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Name: _____________________________________________ Period: ________ Date ____________ The Human Anatomy Book Table of Contents Assessments Levels of Organization & Tissues Overview of Body Systems Interactions of Body Systems Immune System and Vaccines Skeletal System Muscular and Integumentary Systems Circulatory System Lymphatic and Respiratory Systems Digestive and Excretory Systems Nervous and Endocrine Systems Page 1-2 Page 2 Page 3 Pages 4--6 Pages 7-8 Pages 9-10 Pages 11-12 Page 13 Pages 14-15 Pages 16-18 Pages 1-4: Levels of Org, Overview, Interactions, & Immune Vocab Quizzes Pig and Rat Practical Skeletal, Muscular, & Integumentary Systems Circulatory, Lymphatic, & Respiratory Digestive & Excretory Levels of Organization _________________________________________________________________ __________________: smallest unit of structure and function in living things. __________________: a group of similar cells working together. __________________: a group of different tissues working together to do a specific job. __________________: a group of different organs working together to do a specific job. __________________: a living thing that carries out its own life activities. BODY TISSUE Epithelial (fast growth for quick replacement) Connective FUNCTIONS coverings-- ___________ linings--___________ nutrients & oxygen glands-- __________sweat & hormones Supports the body Connects parts Nervous Communicates information throughout the body using _________ ___________ Muscle Movement (___________) LOCATION / EXAMPLE Overview of the Body Systems System Functions Skeletal Movement, protects internal organs, gives shape / support. Stores mineral & produces red blood cells Muscular Integumentary Responsible for voluntary movement (ex. Jumping) and involuntary movements (ex. Heartbeat) (skin) is protective barrier against water loss, infection, controls body temperature, gathers stimuli from environment Circulatory Transports oxygen and nutrients to cells and carries wastes away from cells. Respiratory Moves oxygen into blood and moves carbon dioxide out of blood Immune / Lymphatic Protects body from infection (invasion of a disease causing agent) Major Organs Bones, cartilage, ligaments, tendons Osteoporosis, Scloliosis, ArthritisBursitis/Tendini tis Skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscle Muscular Dystrophy Tetanus Skin, hair, nails, sweat, and oil glands Acne, eczema Psoriasis, melanoma Warts Heart, blood vessels(arteries, veins & capillaries) & blood Heart Attack, Stroke Arteriosclerosis Atherosclerosis High Blood Pressure Nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs alveoli White blood cells, lymph nodes (T- cells are white blood cells that is attacked by HIV) Detects changes outside and inside your body and controls the way your body responds to changes. Brain, spinal cord, peripheral nerves Endocrine Produces chemicals messengers called hormones, which some maintain homeostasis, while others control growth and development glands: pituitary, thyroid, pancreas, thyroid, ovaries, testes Excretory Filters blood removing wastes from the body; maintains homeostasis (water and salt balance in blood) Digestive Digests (breaks down) food and absorbs nutrients into bloodstream Nervous Reproductive Produces gametes for survival of species. Also produces hormones that control secondary sexual characteristics Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 Diseases Kidneys, bladder, ureters, urethra, skin & lungs Mouth, pharynx, stomach, intestine, Liver, pancreas, gall bladder Testes Ovaries Athma, Emphysema Cystic fibrosis Cancers: (Leukemia & Lymphomia ) Allergy & HIV / AIDS Epilepsy, Migranes Multiple Sclorosis Parkenson's disease Alzheimer's Hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism Diabetes Pituitary Dwarfism/Giantism Kidney stones Ulcers, Acid reflux Crones disease Cirrhosis STD's Cancers: (Breast, Ovarian, Prostate) 2 Interactions of the Body Systems Digestive Nervous Skeletal Endocrine Reproductive Integumentary Circulatory Respiratory Muscular Blood carries digested nutrients to body cells The brain stem controls the heart rate Bone marrow produces blood cells The pharynx serves as a passageway for both air and food. The brain stem regulates breathing. The rib cage expands to help move air into the lungs. Blood carries hormones throughout the body Hormones can contribute to asthma attacks Muscles churn the stomach; aids in digestion Signals travel down the spinal cord to the muscles The contraction and relaxation of skeletal muscles move bones Hormones cause males to put on more muscle mass during puberty Nutrients diffuse through the placenta and are carried to the embryo through blood vessels in the umbilical cord Platelets in the blood help close small cuts in the skin Breathing rate increases to provide extra oxygen needed during labor Muscle contractions in the uterus push the fetus out during labor Cells lining the nostrils produce mucus that keeps the nearby tissue from drying out Mucus lining the respiratory passages helps trap pathogens Muscles raise the hair on the arms and legs to help retain heat Sneezing involves involuntary muscle contractions The respiratory system removes carbon dioxide gas (waste) from the body Contraction of the diaphragm helps move air into the lungs Muscle contractions are involved in emptying the urinary bladder Immune White blood cells attack pathogens such a bacteria and viruses Excretory Waste products are filters from the blood by the kidneys Muscular The heart is largely composed of muscle tissue Oxygen moves from the lungs to the blood, and carbon dioxide moves from the blood to the lungs Respiratory Breathing rate increases during exercise to help meet the increased oxygen demand by skeletal muscles Indicate the correct set of body systems that are interacting together. 1. The two body systems that are involved when the vertebrae protect the spinal cord. _______________________________ 2. Hormones provide feedback to the brain to affect neural processing. __________________________________________ 3. The bladder sends sensory information to the brain. _______________________________________________________ 4. The two body systems are most useful in getting nutrients from the food you eat to your brain _______________________ 5. The three body systems that help you swing a tennis racket. _________________________________________________ 6. The digestive system sends signals to the brain when the stomach is full. _______________________________________ 7. Which two body systems interact when CO2 gas is removed from the body by the lungs? __________________________ 8. Which two systems allow the pupil in your eye to dilate in a dark movie theater? _________________________________ 9. Solid waste is filtered out from food and eliminated from the body. ____________________________________________ http://www.projectsharetexas.org/resource/interactions-body-systems-defense-illness The Immune System Vocabulary: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Disease- a condition in which the body does not function normally. Infectious disease: disease caused by the__________________________________________________________ Epidemic- A local outbreak of a disease concentrated in one area. Pandemic-A worldwide outbreak of a disease Pathogen- ____________________________________________________________________________________ Examples of pathogens include: ________________________________________________________________ Is cancer a disease? Is cancer an infectious disease? Explain. ______________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________________ Function of the Immune System 1. The immune system is a defense system against _____________________________________________________ 2. Immune system consists of a variety of different types of white blood cells (WBC’s) Where are most of the white blood cells found in the body? Why is this a good place for them? _____________ __________________________________________________________________________________________ The Skin: The First Line of Defense ________________________ 1. The skin is the most important first line of defense 2. Outer epidermis is dead cells; prevents pathogens from entering Sweat & tears have enzymes that prevent bacterial growth Mucus that lines the nose, throat, & lungs traps pathogens Pathogens and mucus are swept into stomach where stomach acids destroy them 3. Why is it important to keep the skin clean and free from cuts? Inflammatory Response: The Second Line of Defense: ____________________________________________ 1. Nonspecific response to a localized infection. 2. Injured or infected cells cause blood vessels to enlarge so they can leak fluid & WBC’s skin appears red at injury site swelling occurs around infection Macrophages (large WBC’s are first to arrive) Nonspecific: treat all pathogens the same; Consume (eat) dead cells & pathogens Fever kills pathogens Vocabulary 1. Immunity: capacity of the human body to resist specific pathogens by identifying foreign (non-self) antigens 2. Antigen: anything that causes an immune response 3. Lymphocytes: WBC’s involved in immunity and the immune response Helper T cells, B cells, & Killer T cells are specific; seek out & destroy specific pathogens 4. Immune Response: specific response to an infection that has spread through body triggered by the presence of antigens/pathogen Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 4 Immune Response: The Third and Final Line of Defense _______________________________________ Macrophages ingest pathogen; send out chemical signal to call Helper T cells to the site of infection By the time Helper T cells arrive, macrophages have incorporated pathogen’s antigens onto its own cell membrane Helper T cell attaches to antigens on macrophage & develops new binding site that recognizes foreign antigens Helper T cell passes information to two different attack cells: B cells & Killer T cells Killer T Cells: have Direct Contact with Antigens 1. 2. 3. 4. Killer T cells come into direct contact w/ a cell; pierces hole in cell wall Water moves into the cell & the cell swells & bursts open (lysis) Killer T cells produced at same time as B cells Killer T cells destroy protists, virus infected cells, & cancer cells B Cells Produce Antibodies 1. B cells release antibodies 2. Millions of B cells are cloned & millions of antibodies are released into blood when fighting infection 3. Antibody: Y shaped protein that “tags” an antigen for destruction 4. Antibodies also bind to virus & bacterial toxins & neutralizes them Active verses Passive Immunity 1. Passive Immunity is acquired when antibodies to the antigen are injected into the body. They do not last. (Ex. Breast milk) 2. Active immunity is produced when the body creates its own antibodies after being exposed to an antigen. Acquired through vaccinations Acquired through infection of pathogen. Antibodies are constantly produced by memory cells created when the body was first infected. The Immune System Disorders / Problems 1. 2. 3. 4. Allergy: a disorder in which the immune system overreacts to the presence of a harmless antigen such as pollen. Autoimmune disease: is one in which the immune system attacks its own body cells. Ex. M.S. and Arthritis Rejection of organ transplants (cells are foreign). Cancer cells are naturally destroyed by the body; however, when the body fails to recognize them they spread causing tumors. Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 5 How Vaccines Prevent Disease How Vaccines Prevent Diseases The diseases that vaccines prevent (measles, mumps, polio, etc) can be dangerous, or even deadly. Vaccines reduce the risk of infection by working with the body's natural defenses to help it safely develop immunity to disease. When germs, such as bacteria or viruses, invade the body, they attack and multiply. This invasion is called an infection, and the infection is what causes illness. The immune system then has to fight the infection. Once it fights off the infection, the body is left with a supply of cells that help recognize and fight that disease in the future. Vaccines help develop immunity by imitating an infection, but this "imitation" infection does not cause illness. It does, however, cause the immune system to develop the same response as it does to a real infection so the body can recognize and fight the vaccine-preventable disease in the future. Sometimes, after getting a vaccine, the imitation infection can cause minor symptoms, such as fever. Such minor symptoms are normal and should be expected as the body builds immunity. The major ingredient of a vaccine is the anitgen that would normally make a person sick. For example, the measles vaccine contains the measles virus. However, the anitgen used in the vaccine has either been killed or weakened to the point that it cannot make a person sick. Some vaccines only contain the part of the antigen that the immune system would need to recognize to produce the antibodies. 1. Describe the contents of a vaccine. _________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Which body system is most directly affected by a vaccination? Explain. ___________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. Explain how a vaccination results in the long-term ability of the body to resist disease. ________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. Can vaccines be given to help prevent genetic diseases (disorders)? Explain. ______________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. Give two infectious diseases for which vaccines are not currently available. ________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________________ 6. You friend claims that every time they get a flu vaccine (flu shot), they catch the flu. Explain how this reasoning is incorrect and what is really happening. _____________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 6 The Skeletal System Label the Parts of the Bone The 5 Main Functions of the Skeletal System 1. __________________________________________________ 2. __________________________________________________ 3. __________________________________________________ 4. __________________________________________________ 5. __________________________________________________ Structure and Function of Bone Structure Description / Function Compact bone Spongy bone Bone marrow Cartilage Ligament Tendon Bone Development: p. 924-925 How do Bones Develop? What are osteocytes? How many bones are the human body? Bone formation begins during the eight week of an embryo’s development in the process called osteogenesis. Most of the bones of the body begin as cartilage which is gradually replaced by bone tissue in the process called ossification. Ossification continues throughout life. Osteocytes are bone cells (osteo- = bone; -cyto = cell). Osteocytes maintain bone by exchanging nutrients and wastes between blood and bone tissue. A baby is born with about 300 bones, but you only have 206. Some bones fuse together as the individual grows. Skeletal System Disorders: p. 925 What is arthritis? What causes osteoporosis? How can osteoporosis be avoided? Arthritis is inflammation of the joints (the points where bones meet) in one or more areas of the body. Osteoporosis occurs when the creation of new bone doesn't keep up with the removal of old bone. Osteoporosis causes bones to become weak and brittle — so brittle that a fall or even mild stresses like bending over or coughing can cause a fracture. Keep your bones healthy by consuming an Adequate amounts of calcium, Adequate amounts of vitamin D, and Regular weight bearing exercise Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 7 Types of Joints & Their Movements 1. Immovable (fixed) joint a. Ball-and-Socket • movement:________________________ • movement:_______________________ • ex.__________________________ • ex.___________________________ 2. Freely Moveable joint b. Hinge • movement: wide range of movement • movement:_____________________ • ex.________________________ • ex. bone ends covered in cartilage 3. Slightly Movable joint c. Gliding • movement:_______________________ • movement:___________________________ • ex.__________________________ • ex: ___________________________ A Bone Labeling B K C Q D E X L R M N Y S Z T U V F O H I P J A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ____________________ ___________________ W J. ___________________ K. ___________________ L. ___________________ M. ___________________ N. ___________________ O. ___________________ P. ___________________ Q. ___________________ R. ___________________ S. ___________________ T. ___________________ U. ___________________ V. ___________________ W. ___________________ X. ___________________ Y. ___________________ Z. ___________________ What bones make up the axial skeleton? What bones make up the appendicular skeleton? Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 8 Muscular System The main function of the muscular system is movement. The nervous system works with the muscular system to help control movement. Muscles are the only tissue in the body that has the ability to contract and therefore move the other parts of the body. Related to the function of movement is the muscular system’s second function: the maintenance of posture and body position. Muscles often contract to hold the body still or in a particular position rather than to cause movement. The muscles responsible for the body’s posture have the greatest endurance of all muscles in the body—they hold up the body throughout the day without becoming tired. Another function related to movement is the movement of substances inside the body. The cardiac and smooth muscles are primarily responsible for transporting substances like blood or food from one part of the body to another. The final function of muscle tissue is the generation of body heat. As a result of the high metabolic rate of contracting muscle, our muscular system produces a great deal of waste heat. Many small muscle contractions within the body produce our natural body heat. When we exert ourselves more than normal, the extra muscle contractions lead to a rise in body temperature and eventually to sweating. 1. List 4 functions of the human muscular system. _________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Which body system works with the muscular system to help control movement? _______________________________ Three Types of Muscles: Skeletal muscle cells are voluntary, striated muscle cells that control body movements. These are the muscles that people are generally most familiar with because many of them are visible and we actively control them all the time in our everyday lives. An interesting feature of skeletal muscle is that each skeletal muscle cell contains lots of nuclei. This is because each mature skeletal muscle cell is actually formed from lots of immature muscle cells that fuse together to form one large cell. Cardiac muscle cells are involuntary muscle cells that make up the heart. Cardiac muscle is only found in the heart and a key difference between cardiac muscle and other muscle types is that cardiac muscle cells pass electrical signals to each other. In this way, when one cardiac muscle cell gets a signal to contract, it passes that signal along to all its neighbors. The electrical signal is quickly passed to all of the muscle cells of the heart chamber and they contract in unison. Smooth muscle cells are involuntary muscle cells that are found throughout the body, except for the heart. Unlike cardiac and skeletal muscle, smooth muscle does not have visible stripes, or striations, when viewed under a microscope. This is actually the reason why it's called smooth muscle. Smooth muscle is found in many places throughout the body like blood vessel walls, the stomach, the small intestine, the large intestine and the bladder. 1. Which type of muscle contains many nuclei in each cell? Why? ___________________________________________ 2. Which type of muscle lines the digestive tract, blood vessels, and stomach? _________________________________ 3. Which type of muscle is under voluntary control? _______________________________________________________ 4. What kind of muscle makes up the heart? _____________________________________________________________ 5. Which two types of muscle are under involuntary control? _________________________________________________ 6. Which type of muscle passes electrical signals to each other? _____________________________________________ 7. Which type of muscle is attached to the bones? ________________________________________________________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 9 The Integumentary System The integumentary system is an organ system consisting of the skin, hair, nails, and exocrine glands. The skin is only a few millimeters thick yet is by far the largest organ in the body. The average person’s skin weighs 10 pounds and has a surface area of almost 20 square feet. Skin forms the body’s outer covering and forms a barrier to protect the body from chemicals, disease, UV light, and physical damage. Hair and nails extend from the skin to reinforce the skin and protect it from environmental damage. The exocrine glands of the integumentary system produce sweat, oil, and wax to cool, protect, and moisturize the skin’s surface. Being the body’s outermost organ, the skin is able to regulate the body’s temperature by controlling how the body interacts with its environment. When the body is overheated, the skin is able to reduce body temperature through sweating . and vasodilation. Sweat produced by sweat glands delivers water to the surface of the body where it begins to evaporate. The evaporation of sweat absorbs heat and cools the body’s surface. Thus, the skin plays a very important role in helping the body maintain homeostasis. Vitamin D, an essential vitamin necessary for the absorption of calcium from food, is produced by ultraviolet (UV) light striking the skin. This occurs within the lower epidermis or outer layer of skin. The epidermis contains melanocytes which the pigment called melanin. Melanin absorbs UV light before it can pass through the skin. UV light can cause cells to become cancerous if not blocked from entering the body. 1. List four (4) functions of the integumentary system. ____________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. What is the function of vitamin D? ___________________________________________________________________ The dermis is the deep layer of the skin found under the epidermis. The dermis is mostly made of dense irregular connective tissue along with nervous tissue, blood, and blood vessels. The dermis is much thicker than the epidermis and gives the skin its strength and elasticity. Hair helps to protect the body from UV radiation by preventing sunlight from striking the skin. Hair also insulates the body by trapping warm air around the skin. Fingernails and toenails reinforce and protect the end of the fingers and toes and are used for scraping and manipulating small objects. The Skin blood vessels muscle sweat gland fat nerve oil gland hair follicle 3. Label the dermis and epidermis on the skin diagram. 4. Why should a person with little or no hair on their head wear a hat while out in the sun? _________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ 5. What is the function of nails? _______________________________________________________________________ The ABCD of Skin Cancer 1. Asymmetry_______________________________________________ 2. 3. Borders _________________________________________________ Color ___________________________________________________ 4. Diameter ________________________________________________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 10 Circulatory System The 4 Main Functions of the Circulatory System 1. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Parts of the Blood Part Function Plasma Red Blood Cells White Blood Cells Platelets Blood Vessels Blood Vessel Artery Function Vein Capillary Lymphatic Vessel Part Major Heart Parts Function Heart Pericardium Septum Atria (Atrium) Ventricle(s) Pacemaker How the Heart Works: Pulmonary Circulation 1. Transports O2 poor blood to ___________ and O2 rich blood back to the ___________ 2. Blood travels from ____________ side of ____________ to ____________ 3. Blood picks up ____________ & releases ______________in lungs 4. ___________ rich blood returned to ____________ side of _____________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 11 How the Heart Works: Systemic Circulation 1. O2 rich blood exits __________ __________ & enters _____________ 2. O2 rich blood travels through ____________ then _______________ 3. O2 ______________ out of capillaries & into cells; blood picks up ____________ & other ____________ 4. ____________ return O2 poor blood to ____________ side of heart (right ___________) Pathway of Blood Flow Through the Heart 1. __________________________ 2. __________________________ 3. __________________________ 4. __________________________ 5 __________________________ 6. __________________________ 7. __________________________ 8. __________________________ 9. __________________________ 10. __________________________ 11. __________________________ 12. __________________________ 13. __________________________ Circulatory System Diseases 1. Leukemia: bone marrow produces abnormal white blood cells (leukocytes) . At first, leukemia cells function normally. In time, there are too many & they crowd out normal WBCs, RBCs & platelets. 2. Hemophilia: an inherited disorder. Afflicted persons cannot produce clotting factors, which causes people w/ hemophilia to bleed for longer periods of time than people whose produce clotting factors. The main problem w/ hemophilia is internal bleeding, mainly into ___________ &______________. Diseases and Conditions 1. Atherosclerosis: when __________ deposits called __________ build up on the inner walls of the arteries. 2, Arteriosclerosis: ____________ or ______________ of the artery walls. 3. Stroke: when blood ___________ break free and get ____________in the blood vessels leading to the brain. Blood Pressure Blood Pressure: Blood pressure measures the force pushing outwards on your arterial walls. Systolic Pressure The top number, which is also the higher of the two numbers, measures the pressure in the arteries when the heart beats (when the heart muscle contracts). The bottom number, which is also the lower of the two numbers, measures the pressure in the arteries between heartbeats (when the heart muscle is resting between beats and refilling with blood). Optimal blood pressure is less than 120/80 mm Hg (systolic pressure is 120 AND diastolic pressure is less than 80). Diastolic Pressure What the values mean Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 12 Lymphatic System 3 MAIN FUNCTIONS: _________________________________________ CH 37-2 Page 951-955 ___________________________________________________________ PART DESCRIPTION / FUNCTION Label the diagram below with the parts in the chart on the left. Lymph *Lymph Vessel *Lymph Node *Tonsils *Spleen *Thymus Respiratory System Main Function: _____________________________________ CH 37-3 p. 956 - 963 Part Function Label the parts of the respiratory system! Nose Mouth Pharynx Epiglottis Larynx Trachea Bronchi Bronchioles Alveoli Lung Diaphragm How does the respiratory system interact with the nervous system to control breathing? __________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 13 Digestive System Main Function: to ___________________food into simpler molecules that can be ______________by the body. 1. Mechanical Digestion: ___________________________________________________________________________ 2. Chemical Digestion: ____________________________________________________________________________ a. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ b. ___________________________________________________________________________________________ Digestive System Organs (in the order that food travels) Part Function & Enzymes / Secretions Involved Mouth Esophagus Stomach Small Intestine Large Intestine Rectum Other Organs Involved in Digestion: 1. ____________________ – organ which makes digestive fluids and the hormone called insulin. 2. ____________________ – largest internal organ that makes bile, which is a green liquid that digests fats; stores excess glucose 3. ___________ – small sac that stores bile. Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 14 Excretory System Main Function: __________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ Organs Involved: Organ Function Kidney Ureter Urinary Bladder Urethra Other Organs of Excretion Lungs Skin Control of Kidney Function What is ADH?________________________________________________________________________ Actions of ADH as a Feedback Mechanism. Brain Tells pituitary that amount of water in blood is low. Low amount of water in blood and high amount of urine produced. Tells pituitary that amount of water in blood is high. Pituitary Gland Releases ADH into bloodstream. Stops releasing ADH into bloodstream High amount of water in blood and low amount of urine produced. Kidneys Reabsorb more water. Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 Reabsorbs less water. 15 The Nervous System MAIN FUNCTIONS: 1. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 2. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ STRUCTURE: Consists of nerve cells called _________. Neurons are specialized for transmitting electrical signals called nerve ________. Main Parts of a Neuron: Parts of a Typical Neuron Cell Body:________________________________ dendrite axon muscle tissue _________________________________________ Dendrites:________________________________ _____________________________________ ___ Axon: ___________________________________ cell body _________________________________________ Myelin sheath: ____________________________ synapse _________________________________________ Nodes: __________________________________ Axon terminals____________________________ TYPICAL MOTOR NEURON _________________________________________ There are 3 Types of Neurons: Nerves and Muscles 1. _______________neurons – sends messages from the body to the brain Nerves work together with muscles for movement. An impulse begins when one neuron is stimulated by another neuron or by the sense organs. The impulse travels down the _________________________________ to ___________________ in the spinal cord & brain. The brain will then send an impulse through ___________________________to the necessary muscle or organ, telling it to contract. 2. _________________ – connect sensory and motor neurons at the spinal cord 3. _________________neurons – sends messages from the brain to the body (muscles) Interneuron Muscle Fibers Sensory Neuron Motor Neuron Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 16 DISORDER: Multiple Sclerosis is caused by destruction of large patches on the ______________ ____________of the neuron. Small, hardened scars appear along the ________________ which interferes with the normal transmission of impulses. Normal nerve function is _______________________, and symptoms such as double vision, muscular _________________, loss of memory, and paralysis result. Two Main Divisions of the Nervous System: CNS & PNS 1. Central Nervous System (CNS) Consists of the _________& _________ ______ Part to label brain Function Cerebrum Cerebellum Medulla Oblongata (brainstem) Spinal cord 2. Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): Consists of the __________________________(eyes, ears, skin, tongue, and nose), ___________________, and all other _______________extending out from the spinal cord to the body parts. Parts of the Spinal Cord Parts of the Spinal Cord 1. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ a. cervical nerves: 8 pair_______________________________ __________________________________________________ b. thoracic nerves: 12 pair: _____________________________ ___________________________________________________ c. lumbar nerves: 5 pair: ________________________________ ___________________________________________________ d. sacral nerves: 5 pair: _________________________________ ___________________________________________________ e. coccygeal nerve: 1 pair: ______________________________ ______________________________________________________ Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 17 Endocrine System 1. Main function of the endocrine system is to release ______________ into the ______________which deliver _______________ throughout the body. Basically it does what the ______________ system cannot. 2. Endocrine Gland- release _____________ into the blood stream 3. Hormone- ________________ that travel through the bloodstream and affect bodily___________________. Hypothalamus: The hypothalamus is located in the ______________ and controls the release of hormones from the ________________ gland. It is an important link between the Glands and the Hormones they Release ENDOCRINE GLAND HORMONE EXAMPLE Pituitary Gland ADA and Human Growth Hormone Pineal gland Melantonin Thyroid Gland Thyroxin Pancreas Insulin Adrenal Gland Adrenaline Ovary Estrogen & Progesterone Testes Testosterone FUNCTION DISORDERS The brain and glands work together to maintain homeostasis through a process called negative and positive __________________. The feedback the brain gets is from the information it collects as the hypothalamus monitors the bloodstream. Using this information, the brain knows what hormones to start and stop releasing. Pre AP Biology Human Anatomy Book 2014 18