1 / 72

HUMAN ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY for COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING

Explore the classification of humans, the definition of anatomy, structural levels of organization, and the systems of the human body. Learn about the different kingdoms and phyla within the animal kingdom, including Eubacteria, Archaebacteria, Protista, Fungi, Plantae, and Animalia. Dive into the characteristics and classifications of each kingdom and understand the importance of studying all phases of the life cycle for proper classification.

wburton
Download Presentation

HUMAN ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY for COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING

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. HUMAN ANATOMY &PHYSIOLOGYforCOMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE & ENGINEERING

  2. GENERAL HUMAN ANATOMY

  3. PERSPECTIVES • The Classification of Humans • The Definition of Anatomy • Structural Levels of Organization • The Relationship of Structure to Function • The Systems of the Human Body

  4. CLASSIFICATION OF HUMANS • Classification Scheme • Kingdom: Animalia • Phylum: Chordata • Subphylum: Vertebrata • Class: Mammalia • Order: Primate • Family: Hominidae • Genus: Homo • Species: Sapiens • Scientific Binominal:Homo sapiens

  5. KINGDOM • 6 Recognized Kingdoms • Eubacteria • Archaebacteria • Protista • Fungi • Plantae • Animalia

  6. EUBACTERIA • Characteristics • Prokaryotes • Unicellular • Microscopic • Kinds • Decomposers • Parasites • Some Photosynthetic • Some recycle nitrogen

  7. ARCHAEBACTERIA • Characteristics • Prokaryotes • Unicellular • microscopic • Differ biochemically from Eubacteria • Kinds • Methanogens • Halophiles • Thermophiles

  8. PROTISTA • Characteristics • Eukaryotes • Mostly unicellular • Kinds • Protozoa, Algae and Slime Molds

  9. FUNGI • Characteristics • Eukaryotes • Heterotrophic • Absorb nutrients, do not photosynthesize • Kinds • Decomposers; some parasitic

  10. PLANTAE • Characteristics • Eukaryotes • Multicellular • Photosynthetic • Kinds • Primary producers; important source of oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere

  11. ANIMALIA Characteristics • Eukaryotes • Multicellular Organisms • Must eat other organisms for nourishment • High degree of tissue and body organization in complex animals • Motility • Complex Sense Organs • Nervous Systems • Muscular Systems

  12. PHYLA of the Animal Kingdom • Range • from Simple (Phylum Protozoa) • to complex (Phylum Chordata) • Phylogeny = the study of Phyla • Ontogeny = the study of individual development • Embryology = the study of prenatal development • Classification requires the study of all phases of the life cycle

  13. Phylum: Chordata • Characteristics • Dorsal hollow Nerve Cord • Notochord • Pharyngeal Pouches • Seen in all Chordates • In some, only present in the embryo • Must study embryology to properly classify

  14. Dorsal hollow Nerve Cord • See in human embryos • Lies dorsal to the Notochord • Develops into the Brain and Spinal Cord of adults

  15. Notochord • Flexible rod of tissue • Mid-dorsal • Position later occupied by the vertebral column • In adult, only remnants are inside intervertebral discs

  16. Pharyngeal Pouches • Envaginations of pharyngeal walls • Gill slits in fish • In human adults, become: • Eustachian tube • Middle ear cavity • Tympanic membrane

  17. Subphylum: Vertebrata • Characteristics • Animals with backbones • Forms a vertebral column • In most animals, largely replaces the notochord • Endoskeleton • Closed circulatory system • Paired kidneys that regulate fluid balance • Complete digestive system • Sexes typically separate

  18. Subphylum: Vertebrata • Other Characteristics • Bilateral Symmetry • An animal can be sectioned into right and left haves; one the mirror image of the other • Segmentation • Tube-within-a-tube body plan • Body Cavities

  19. Subphylum: Vertebrata • Other Characteristics • Bilateral Symmetry • Segmentation: • Tube-within-a-tube body plan • Body Cavities

  20. Subphylum: Vertebrata • Other Characteristics • Bilateral Symmetry • Segmentation • Tube-within-a-tube body plan: • Tube formed by digestive organs within the body • Body Cavities

  21. Subphylum: Vertebrata • Other Characteristics • Bilateral Symmetry • Segmentation • Tube-within-a-tube body plan • Body Cavities: • Closed to the external environment • Contain internal organs

  22. Body Cavities: Dorsal • Cranial Cavity • Houses the Brain • Vertebral Canal • Houses the Spinal Cord

  23. Body Cavities: Ventral(Lateral View) • Thoracic Cavity • Abdominopelvic Cavity (contains the “viscera”) • Abdominal Cavity • Pelvic Cavity • Lined by serous membranes

  24. Body Cavities: Thoracic(Anterior View) • Mediastinum: a potential space that contains the heart, great vessels, trachea, esophagus, etc • Plural Cavities: contain the lungs • Pericardial Cavity: contains the heart

  25. Serous Cavities • Ventral Body Cavity • Lined by a serous membrane, or Serosa • Parietal serosa: forms outer wall of cavity • Visceral serosa: covers the visceral organs • Serous fluid • Secreted by the membranes • Is slick; reduces friction

  26. Serous Pericardium • Around the Heart • Parietal Pericardium • Visceral Pericardium • Pericardial Cavity • Filled with serous fluid

  27. The Plural Cavities • Around the Lungs • Parietal Pleura: • lines walls of thoracic cavity • Visceral Pleura: • covers each lung

  28. The Peritoneal Cavity • Around some abdominopelvic organs • Contained within the abdominopelvic cavity • Parietal Peritoneum • Covers wall of abdominopelvic cavity • Visceral Peritoneum • Covers organs of the peritoneal cavity • Some organs are retroperitoneal

  29. Abdominal Divisions • Quadrants: 4 • Right Upper Quadrant • Right Lower Quadrant • Left Upper Quadrant • Left Lower Quadrant

  30. Abdominal Divisions • Regions: 9 • Rt Hypochondriac region • Rt Lumbar region • Rt Iliac (Inguinal) region • Epigastric region • Umbilical region • Hypogastric (Pubic) region • Lt Hypochondriac region • Lt Lumbar region • Lt Iliac (Inguinal) region

  31. Other Cavities • Oral cavity • Nasal cavity • Orbital cavities • Middle ear cavities • Synovial cavities

  32. PERSPECTIVES • The Classification of Humans • The Definition of Anatomy • Structural Levels of Organization • The Relationship of Structure to Function • The Systems of the Human Body

  33. THE DEFINITION OF ANATOMY • Anatomy • Greek=to cut up, or dissect • The science that deals with the structure of the body • Kinds: • Gross Anatomy • Microscopic Anatomy • Developmental Anatomy • Comparative Anatomy

  34. Gross Anatomy • Definition: • That which can be seen with the naked eye • Kinds: • Regional: • body studied by area • Systematic: • body studied by system

  35. Microscopic Anatomy • Definition: • That which can be seen with the assisted eye • Kinds: • Cytology: • The study of cells • Histology: • The study of tissues • Organology: • The study of organs

  36. Developmental Anatomy • Definition: • The study of anatomical changes in a life cycle • Kinds: • Embryology: • The study of prenatal development • Postnatal development: • The study of structures after birth • Ontogeny: • Total development of an individual

  37. Comparative Anatomy • Definition: • Comparison of structures between organisms • Kinds: • Vertebrate: • Comparison of structures among the vertebrate classes • Phylogeny: • The study of phyla, and their relationships

  38. Physiology • The scientific discipline that studies the function of body structures. • Structure and function cannot be completely separated. • Form is related to function

  39. History of Anatomy • In Western Civilization: began around the Mediterranean Sea • Mesopotamia • The Greeks • Hippocrates (~400 B.C.): Father of Medicine • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.): structure and function • Alexandria in Egypt • First Medical School, cadaver dissection • Herophilus (300 B.C.): Father of Anatomy • Rome (after Alexandria fell) • Galen (A.D. 130-201): “the supreme authority”

  40. History • After the Fall of Rome (476 A.D.): the dark ages • Medical knowledge saved by Byzantium and the Islamic world • monasteries • 1200’s • Out of the dark ages • Medical schools in Solerno, Bologna Italy • 1400’s: Renaissance • Leonardo de Vinci (1452-1519) • Vesalius: the “Reformer of Anatomy” (1514-1564) • Based on cadaver dissection again; corrected Galen • The father of modern anatomy • The emergence of modern medicine

  41. PERSPECTIVES • The Classification of Humans • The Definition of Anatomy • Structural Levels of Organization • The Relationship of Structure to Function • The Systems of the Human Body

  42. STRUCTURAL LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION • Chemical • Cellular • Tissue • Organ • System • Organism

  43. PERSPECTIVES • The Classification of Humans • The Definition of Anatomy • Structural Levels of Organization • The Relationship of Structure to Function • The Systems of the Human Body

  44. MAJOR FUNCTIONS • Metabolism: sum of all chemical processes that occur in the body • Anabolism: building; requires energy • Catabolism: break-down; releases energy • Excitability/Conductivity: • Contractility • Growth and Development • Reproduction

  45. PERSPECTIVES • The Classification of Humans • The Definition of Anatomy • Structural Levels of Organization • The Relationship of Structure to Function • The Systems of the Human Body

  46. Integumentary System • Components • Skin • Hair, nails • Function • External covering • Protection • Synthesis of Vitamin D • Location of Sense receptors

  47. Skeletal System • Components • Bones • Joints and adjacent cartilages • Function • Support • Protection • Movement • Blood cell production (red bone marrow) • Mineral storage (calcium and phosphorus)

  48. Muscular System • Components • Skeletal Muscles • Associated Connective Tissues (tendons) • Function • Locomotion • Manipulation of the environment • Facial expression (communication) • Maintain posture • Produce heat

  49. Circulatory System • Components • Cardiovascular System • Lymphatic System • Function • Transportation of materials • Within the body • To and from internal and external environments

  50. Cardiovascular System • Components • Heart • Vessels • Function • Transportation of blood • Blood contains O2 andCO2, nutrients, wastes, etc. • Blood composed of plasma and cells

More Related