290 likes | 500 Views
Immune System Nervous System Hormones and Endocrine Systems. Chapter 40: Immune System. Pathogen – a disease causing agent 1st line of defense: Skin and mucous membranes 2nd line of defense: inflammatory response, temperature response, proteins and white blood cells ( wbc ).
E N D
Chapter 40: Immune System • Pathogen – a diseasecausing agent • 1st line of defense: Skinandmucousmembranes • 2nd line of defense: inflammatory response, temperature response, proteins and whitebloodcells (wbc)
Temperature response: body temperature increases to kill bacteria • Temperature greater than 103oF are dangerous • Temperature greater than 105oF are fatal
Macrophage – wbc that ingestand killpathogens they encounter • Cytotoxic T Cells – attack and kill infected cells • B Cells – labels invaders for later destruction
Helper T cells – active cytotoxic T cells and B cells • Antigen-substance that triggersan immune response • Koch’s Postulates are a guide for identifying specific pathogens
Immunity – resistance to a particular disease • Vaccine – solution that contains deador modifiedpathogen that can no longer cause disease. A vaccine triggers an immuneresponsewithout symptoms of infection.
You can get infectious disease through: • Person to person contact • Air • Food • Water • Animal bites
Allergy-the body’s inappropriate response to a normally harmlessantigen • Autoimmune disease-body launches an immuneresponse against its own cells attacking them as they were pathogens. They can no longer distinguish “self” from “nonself”.
HIV causes AIDS when the body can no longer fight off other infections because of the destruction of helper T cells. • If a person’s blood contains antibodies to HIV they are HIV positive. • HIV is transmitted through body fluids including blood. Can also be transmitted through sexual contact, breast milk, and needles.
Neuron – nerve cell • Neurons enable movement, perception, thought, emotion and learning.
Axon conduct (sends) nerve impulses TO other cells Nerves are bundles of axons.
Central Nervous System (CNS) • The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord. • The CNS interprets and responds to information from the environment and from within the body.
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS) • Sensory neurons send information from sense organs. • Example of a sense organ: skin, eyes, ears, nose, mouth • Motor neurons send commands from the CNS to muscles and other organs.
Brain • Body’s processing center. • Contains about 100 billion neurons. • Enables you to have thoughts, feelings, emotions, behavior, memories, and the ability to learn and process information.
Spinal Cord • Dense cable of nervous tissue that runs through the vertebralcolumn to a level just below the ribs. • Links brain to the peripheralnervous system.
Somatic Nervous System • Consists of most motor neurons that stimulate skeletal muscle. • Reflexes, although involuntary, are also part of the somatic nervous system. A reflex is a self-protectivemotor response. • Reflex – sudden, involuntary contraction of muscles in response to a stimulus
Autonomic Nervous System • Consists ofperipheral motor neurons that regulate smooth muscles such as heartrate, all the body systems, and secretions of glands. • Has 2 divisions: • Sympathetic – fight or flight response • Parasympathetic – keeps body functioning when you are notactive (able to breathe while sleeping)
Chapter 42: Hormones and the Endocrine System • Hormones are substances secreted by cells that act to regulate the activityof other cells in the body.
Function: • Regulating growth, development, behavior, and reproduction • Coordinating the production, use, and storage of energy • Maintaining homeostasis (temperature, regulation, metabolism, excretion and water and salt balance) • Responding to stimuli from outside the body
Endocrine glands are ductless organs that secrete hormones directly into either the bloodstreamor the fluid around cells. (extra cellular fluid) • Organs include the brain, stomach, small intestine, kidneys, liver and heart.
Exocrine glands deliver substances through ducts (tubelike structures). • Organs include sweat glands, mucous glands, and other digestive glands.
Target cell are a specific cell that a hormone binds to and acts on (carriers the message to) • If high levels of hormones stimulate the output of even more hormone, the regulation is celled positive feedback. • Negative feedbackis a change in one direction stimulates the control mechanism to counteract further in change in the same direction.
Hypothalamus is the area of the brain that coordinates the activities of the nervous and endocrine systems. • Controls many body functions including: • Body Temperature • Blood Pressure • Emotions
Pituitary Gland is an endocrine gland suspended from the hypothalamus by a short stalk.
Insulin is a hormone that lowersblood glucose levels by promoting the accumulation of glycogen in the liver. • Glucagon had the opposite effect of insulin; it raisesblood glucose levels
Diabetes mellitus is a serious disorder in which cells unable to obtain glucose from the blood, resulting in high blood glucose levels. • Type I – is a hereditary autoimmune disease (usually treated with insulin dose everyday) • Type II – develops in people over 40 due to obesity and an inactive lifestyle