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REVISION SESSION Prepared by; Mrs. Saidatul Biomedical Electronic Program University Malaysia Perlis Topics; • • • • • • The Human Body: An orientation Cells and Tissues Blood The Cardiovascular System The Respiratory System The Nervous System Tuesday 2pm – 4pm • • • • The Human Body: An orientation Cells and Tissues Blood Cardiovascular System Wednesday 2pm-3pm • The Respiratory System • The Nervous System Human Anatomy : An Orientation The Human Body: An Orientation • Anatomy - Study of the structure and shape of the body and its parts • Physiology - Study of how the body and its parts work or function Anatomy—Levels of Study • Gross anatomy - Large structures - Easily observable • Microscopic Anatomy - Very small structures - Can only be viewed with a microscope Levels of Structural Organization • Integumentary Forms the external body covering Protects deeper tissue from injury Helps regulate body temperature Location of cutaneous nerve receptors • Skeletal Protects and supports body organs Provides muscle attachment for movement Site of blood cell formation Stores minerals • Muscular Produces movement Maintains posture Produces heat • Nervous Fast-acting control system Responds to internal and external change Activates muscles and glands • Endocrine Secretes regulator hormones Growth Reproduction Metabolism • Cardiovascular Transports materials in body via blood pumped by heart Oxygen Carbon dioxide Nutrients Wastes • Lymphatic Returns fluids to blood vessels Cleanses the blood Involved in immunity • Respiratory Keeps blood supplied with oxygen Removes carbon dioxide • Digestive Breaks down food Allows for nutrient absorption into blood Eliminates indigestible material • Urinary Eliminates nitrogenous wastes Maintains acid-base balance Regulates water and electrolytes • Reproductive Produces offspring Necessary Life Functions • Maintain boundaries • Movement Locomotion Movement of substances • Responsiveness Ability to sense changes and react • Digestion Break-down and absorption of nutrients • Metabolism—chemical reactions within the body Produces energy Makes body structures • Excretion Eliminates waste from metabolic reactions • Reproduction Produces future generation • Growth Increases cell size and number of cells Survival Needs • Nutrients Chemicals for energy and cell building Includes carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, vitamins, and minerals • Oxygen Required for chemical reactions • Water 60–80% of body weight Provides for metabolic reaction • Stable body temperature • Atmospheric pressure Must be appropriate Interrelationships Among Body Systems • Homeostasis - Homeostasis—maintenance of a stable internal environment - A dynamic state of equilibrium - Homeostasis is necessary for normal body functioning and to sustain life - Homeostatic imbalance - A disturbance in homeostasis resulting in disease Maintaining Homeostasis • The body communicates through neural and hormonal control systems • Receptor Responds to changes in the environment (stimuli) Sends information to control center • Control center Determines set point Analyzes information Determines appropriate response • Effector Provides a means for response to the stimulus Feedback Mechanisms • Negative feedback Includes most homeostatic control mechanisms Shuts off the original stimulus, or reduces its intensity Works like a household thermostat • Positive feedback Increases the original stimulus to push the variable farther In the body this only occurs in blood clotting and during the birth of a baby Cells and Tissues • Active Transport Processes • Passive Transport Processes • Mitosis (PMAT) - Stages of Mitosis • Meoisis Body Tissues • Primary Types – Epithelial Tissue – Connective Tissue – Nervous Tissue – Muscle Tissue √ Cuboidal, Squamous, Columnar.. Location? √ Example for each type BLOOD • • • The only fluid tissue in the human body Classified as a connective tissue Components of blood - Living cells Formed elements - Non-living matrix Plasma Physical Characteristics of Blood • • • • • Color range - Oxygen-rich blood is scarlet red - Oxygen-poor blood is dull red pH must remain between 7.35–7.45 Blood temperature is slightly higher than body temperature at 100.4°F In a healthy man, blood volume is about 5–6 liters or about 6 quarts Blood makes up 8% of body weight Blood Plasma • • • • • • Composed of approximately 90% water Includes many dissolved substances - Nutrients - Salts (electrolytes) - Respiratory gases - Hormones - Plasma proteins - Waste products Plasma proteins - Most abundant solutes in plasma - Most plasma proteins are made by liver - Various plasma proteins include Albumin—regulates osmotic pressure Clotting proteins - help to stem blood loss when a blood vessel is injured Antibodies - help protect the body from pathogens Formed Elements • • • • Erythrocytes - Red blood cells (RBCs) Leukocytes - White blood cells (WBCs) Platelets Cell fragments Hematopoiesis • • • • • • Blood cell formation Occurs in red bone marrow All blood cells are derived from a common stem cell (hemocytoblast) Hemocytoblast differentiation Lymphoid stem cell produces lymphocytes Myeloid stem cell produces all other formed elements Control of Erythrocyte Production • • • • Rate is controlled by a hormone (erythropoietin) Kidneys produce most erythropoietin as a response to reduced oxygen levels in the blood Homeostasis is maintained by negative feedback from blood oxygen levels Controlled by hormones - Colony stimulating factors (CSFs) and interleukins prompt bone marrow to generate leukocytes - Thrombopoietin stimulates production of platelets Hemostasis • • • • Stoppage of bleeding resulting from a break in a blood vessel Hemostasis involves three phases - Vascular spasms - Platelet plug formation - Coagulation (blood clotting) Vascular spasms - Vasoconstriction causes blood vessel to spasm - Spasms narrow the blood vessel, decreasing blood loss Platelet plug formation - Collagen fibers are exposed by a break in a blood vessel - Platelets become “sticky” and cling to fibers - Anchored platelets release chemicals to attract more platelets - Platelets pile up to form a platelet plug • Coagulation Injured tissues release tissue factor (TF) PF3 (a phospholipid) interacts with TF, blood protein clotting factors, and calcium ions to trigger a clotting cascade Prothrombin activator converts prothrombin to thrombin (an enzyme) • Coagulation Thrombin joins fibrinogen proteins into hair-like molecules of insoluble fibrin Fibrin forms a meshwork (the basis for a clot) • Blood usually clots within 3 to 6 minutes • The clot remains as endothelium regenerates • The clot is broken down after tissue repair Undesirable Clotting Thrombus • A clot in an unbroken blood vessel • Can be deadly in areas like the heart Embolus • A thrombus that breaks away and floats freely in the bloodstream • Can later clog vessels in critical areas such as the brain Bleeding Disorders Thrombocytopenia • Platelet deficiency • Even normal movements can cause bleeding from small blood vessels that require platelets for clotting Hemophilia • Hereditary bleeding disorder • Normal clotting factors are missing Cardiovascular System Anatomy of Heart • • • • Valve Chamber Structures Blood flow through aortic and semilunar valve for right and left side. Systemic and Pulmonary Circulations • Systemic circulation – Blood flows from the left side of the heart through the body tissues and back to the right side of the heart • Pulmonary circulation – Blood flows from the right side of the heart to the lungs and back to the left side of the heart Heart Contractions The heart : Cardiac Cycles Left atrium Right atrium Left ventricle Right ventricle Ventricular filling Atrial contraction Mid-to-late diastole (ventricular filling) Isovolumetric Ventricular contraction phase ejection phase Isovolumetric relaxation Ventricular systole (atria in diastole) Early diastole The Heart – Cardiac Output • Cardiac output (CO) – Amount of blood pumped by each side (ventricle) of the heart in one minute • Stroke volume (SV) – Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in one contraction (each heartbeat) – Usually remains relatively constant – About 70 mL of blood is pumped out of the left ventricle with each heartbeat • Heart rate (HR) – Typically 75 beats per minute • CO = HR SV • CO = HR (75 beats/min) SV (70 mL/beat) • CO = 5250 mL/min • Starling’s law of the heart—the more the cardiac muscle is stretched, the stronger the contraction • Changing heart rate is the most common way to change cardiac output • Arterial supply of the brain • Fetal circulation • Hepatic Portal Circulation Arterial Supply of the Brain Fetal Circulation Hepatic Portal Circulation THANK YOU