1 / 22

Anatomy and Physiology

Anatomy and Physiology. Anatomy is defined as : The study of the structure and shape of the organs and systems of the Human Body and their Structural relationships to one another . Physiology is defined as

tallis
Download Presentation

Anatomy and Physiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Anatomy and Physiology

  2. Anatomy is defined as : • The study of the structure and shape of the organs and systems of the Human Body and their Structural relationships to one another

  3. Physiology is defined as • The functions of the parts of the human body and the interaction of anatomic systems forming the human body as a whole

  4. Characteristics of life • Structure • Biochemical reactions • Responsiveness- to maintain Homeostasis • Reproduction • Growth-to gain mass • Development-different abilities (diffferentiation)

  5. Characteristics of life • Adaptation and evolution

  6. Goal of almost all body systems is to maintain life • Survival needs include • Water • Food • Oxygen • Heat • Atmospheric Pressure

  7. Homeostasis • The body’s ability to maintain relatively stable internal conditions even though the outside world is constantly changing • Every organ system plays a role in maintaining stability

  8. Homeostasis • Homeostatic Regulation:physiological adjustments • Receptor –sensitive to stimulus • Effector-activity has an effect on the stimulus • Negative feedback effector that is activated by the control center opposes the stimulus • Positive Feedback-response reinforces the stimulus

  9. Level of Organization • Molecular • Cell • Tissue • Organ • Organ system • Organism • Each level is dependent of the others

  10. Organ systems • Integumentary : skin • Skeletal • Muscular • Nervous • Endocrine • Cardiovascular • Lymphatic: defense against infection/disease • Respiratory • Digestive

  11. Organ systems • Urinary • Reproductive

  12. Anatomical Directions • Costal-ribs • coxal-hip • Crural-leg • Cubital- elbow • Digital- finger • Dorsal-back • Femoral- thigh • Frontal- forehead • Genital reproductive organs

  13. Anatomical Directions • Inguinal-depressed area of the abdomen near the thigh • Dorsal Cavity-back of the body • Cranial cavity-brain • Vertebral cavity-spinal cord, spine • Ventral cavity-front or stomach • Thoracic cavity- • Pleural-lungs

  14. Ventral Cavity • Thoracic con’t- • Mediastinal- esophagus/trachia/major blood vessels • Periocardial-heart • Abdominopelvic • Abdominal cavity-digestive organs • Pelvic- reproductive/urinary

  15. Body cavities

  16. Thoracic Membranes • Pleural Membrane • Parietal Pleural Membrane-line inside of the pleural cavity • Visceral Pleural Membrare-adheres to the surface of lungs • Periocardial Membrane • Parietal Periocardial Membrane- line inside of periocardial cavity • Visceral Periocardial Membrane- adheres to the surface of the heart

  17. Abdominal Membrane • Peritoneal Membrane • Parietal peritoneal Membrane/Parietal peritoneum-lines inside of abdominal cavity • Visceral Peritoneum-adheres to the surface of the stomach

  18. Directional Terms • Superior (cranial or cephalic) • Inferior –caudal • Anterior- ventral • Posterior- Dorsal • Medial- midline • Lateral- away from the longitudinal axis • Proximal-toward an attached base, toward the trunk • Distal- away from an attached base, away from the trunk

  19. Body planes

  20. Standard Anatomical Position

  21. Abdominal quadrants

More Related