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Download THE UNITY AND DIVERSITY OF LIFE
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AN ORIENTATION TO THE HUMAN BODY Human Biology • It is the structural, functional, behavioral basis of the human organisms’ ability to adapt to and survive in its environment. NECESSARY LIFE FUNCTIONS • • • • • • • Maintain boundaries – Movement Process of metabolism Maintain homeostasis Reproduction Responsiveness/irritability Growth TRUE FOR: • • • • Unicellular Made up of one cell Example – ameba, Maintain boundaries – cell membrane • • • • Multicellular Made up of many cells Example – humans Maintain boundaries – skin • Must maintain homeostasis for single cell as well as for organism Survival Needs • • • • • Nutrients Oxygen water body temperature Appropriate atmospheric pressure ORGANIZATION OF HUMAN BODY • • • • • • • • • Cell Tissues Organ Organ system Organism Population Community Ecosystem/biome biosphere FEEDBACK SYSTEM • Feedback system is a cycle of events in which the status of a body condition is continually monitored, evaluated, changed, remonitored, reevaluated continuously. HOMEOSTATIC CONTROL MECHANISMS • Receptor • Control center • Effector MAINTAINING HOMEOSTASIS • Negative feedback system • Positive feedback system HOMEOSTATIC IMBALANCE • Most diseases are a result of disturbances in the body’s homeostasis • Efficiency decreases with age LANGUAGE OF ANATOMY Provides ways to accurately describe the body ANATOMY • Study of structure and shape of the body and body parts and their relationship to each other • Gross anatomy – study of large observable structures • Microscopic anatomy – study of structures that require a microscope to been seen PHYSIOLOGY • Study of how the body and its parts function. Structure determines function. Governing rule in anatomy Terms • • • • • • • • Disorder Disease Symptom Signs Pathology Epidemiology Pharmacology diagnosis • • • • Infectious disease Pathogens Local disease Systemic disease ANATOMICAL POSITION • Standard position • Basis for directional terms DIRECTIONAL TERMS • Explain exact location of 1 body structure in relation to another. REGIONAL TERMS • Anterior body landmarks – toward / at front of body • Posterior body landmarks – toward / at back of body BODY PLANES AND SECTIONS • Imaginary line through the body wall or organ • Three sections • Sagittal section • Frontal (coronal) plane • Transverse sections (cross-section) BODY CAVITIES TWO MAIN CAVITIES 1. Dorsal Cavity 2. Ventral Cavity Dorsal cavity 2 divisions that are continuous with each other 1. Cranial – space for brain 2. Spinal cavity – space for spinal cord Foramen magnum – opening at base of brain allows for spinal cord to connect with brain Ventral cavity • 1. Thoracic cavity – separated from rest of ventral cavity by diaphragm surrounded by ribs houses heart, lungs 2. Abdominopelvic a. abdominal – superior cavity houses stomach, liver, intestines b. Pelvic – inferior cavity houses reproductive organs, bladder, rectum 9 regions of abdominopelvic • • • • • • • • • Right hypochondriac region Left hypochondriac region Right lumbar region Left lumbar region Right iliac region Left iliac region Epigastric region Umbilical region Hypogastric region CRANIAL CAVITIES • • • • • • • Sphenodial sinus Frontal sinus Orbital cavity Nasal cavity Oral cavity Middle ear cavity Cranial cavity Medical imaging • Bombards the body with energy to reveal structures of internal organs, and chemical processes of body X-RAY • Oldest • Visualize hard bony structures • Locate abnormally dense structures such as tumors and TB nodules ULTRASOUND • • • • • Sonography Equipment is inexpensive Uses high frequency sound waves So far, no harmful effects on living tissue Determines fetal age, position: locating placenta. CT SCAN • • • • • Computer tomography Confines its beam to a thin slice of tissue Like a refined version of X-ray Eliminated exploratory surgery Patient is moved through a doughnut shaped CT machine – tube rotates around bed PET • Positron-emission tomography • it sends images about metabolic processes • Insights into brain activity (mental illness, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy) • Uses radioisotopes MRI • Magnetic resonance imaging • Uses magnetic fields 3,000 to 60,000 times stronger than the earth’s • Bones do not show up thus they do not interfere with viewing soft tissue behind bone • Good at picking up degenerative diseases – ex MS • Very expensive