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The Human Body

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An Overview SURVIVAL NEEDS In order to maintain the eight functions for living, the human body must have the following items: Nutrients Chemicals for energy and cell ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Human Body


1
The Human Body
  • An Overview

2
Anatomy
  • From Latin tomy (to cut) and ana (apart)
  • Its the study of structure and shape of the body
    and its parts
  • Two types
  • Gross anatomy large structures, easily
    observable
  • Microscopic anatomy small structures only
    visible with microscope

3
Gross Anatomy
4
Microscopic anatomy
5
Levels of Structural Organization
6
  • Structural complexity
  • Six levels of complexity
  • Chemical level
  • Atoms smallest building blocks of matter
  • Molecules combinations of atoms to make water,
    sugars, and proteins
  • Atoms combine to form molecules

Nitrogen
7
  • Cellular level
  • Molecules combine to form cells, which vary in
    size and shape, reflecting different functions of
    body

8
  • Tissue level
  • Similar types of cells group to form tissues
  • Four basic tissue types
  • Epithelial tissue (skin, membranes)
  • Connective tissue (tendons, cartilage, ligaments
    and bone)
  • Muscular tissue (muscles)
  • Neural tissue (spinal cord, brain matter)

9
  • Organ level
  • Tissue or multiple tissues that form a structure
    that performs a specific function
  • Ex small intestine is made out of all four
    tissue types

10
  • Organ system level
  • Group of organs that cooperate to accomplish a
    common purpose
  • Ex digestive system includes esophagus, stomach,
    small and large intestines, and more
  • Total of 11 organ systems
  • How they work physiology!

11
  • Organismal level
  • Highest level of organization
  • Human organisms have similar organ systems and
    chimpanzees, but very different organ systems
    than mosquitoes

12
Physiology
  • Studies functions (how it works) of human body
    and its parts
  • Anatomists observe structures while physiologists
    employ experimentation

13
Organ systems
  • Integumentary system
  • External covering of the body (skin)
  • Protects deeper tissue from injury or infection
  • Synthesizes vitamin D
  • excretes salts and urea in perspiration
  • helps regulate body temperature
  • contains pain, temperature, and pressure
    receptors for environmental cues

14
  • Muscular system
  • Muscles of body
  • Contract or shorten to move skeleton
  • Maintains posture
  • Produces heat

15
  • Skeletal system
  • All bones, cartilages, ligaments and joints make
    up skeletal system
  • Protects and supports body organs
  • Provides muscle attachment for movement
  • Forms blood cells (hematopoiesis) in bone marrow
  • Provides and stores minerals

16
  • Nervous system
  • Brain, spinal cord, nerves, and sensory receptors
  • Speedy control system that responds to external
    stimuli
  • Light
  • Sound
  • Temperature changes
  • Pain
  • Pressure
  • Central nervous system (brain and spinal cord)
    assesses information and responds by activating
    appropriate effector (muscles or glands)

17
  • Endocrine system
  • A series of glands that slowly control body by
    producing and releasing hormones for growth,
    metabolism, and reproduction
  • Pituitary gland
  • Thyroid gland
  • Parathyroid glands
  • Adrenal glands
  • Thymus
  • Pancreas
  • Pineal gland
  • Ovaries (females)
  • Testes (males)

18
  • Cardiovascular system
  • Heart and blood vessels
  • Work together to transport materials in blood
  • Nutrients
  • Hormones
  • Oxygen
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Waste

19
  • Lymphatic system
  • Lymphatic vessels, lymph nodes, spleen, and
    tonsils
  • Returns fluid leaked from blood back to blood
    vessels
  • Lymph nodes (and others) help cleanse blood and
    store cells involved in immunity

20
  • Respiratory system
  • Lungs, nasal passages, pharynx, larynx, trachea,
    and bronchi
  • Supplies oxygen
  • Removes carbon dioxide

21
  • Digestive system
  • Mouth, esophagus, stomach, small and large
    intestines, liver, pancreas, and rectum
  • Breaks down food
  • Deliver products to blood for dispersal to body
  • Undigested food leaves body through anus as feces
  • Reclaim water for bodily use

22
  • Urinary(excretory) system
  • Kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra
  • Rids body of waste products
  • Nitrogen-containing urea and uric acid from
    breakdown of proteins and nucleic acids
  • Maintains bodys water and salt/electrolyte
    balance
  • Regulates acid-base balance of blood

23
  • Reproductive system
  • Males scrotum, penis, accessory glands, and
    ducts
  • Females ovaries, uterine tubes, uterus, and
    vagina
  • Sole purpose is to produce offspring

24
Major Organs
25
Life Functions
  • Organ systems work together to promote health and
    well-being of entire body. Must be able to
    provide eight functions necessary for living. A
    healthy body must

HINT these are all VERBS!
26
Maintain boundaries
  • The inside remains distinct from the outside.
  • Examples include
  • a cells environment maintained by the cell
    membrane
  • the integumentary system protecting organs from
    desiccating (drying out), from bacteria and
    viruses, from heat and sunlight, and from
    chemicals

27
Move
  • Muscle movement is necessary for
  • Locomotion getting us from one place to another,
    or for moving muscle for safety (hot stove)
  • Movement of substances getting blood, food, and
    urine through their proper organs

28
Respond or be irritated
  • Ability to sense changes (from stimuli) and react
    to them
  • Ex is automatically removing hand from broken
    glass (painful stimulus) that cuts involuntary
    response
  • Ex when decrease in oxygen levels detected
    (mountains), response is to increase breathing
    rate to obtain more oxygen

29
Digest
  • Breakdown of nutrients and absorption into blood
    for delivery to all body cells

30
Metabolize
  • Chemical reactions within body cells to
  • Produce energy in form of ATP (adenosine
    triphosphate)
  • Make body structures like bones and muscles
  • Regulated mainly by hormones secreted by glands
    of endocrine system

testosterone
31
Excrete
  • Eliminate excreta (waste) from digestions and
    metabolic reactions

32
Reproduce
  • Produce future generations
  • of identical cells in cell division (repair or
    growth)
  • of entire organism

33
Grow
  • Increasing cell size and number
  • Must make more cells faster than cells die

34
Survival needs
HINT these are all NOUNS!
  • In order to maintain the eight functions for
    living, the human body must have the following
    items
  • Nutrients
  • Chemicals for energy and cell building
  • Carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Lipids
  • Vitamins
  • Minerals

35
  • Oxygen
  • Required for chemical reactions
  • Cellular respiration

36
  • Water
  • 60-80 of body weight
  • Necessary for metabolic reactions

37
  • Basal body temperature
  • 98.6F or 37C
  • Atmospheric pressure
  • Standard atmospheric pressure (on earth at sea
    level is 760 mmHg or 29.92 inHg)

38
Homeostasis
  • Maintenance of a stable internal environment a
    dynamic state of equilibrium
  • Homeostasis must be maintained for normal body
    functioning and to sustain life
  • When needs are being adequately met, body is
    functioning smoothly, body demonstrates
    homeostasis
  • All organ systems partake in maintaining
    homeostasis

39
  • Homeostatic imbalance a disturbance in
    homeostasis sets off chain reaction of events
  • Stimulus
  • Produces change in variable
  • Detection
  • Change is detected by receptor
  • Input
  • Information is sent from receptor to control
    center
  • Output
  • Control center decides what action or response
    should be taken
  • Response
  • Action or response feeds back to influence
    magnitude of stimulus and returns variable to
    homeostasis

40
Overview of Homeostasis
41
  • The body communicates chiefly through nervous and
    endocrine systems
  • Nervous uses electrical signals delivered by
    nerves
  • Endocrine system uses blood borne hormones
  • Factor being regulated is called the variable

42
  • All homeostatic control mechanisms have at least
    three components
  • Receptor
  • Responds to changes in the environment (stimuli)
  • Sends information to control center via afferent
    pathway
  • Afferent approaches control center
  • Control center
  • Determines set point at which variable should be
    maintained
  • Analyzes information
  • Determines appropriate response
  • Effector
  • Provides a means for response to the stimulus
  • Desired response flows along efferent pathway
  • Efferent exits control center

43
  • Most homeostatic control mechanisms are negative
    feedback mechanisms
  • Negative feedback
  • Includes most homeostatic control mechanisms
  • Shuts off the original stimulus, or reduces its
    intensity
  • Works like a household heating system with set
    point of 72F
  • If its too cold, will heat it up by turning on
    heater
  • If its too warm, will shut off heater until it
    levels off

44
  • Hypothalamus, located in brain, regulates body
    temperature

45
  • If stimulus produces desired effect, and body
    needs it to increase in action, a positive
    feedback results
  • Positive feedback
  • Increases the original stimulus to push the
    variable even farther away from set point
  • In the body this only occurs in blood clotting,
    birth of a baby, and protein digestion
  • Cut on hand stimulus (wasnt there prior and is
    not part of body set-point)
  • Factor in blood starts to form blood clots
  • Body wants MORE blood clots so positive feedback
    mechanism takes over
  • MORE blood clotting factors are in play until
    wound heals

46
  • Homeostasis is SO important that most disease is
    a result of homeostatic imbalance
  • As we age, body organs become less efficient, and
    internal conditions less stable
  • Events put us at increased risk for illness and
    produce changes associated with aging
  • Ex elastin in connective tissue of skin makes it
    able to resume shape after stretching, like a
    rubber band
  • As we age, elastin production decreases and/or
    breaks down, so skin loses ability to resume
    shape

47
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48
Anatomical Language
  • Cant always describe body as left and right or
    top and bottom because so many protrusions and
    bends. Have specific terminology to describe
    locations of the body.
  • Exact terms are used for
  • Positions
  • Directions
  • Regions
  • Structures

49
  • Positions
  • Initial point of reference is always the standard
    position called anatomical position regardless of
    position body happens to be in (like sitting)
  • Body standing erect
  • Feet parallel
  • Arms hanging at sides, palms facing forward
  • Two major positions
  • Anterior front of body in anatomical position
  • Posterior back of body in anatomical position

50
  • Regions
  • Anterior body landmarks
  • See page 13 of book (dont need to know for test)

51
  • Posterior body landmarks
  • See page 13 of book (dont need to know for test)

52
  • Directions
  • Used to describe body structure is in relation to
    another.
  • Superior toward head
  • Inferior away from head below
  • Anterior toward or at front in front of
  • Posterior toward or at back behind
  • Medial toward or at midline
  • Lateral away from midline
  • Intermediate between a more medial and more
    lateral structure

opposites
opposites
opposites
53
  • Proximal close to origin of body part or point
    of attachment of a limb to the body trunk
  • Distal farther from origin of a body part or
    point of attachment of a limb to the body trunk
  • Superficial toward or at body surface
  • Deep away from body surface more internal
  • Supine lying face upwards
  • Prone lying face down

opposites
opposites
opposites
54
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55
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56
  • Structures
  • Planes and sections
  • Midsagittal
  • Frontal
  • Transverse

57
  • Body cavities
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