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Transcript
Anatomy & Physiology Introduction
• Anatomy -(dissect) to
study structure
• Physiology -function
•
Humans and bilateral
symmetry – right/left
division based on
anatomical position
Levels of organization
• atoms molecules*cells*tissues
organssystemsorganism
Body location terminology
a) ventral (anterior) vs dorsal(posterior)
front
vs
back
b) superior vs inferior
above vs below
c) ipsilateral vs contralateral
same side vs
opposite sides
d) lateral vs medial
away from midline
vs
closest to midline
e) axial vs appendicular
head/trunk
vs
limbs
f) superficial vs deep
closest to surface(skin) vs internal
g) distal vs proximal
far vs near
Planes through the body (cuts)
a)coronal / frontal
separation of ventral from dorsal
b)sagittal / midsagittal
separation of right from left
c)transverse / oblique
separation of superior from inferior
Body cavities
A) Dorsal cavities
1) cranial - contains brain
2) spinal - contains spinal cord
B) Ventral cavities
1) thoracic - entire chest cavity
a) mediastinum (1)
heart, trachea, esophagus, thymus
b) pleural (2)
one lung in each pleural cavity
2) abdominal
*below the diaphragm to pelvic
liver, stomach, spleen, pancreas,
most of the intestine, kidneys,
3) Pelvic
gonads, bladder, urethra
C) Assorted body cavities
1) nasal -behind nose
2) oral/buccal – mouth
3) middle ear – ear canal, hammer,
anvil, stirrup, tympanic membrane
4) orbital - eye
5) synovial - bone joint
Body System Preview
1. Skeletal -- bones (cartilage)
support, movement, protection
2. Nervous -- neurons, brain, spine
communication
3. Muscular -- muscles
movement, posture,heat,protection
4. Cardiovascular -- heart, vessels, blood
deliver oxygen, nutrients
5. Respiratory -- Nose, mouth, trachea, lungs
gas exchange with atmosphere
6. Digestive -- mouth, stomach, intestines
acquire nutrients, waste removal
7. Urinary -- kidneys, bladder, urethra
filter blood, waste removal
8. Integumentary -- skin, hair, nails
protection
9. Reproductive -- gonads
continuation of species
10. Lymphatic/Immune -- lymph, lymph nodes,
lymphocytes
protection from disease, immune response
11. Endocrine -- thyroid, pancreas, pituitary
secrete hormones into blood
Tissues
• Tissue – group of cells and their products with
common origin and function
• Histology – study of tissues
• Biopsy – surgical removal of tissue sample
• Pathologist – analyzes tissues for disease
I. Four tissue types
A) Epithelial – lines surfaces, forms glands
B) Connective – binds, supports
C) Muscle – movement, heat,
D) Nervous – communication
Epithelial Tissue
I. Naming
A) layers
1) simple
2) stratified
3) pseudostratified
B) cell shape
1) squamous
2) cuboidal
3) columnar
4) transitional
II. Characteristics
- little to no matrix
- avascular
- nerve supply
-basement membrane
-lines surfaces
a) exterior
b) interior
1)passageways
2) cavities
3) glands
Epithelial - Glands
I.
Classification
A) Endocrine - secrete hormones into blood
- ductless
B) Exocrine – secrete product into duct
1. merocrine – most common
a) no cellular damage
b) sweat, salivary, etc
2. holocrine
a) cells burst to release product
b) sebaceous glands
3. apocrine –rare or absent?
a) cells “pinch off”
b) mammary
2 types of glands
endocrine
exocrine
Connective Tissue
I. Characteristics
a) abundant matrix
b) mostly vascular
c) nerve supply
d) deep
II. Categories
A) Loose connective
1) areolar – “glue”
2) adipose – fat
3) reticular – web-like(spleen, lymph node)
B) Dense connective
1) dense regular – rope-like
2) dense irregular – sheet-like
3) elastic – stretchy, resilient
C) Bone – compact, spongy
D) Cartilage – hyaline, elastic, fibro
E) Blood
F) lymph
Cell junctions
• Based on shared membrane proteins
A) tight junction – prevents leakage
- GI tract
B) gap junction – rapid communication
- heart
C) desmosome – prevents separation
- skin
Membranes
• Epithelial + connective
A) mucous – lines passageways to exterior
B) serous – lines organ(s) in cavity
C) synovial – surrounds bone joints
D) cutaneous - skin