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Introduction to Physiology

Introduction to Physiology. 1. About this Chapter. Definition of physiology Review of organ systems Function and process Introduction to homeostasis Ideas in physiology Themes in physiology The science of physiology Discussion of scientific literature. Levels of Organization.

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Introduction to Physiology

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  1. Introduction to Physiology 1

  2. About this Chapter • Definition of physiology • Review of organ systems • Function and process • Introduction to homeostasis • Ideas in physiology • Themes in physiology • The science of physiology • Discussion of scientific literature

  3. Levels of Organization • Physiology defined • Study of the functions and processes of living organisms • Organization of life • The cell is the unit of life • Cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, and organisms

  4. Levels of Organization Figure 1-1

  5. Organ Systems in Review • Integumentary • Musculoskeletal • Respiratory • Digestive • Reproductive and Urinary • Circulatory • Nervous and Endocrine • Immune

  6. Organ Systems in Review The integration between systems of the body Figure 1-2

  7. Function versus Process • Function explains the “why” • Teleological approach • Process or mechanism describes the “how” • Mechanistic approach • Red blood cell example

  8. Homeostasis • Environmental balance • External • Internal • Cell • Intracellular fluid • Extracellular fluid

  9. Homeostasis Relationships between an organism’s internal and external environments Figure 1-3

  10. Homeostasis and Controls • External or internal change • Physiological attempt to correct • Sensors, integrating center • Response of cells and organs • Loss of homeostasis

  11. Homeostasis and Controls • Successful compensation • Homeostasis reestablished • Failure to compensate • Pathophysiology • Illness • Death

  12. Homeostasis and Controls Figure 1-4

  13. Current Thought in Physiology • Genomics to proteomics • The Human Genome Project • The Physiome Project • Challenges of an integrative science • Levels of organization • Multi-component systems • Emergent properties • Tools • Concept mapping

  14. Concept Mapping • Structure and function • Integration across • Cells, tissues, and organs • Flow charts • Follow process in sequence

  15. Concept Mapping: Types of Maps Figure 1-5a

  16. Concept Mapping: Types of Maps Figure 1-5b

  17. Themes in Physiology • Homeostasis and control systems • Biological energy • Structure-function relationships • Molecular interactions • Compartmentation • Mechanical properties • Communication

  18. Themes in Physiology A simple control system Figure 1-6

  19. Scientific Inquiry and Knowledge • Observation and experimentation • Hypothesis • Variables, controls, and data • Replication • Theories and models

  20. Human Experiments • Difficult to interpret results • Genetic variables • Placebo effect • Nocebo effect • Ethics

  21. Formats of Experimental Design • Crossover studies • Blind studies • Double-blind studies • Double-blind crossover studies

  22. Time Duration of Experiments • Longitudinal studies • Prospective studies • Cross-sectional studies • Retrospective studies • Meta-analysis

  23. Representing DataGraphs: X- and Y-Axes Figure 1-7a

  24. Representing DataGraphs: Bar Figure 1-7b

  25. Representing DataGraphs: Histogram Figure 1-7c

  26. Representing DataGraphs: Line and Interpolation Figure 1-7d

  27. Representing DataGraphs: Scatter Plot and “Best Fit” Line Figure 1-7e

  28. Scientific Literature • Books • Journals • Peer-reviewed • Review articles • Internet • Google • Google Scholar

  29. Summary • Organ systems • Structures and functions • Homeostatic balance • Integrative science • Four key themes • Experimental designs • Data representation • Scientific literature

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