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Anatomy en physiology part 1 Sylvia Welsing-Schaefer 2014/2015 Why? • To understand how a body is built up – Bones – Muscles – Tendons / ligaments / (fascia) – Tissues and organs – Respiration / circulation / nervous system • To understand how a body functions • To learn to observe • Anatomy: the study of the body structure and the relationships among body parts • Physiology: the study of the body function, or how the body works Basics Requirements for life to exist • Water: The body consists of +/- 60% water • Food: plants or animals broken down into chemical substances • Oxygen: in order to oxidize fuel molecules and obtain their energy • Appropriate environmental temperature • Suitable environmental pressure Characteristics of human beings • Movement • (voluntary / involuntary) • Metabolism and homeostasis • Catabolism / Anabolism • Maintain a constant internal environment • Responsiveness • Growth an development • Cellular differentiation • Reproduction • Adaptation • Bones, Brain, Larynx.... Levels of structural organisation • Chemical level • Atoms / molecules (H-H-O, H2O) • Cellular level • Tissue • Muscle-, nervous-, connective-, epithelial tissue • Organs • Brain, stomach, heart • Body system • Circulatory system, digestive system • Organism • You yourself! Levels of structural organisation Organ / Body systems • Integumentary • Skin (glands), nails, hair • Skeletal and muscular • Bones, cartillage, tendons, ligaments • Skeletal-, cardiac-, smooth muscles • Nervous and endocrine • Circulatory • Cardiovascular, lymphatic • Respiratory • O2 en CO2 • Digestive • Digestive tract and glands • Urinary • Kidneys and urinary tract • Reproductive Body systems Skeletal system • Bone: main supporting tissue of the body – – – – – Support Protection Transmission of forces / movement (Hematopoiesis) (Storage and release of minerals (Ca, P) • Cartilage • Tendons • (Ligaments) Skeletal system • Form and shape reflects its function – Long bones • Leverage – Flat bones • Protection – Short bones • Weight bearing Bone • Compact bone • Cancellous / spongy bone Bone • Periost • “outer” Fibrous layer • “inner” Osteogenic layer – Osteoblasts – blood vessels – elastic fibers • Where tendons / ligaments attach Bone • Osteoblasts • • • • • Surfaces of developing and growing bone Deposit collagen and ground substance Entrapped withing lacunae Calcification of the matrix = osteocytes • Osteoclasts • Resorption / removal of bone • Extracellular matrix • 50% Inorganic salts (Ca-phosphate, Na, K, Mg) • 50% Organic matrix – (ground substance (glycosaminoglycans) – collagen type I 90%) Bone • Epiphyse • Diaphyse • Metaphyse Bone • • • • • Continuous and extensive remodeling Growth Change size / shape Stress Fractures Cartilage • (Flexible) Connective tissue • Stiff → Flexible • Bone → Cartilage → Muscle • Chondrocyten – Extracellular matrix – (collagen, proteoglycan, elastin fibers) • Elastic-, hyaline-, fibro-cartilage Cartilage • Cartilage – Elastic: • Ear, nose, eustachian tube, epiglottis, trachea, larynx, bronchial tubes – Hyaline: • joints – Fibro: • • • • Intervertebral discs / annulus fibrosis Symphysis Menisci “shock absorbing – NO BLOOD VESSELS Skeleton spine • • • • • Cervical 7 Thoracal 12 Lumbal 5 Sacral 5 Os coccyx (tailbone) 4 (3-5) • Lordosis • Kyfosis spine • Scoliosis – Idiopathic – Congenital – Neuromuscular Spine movements • • • • Flexion Extension Lateral flexion L/R Rotation L/R Anatomical planes Anatomical directions Pelvis • Os Coxae – Os ilium (SIAS, SIPS, crista iliaca) – Os ischii (tuber ischiadicum) – Os pubis • • • • Os Sacrum SI-joint Acetabulum (anteflexion pelvis 10-25°) Pelvis • • • • Flexion Extension Lateral flexion Rotation • (nutation) • (counternutation) Pelvis Ligaments • • • • • • Fibrous connective tissue Links bone to bone at the joint Stabilize Allow mobility Different size and shape Different function Ligaments • Knee – Short, stout – Maintaining the knee as a hinge Ligaments • SI – Dense, broad, thick – Limit movement of SI joint • Pelvis / hip – Thick, strong – Weight bearing and stabilizing Ligaments • Shoulder – Thin, band-like, confluent with the shoulder capsule – Allowing great range of motion joints • Fibrous • Cartilaginous • Synovial Synovial joints • Synovial cavity • Synovial fluid • Fibrous capsule joints • Hinge – Knee, elbow (ulna) • Ball and socket – Hip, shoulder • Gliding – Carpals wrist • Pivot – Radio-ulnair joint • Condoloid – Radio-carpal joint • Saddle – Carpometocarpal, thumb, sternoclaviculair Femur • • • • • Caput Corpus Trochantor major Trochantor minor Condylus medialis – epicondylus • Condylus lateralis – epicondylus Femur • • • • • • Flexion Extension Abduction Adduction Internal rotation External rotation Tibia (knee) • Flexion • Extension • (In 90° flexion 10-15° rotation) fibula • Stabilisation ankle joint Foot / ankle • • • • Dorsal flexion Plantair flexion Inversion Eversion • Pronation foot (passive) • Supination foot (passive) Humerus • • • • • • Flexion Extension Abduction Adduction Internal rotation External rotation ulna • Flexion • extension Radius / ulna • Pronation • Suppination Wrist • • • • Dorsal flexion Palmair flexion Radial abduction Ulnar abduction • Pronation • Suppination Fingers / toes • • • • • • Flexion Extension Abduction Adduction Internal rotation (passive) External rotation (passive) Shoulder Shoulder • • • • • Clavicula Elevation Depression Protraction Retraction Humerus flexion extension ab- adduction in- external rotation • • • • • Scapula (thoracal) Endorotation Exorotation Cranial / caudal translation Lateral / medial translation Together anteflexion / retroflexion abduction / adduction exo- endorotation Shoulder Anatomical directions • • • • • • • • • • • • Medial Lateral Proximal Distal Anterior Posterior Superior Inferior Ventral Dorsal Craniaal Caudaal Movements anatomical planes • (Mid)sagittal plane – (flexion, extension) • Transverse plane – (rotation, pronation, supination) • Coronal plane – (abduction, adduction, lateral flexion) Muscular system • Skeletal or striated – Voluntary • Cardiac – Involuntary • Smooth – involuntary Muscular system • • • • • • • A bundle of many cells Muscle fibers (myofibers) Myofibrils Actine Myosine Sarcomere = basic functional unit (striated appearance) Striated muscle Striated muscle Striated muscle Origin and insertion • Origin – Bone – Proximal – Stable • Insertion – – – – – Bone/tendon Structure it attaches to Distal Less mass Greater motion Form and shape Muscle contraction • Isometric • Concentric • Eccentric Agonist - Antagonist • Agonist – ‘prime mover’ – Movement though contraction • Antagonist – Oppose a specific movement – Controls, slows down • Antagonistic pairs – One muscle contracts, other relaxes – Flexors-extensors – Abductors-adductors Antagonistic pairs Synergist • Synergist – Helps perform the same joint motion as the agonist – (deltoid muscles and TFL and glutes) Stretch reflex • Stretch reflex – Muscle contraction in response to stretching (same muscle) – Muscle spindles • Reciprocal inhibition – One side of a joint relaxes – Other side of a joint contracts propriocepsis • “Awareness” of body position – Spatial orientation • Balance and movement • Proprioreceptors – Muscles, joints • Cerebellum • Visual information • Vestibular system (evenwichtsorgaan) Fascia • Connective tissue • Surrounds – Muscles and groups of muscles – Blood vessels – Nerves • Binds structures together • Permits structures to slide smoothly Fascia • Dense regular connective tissue • Bundles of collagen – (elastin and reticular fibers) – Varying amounts of elastin and collagen • Flexibel • Resist great tension • Ligaments and tendons Fascia • It’s continuous • Really thin • Really thick (IT band) • Extremely strong Fascia Fascia • Makes muscles “slide” • 30% of the mass of our muscle • Muscle = myofascia • Tubes, within tubes, within tubes....... Fascia • Myofascia-tendon complex (MT complex) • Where fascia becomes tendon • Areas that are stronger / weaker • MT junction = weakest link Deep fascia • Ground substances • Living cells (fibroblasts) • Everything is interconnected • All the tissues work together – Binds – Transmits forces – Lubricates • It’s fascia that holds us together!!!! Fuzz • • • • If fascia is too dry Sliding surfaces “stick” together Adhesions “glue” → FUZZ • Every night → fuzz • Injured or immobile → ↓ ROM • Scarr tissue → ↓ ROM Modern meridian theory • Dr. Motoyama – (Japan, Shinto priest and double PhD scientist) • CT and fascia form mechanical continuum • Everything is ensheathed in CT • All movements create tension, compression, shear stress in every part • Generating bio-electrical signals in the CT • CT is a semiconducting communication network • This electric network = meridian system Modern meridian theory • • • • • • H.A. Hyaluronic Acid → 1000 x H2O Liquid chrystals Meridiens are in the CT Meridians are water channels through the CT “Water flow” • Chi or Prana bronnen • Anatomie atlas – Sobotta, thieme, anders... • Ray long – Key muscles • Leslie Kaminoff – Yoga anatomie • Paul Grilley – Yin yoga • Bernie Clark – Yin yoga • Internet (wikipedia) – ........................ Volgende keer • CNS – Autonome (motor – sensor) – Periphere (sympatic - parasympatic • Stress / burn out – Fight-or-flight response • Pregnancy and yoga