most of the cartilage will have been
replaced with hard bone tissue.
66Joints
- A joint is a place in the body where two bones
come together. Joints allow bones to move in
different ways. Immovable joints connect bones in
a way that allows little or no movement. Movable
joints allow the body to make a wide range of
movements. Movable joints include ball-and-
socket joints, pivot joints, hinge joints, and
gliding joints. The bones in movable joints are
held together by a strong connective tissue
called a ligament.
67Take Care of Your Bones!
- A combination of a balanced diet and regular
exercise can start you on the way to a lifetime
of healthy bones.
68Do You Know Your Bones?
- Fill in the blanks on the next slide or on your
handout, and check the following slide for the
answers.
69Label the missing Bones
70How Did You Do?
71Osteoporosis
- Osteoporosis is a disease in which bones become
fragile and more likely to break. A healthy diet
rich in Calcium can help prevent osteoporosis.
72DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Circulatory
System
73Your Circulatory System is Responsible for
Delivering and Removing Materials from Every Cell
in Your Body
Web Sources and Resources Usborne Human Body
Quicklinks
74Blood
- Blood is the fluid of life, transporting oxygen
from the lungs to body tissue and carbon dioxide
from body tissue to the lungs. - Because it contains living cells, blood is alive.
Red blood cells and white blood cells are
responsible for nourishing, cleansing, and
protecting the body. - About half of blood is plasma, a straw-colored
clear liquid. The liquid plasma carries the solid
cells and the platelets which help blood clot.
Without blood platelets, you would bleed to
death.
75Can You Name The Major Parts of Your Heart and
Trace Its Blood Flow? Try It.
76Now Check To See How You Did.
77Heart Dissections
- Your Heart is a Very Muscular Organ!
78Amazing Heart Facts
- Put your hand on your heart. Did you place your
hand on the left side of your chest? Many people
do, but the heart is actually located almost in
the center of the chest, between the lungs. It's
tipped slightly so that a part of it sticks out
and taps against the left side of the chest,
which is what makes it seem as though it is
located there.
79Amazing Heart Facts
Hold out your hand and make a fist. If you're a
kid, your heart is about the same size as your
fist, and if you're an adult, it's about the same
size as two fists.
80Amazing Heart Facts
- Your heart beats about 100,000 times in one day
and about 35 million times in a year. During an
average lifetime, the human heart will beat more
than 2.5 billion times.
The aorta, the largest artery in the body, is
almost the diameter of a garden hose. Capillaries
are the smallest blood vessels. They are so small
that it takes ten of them to equal the thickness
of a human hair.
81Its on to the Nervous System
82DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Nervous System
- Your nervous system receives information about
what is happening both inside and outside your
body. It also directs the way in which your body
responds to this information. In addition, the
nervous system helps maintain homeostasis.
83Your Nervous System
- Your nervous system consists of the central and
peripheral systems. The central nervous system
(CNS), includes the brain and spinal cord the
peripheral system includes the nerves to the rest
of the body.
84What Is Homeostasis?
- Homeostasis refers to the maintenance of the
internal environment within tolerable limits. - Factors that affect homeostasis in our body
include - Temperature
- Salinity (salt content)
- Acidity
- Concentrations of nutrients and wastes
85Homeostasis in the Human Body
- When a change occurs in the body, there are two
general ways that the body can respond - negative feedback--the body responds in a way
that reverses the change. Because this tends to
keep things constant, it allows us to maintain
homeostasis. - positive feedback--the response is to change the
variable even more in the same direction. This
causes instability, so it does not result in
homeostasis.
86Negative Feedback
- To illustrate negative feedback, we can use the
example of a driver trying to stay near the speed
limit. The speed goal is 55 mph. The control
center monitors the speed change and compares it
with the goal speed goal. Here, the control
center is the driver. If the speed changes from
the speed goal, the control center (driver) will
reverse the change.
87Negative Feedback in your body
- The body temperature goal is 98.6 degrees.
- for body temperature, the control center is the
brain. - To control body temperature, the brain sends
messages to glands to produce sweat and to
muscles that shiver.
88Neurons
- The cells that carry information through your
nervous system are called neurons. A neuron has
a large cell body that contains the nucleus. The
cell body has threadlike extensions. One kind of
extension, a dendrite, carries impulses toward
the cell body. An axon carries impulses away from
the cell body.
89The Anatomy of a Neuron
90A NEURON viewed under a electron microscope. Can
you locate the cell body, axon, and dendrites?
91Central Peripheral Nervous Systems Working
Together
- The yellow parts are CNS parts and the purple are
parts of your peripheral nervous system.
92Your Brain- The Command Center
- The human brain is a complex organ that allows
us to think, move, feel, see, hear, taste, and
smell. It controls our body, receives
information, analyzes information, and stores
information (our memories).
93Most nerve signals are interpreted by your brain
and motor nerves then carry out your instructions.
94The Stroop Effect- Your Brain Can Get Confused!
- TRY IT!- The famous "Stroop Effect" is named
after J. Ridley Stroop who discovered this
strange phenomenon in the 1930s. Here is your
job name the colors of the following words. Do
NOT read the words...rather, say the color of the
words. For example, for the word BLUE, you should
say "RED". Say the colors as fast as you can. It
is not as easy as you might think!
95Major Brain Sections
cerebrum
cerebellum
brain stem
96Your Brain Has Very Complicated Anatomy All Its
Own!
97Ouch! In the movie MATRIX, Neo and the others
are plugged into the matrix through their CNS
!(Central Nervous System)
98Your Senses Are Your Nervous Systems Bridge to
the Outside World
Sight, Taste, Touch, Hearing, Smell
Web Sources and Resources Usborne Science
Encyclopedia pgs. 370-375 and Quicklink Images
99Quick Quiz
- How well do you know your own nervous system?
Fill in the blanks on the slides that follow.
Then go back and check your work if needed.
100(No Transcript)
101(No Transcript)
102Which Way Does The Impulse Travel?
103DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Endocrine
System
- The endocrine system is a collection of special
organs in the body that produce hormones. These
organs are usually called the "glands." They are
located in different parts of the body. For
example, the pituitary is in the brain, the
thyroid is in the neck, the adrenal glands are
just alone the kidneys and the sexual glands
(ovaries and testes) are located in the sexual
organs. Each gland produces a hormone into the
blood, which travels all through the body.
Hormones regulate our body activities, for
example growth, sleep, sudden actions, feelings
and blood sugar for energy.
104DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Excretory
System
- Your excretory system collects wastes produced by
cells and removes these wastes from your body.
The removal process is known as excretion.
105The Kidneys
- The two kidneys are the major organs of the
excretory system. The kidneys filter your blood
and remove urea, excess water, and some other
waste materials from your blood. Urea is a
chemical that comes from the breakdown of
proteins. The filtering process produces a watery
fluid called urine.
106Your Excretory System
107Kidney Stones
- Kidney stones are created when certain substances
in urine -- including calcium and uric acid --
crystallize and the crystals clump together.
Usually, they form in the center of the kidney,
where urine collects before flowing into the
ureter, the tube that leads to the bladder. Small
stones are able to pass out of the body in the
urine and often go completely unnoticed. But
larger stones irritate and stretch the ureter as
they move toward the bladder, causing
excruciating pain and blocking the flow of urine.
108DR. I.I.L. MCSNEER Presents Your Reproductive
System
109The Female Reproductive System
- The role of the female reproductive system is to
produce eggs, and if an egg is fertilized, to
nourish a developing baby until birth.
110The Menstrual Cycle
- During the menstrual cycle, an egg develops in an
ovary. At the same time, the uterus prepares for
the arrival of the fertilized egg. Once the egg
is released, it can be fertilized for the next
few days if sperm are present in the oviduct. If
the egg is not fertilized, it begins to break
down, and it passes out of the vagina along with
some tissue from the lining of the uterus in a
process called menstruation.
111Can you name the parts of the female reproductive
system? Check your answers on the following page.
112The Female Reproductive System
113The Male Reproductive System
- Produces sperm- tiny gametes containing
chromosomes that can swim to fertilize the egg,
and the hormone testosterone, which controls the
development of the males physical
characteristics.
114Can you name the parts of the male reproductive
system? Check your answers on the following page.
115The Male Reproductive System
116Fertilization
- Takes place when sperm egg merge.
117Thank You For Visiting Human Body Systems by DR.
I.I.L. MCSNEER!