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Chapter 1.Introduction Instructor: Dr Yao Yang Text book syllabus • chapter content Class hour chapter1 Introduction 2 chapter2 The cell and its fuction 10 chapter3 Blood 6 chapter4 Blood circulation 20 chapter5 Respiration 10 chapter6 Digestion 6 chapter7 Energy metabolism 4 chapter8 Kidney 10 chapter9 Sense organs 4 chapter10 Nervous system 14 chapter11 10 Endocrine system chapter12 Reproduction 2 Assessment • Final exam: 80% • Physiology experiment:20% attendence lab report Section I subjects studied in Physiology Concept of Physiology • Physiology belongs a branch of biology • What is Physiology? • Physiology is the science of studying the functional activities and its mechanisms in biological body. Why must the medical students study human physiology? • Medical science development is closely related to physiology. • (1) Physiology provides the theories to explain many diseases. • (2) Clinical practices test whether the physiological theories are correct or not and promote development of physiology. Physiology is also an experiment science .Why? • the theories about the functional activities are based on the experiments • British physiologist, William Harvey set up the modern physiology. Observed that blood flows in heart and vascular system. • In 1628,<<Heart and movement of blood>> was published. It is the first book of physiology based on experiment. Experiment methods for physiological study (1)acute experiment A Experiment in vitro Advantages: a) experiment condition is easy to be controlled. b) To easily analyze the results B Experiment in vivo (2)Chronic experiment Many conditioning reflex experiments are chronic experiments. Advantages: a) To observe continuously the activities in conscious condition; b) The findings are similar to physiological state. Shortcoming: The conditions in the body are so complicated to analyze the results. Investigation levels in physiology 1. Cell and Molecular level The basic living unit of the body is the cell, and each organ is an aggregation of many different cells held together by intercellular supporting structures. For example: myocyte contraction 2.Organ and system levels • The goals are to explore the effects of organs and systems for human body and how to perform their activities, and the affecting factors. 3. Integral level • The aims are to study interactions among organs and systems, and interaction between human body and environment. Section II Internal environment and Homeostasis Body Fluid = 60% of Body Weight (BW) Plasma 5% of BW Extracellular Fluid 1/3, 20% of BW Interstitial Fluid 15% of BW 70 kg Male, 42 L Intracellular Fluid 2/3, 40% of BW • The extracellular fluid provides all cells with a constant environment to live in. For this reason, the extracellular fluid is called the internal environment of the body , a term introduced more than 100 years ago by French physiologist Claude Bernard. Plasma 5% of BW Extracellular Fluid 1/3, 20% of BW Internal Environment Interstitial Fluid 15% of BW Homeostasis • used by physiologists to mean maintenance of constant conditions in the internal environment. • All of the organs and tissues perform function to help maintain these constant conditions. • For instant: lungs provide oxygen Kidneys maintain ions concentrations Homeostasis • the various physiological arrangements which serve to restore the normal state, once it has been disturbed. • Including two meanings: (1)relatively stable (2)the control process maintaining the constant conditions of internal environment Section III Regulation of Body Functions • • • Nervous regulation Reflex: the basic active manner of nervous regulation Reflex arc: including 5 parts: Receptor>afferent->nervous center->efferent>Effector Conditioning reflex and unconditioning reflex Conditioning reflex: set up after birth Unconditioning reflex: set up before birth • Nervous regulation is characterized by rapidity and accuracy in response, and often shorter in duration. Humoral regulation • including: (1)hormonal regulation:telecrine the hormones secreted by endocrine glands act on the receptors of cells (2)local chemical regulation: paracrine • Compared with the nervous regulation, humoral regulation is, generally speaking, slow in onset, diffuse in nature, and often longer in duration. Nervous - Humoral regulation • Many endocrine glands are not independent on nervous system, they are regulated directly or indirectly by nervous system, so the humoral regulation is believed as one loop of nervous system, i.e. nervous – humoral regulation Autoregulation • The regulation is not depended on nervous system or homoral regulation. The cells or tissues themselves can response to stimulus. It is a supplementary mechanism to the major control systems. • For instant: vascular smooth muscles can contract when they are stimulated by stretch stimuli. Section IV Control systems of the body • To use cybernetics concept to analyze the functional regulation in human body 1. Non – automatic control system belongs open loop system Feature: controlled system does not affect the activities of control system. For instant: depress reaction • 2. Feedback – control system • belongs a closed loop system automatic control • A. Negative feedback: Negative • feedback signals always produce an effect opposite to that produced by the initiating stimulus . For example: the arterial pressure – regulating mechanism. maintaining homeostasis Negative feedback B. Positive feedback: In positive feedback control system, deviations from the steady state are actually amplified, rather than diminished, by the feedback loop. That is, a positive feedback circuit intensifies the activity of the control system. • For instance: micturition reflex, parturition, blood coagulation. C. Feed-forward control system. In feed-forward control system, control part sends control signals to regulate activity of controlled part. At same time feed-forward signals is sent to controlled part via other rapid pathways. For example: conditioned reflex. Compared with negative feedback control, feed-forward control is rapid, predictive, but sometimes cause lapsus. Key points 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Internal environment Homeostasis Regulation of Body Functions Positive feedback Negative feedback