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Anatomy - The Study of Form. Observation of surface structureCadaver dissection is cutting
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1. Chapter 1Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Structure and Function
Origins of Biomedical Science
Scientific Method
Human Evolution
Nature of Life
Homeostasis
2. Anatomy - The Study of Form Observation of surface structure
Cadaver dissection is cutting & separation of tissues to study their relationships
Comparative anatomy is the study of more than one species to analyze evolutionary trends
Physical examination
palpation, auscultation, percussion
Gross anatomy is what is visible with naked eye
Histology is examination of cells with microscope
3. Physiology - The Study of Function Study of bodily functions by use of methods of experimental science
Comparative physiology involves the study of different species
Basis for the development of new drugs and medical procedures
4. Beginnings of Medicine Physicians in Mesopotamia & Egypt 3000 years ago used herbal drugs, salts & physical therapy
Greek physician Hippocrates established a code of ethics & urged physicians to seek causes of disease
Aristotle called causes for disease physiologi & said that complex structures are built from simpler parts
Galen, physician to the Roman gladiators, saw science as a method of discovery
did animal dissections since use of cadavers banned
wrote book advising followers to trust their own observation
5. Birth of Modern Medicine Little advancement during the Middle ages since medicine was taught as dogma with no new ideas
Avicenna from Muslim world supported free inquiry over authority
wrote The Canon of Medicine, used in medical schools until 16th century
Vesalius accurately illustrated gross anatomy in 1543
Harvey realized blood flow out from heart & back in 1628
Leeuwenhoek invented microscope to look at fabrics (1632-1723)
Hooke and Zeiss (1830)developed & improved compound microscope (wrote Micrographia in 1665)
Schleiden & Schwann thought that all organisms were composed of cells -- cell theory of 1839
Clinical practice was in dismal state
bleeding patients to remove toxins, operate with dirty hands, no anesthesia for amputations
6. Living in a Revolution Pioneers in establishing the scientific way of thinking occurred in 19th & 20th centuries
germ theory of disease
mechanisms of heredity & structure of DNA
Now, on threshold of modern biomedical science
Technology enhanced diagnostic ability & life-support strategies
Verge of a genetic revolution due to library of the molecular structure of every human gene
7. Scientific Method Bacon (1561-1626) and Descartes (1596-1650)
were not scientists but did invent new habits of scientific thought
scientific method as habits of disciplined creativity, careful observations, logical thinking & analysis of observations
way of seeking trends & drawing generalizations
Convinced governments of England & France to form academies of science that still exist today
Scientific way of thinking based on assumptions & methods that are reliable, objective & testable
8. Inductive Method First described by philosopher Francis Bacon
Making observations until capable of drawing generalizations and making predictions
anatomy is a product of inductive method
Proof in science can not go past “proved beyond reasonable doubt”
reliable methods of observation
tested and confirmed repeatedly
not falsified by any credible observation
In science, all truth is tentative
9. Hypothetico-Deductive Method Physiological knowledge gained by this method
Ask a question and formulate a hypothesis -- an educated possible answer
Good hypothesis
consistent with what is already known
capable of being tested and falsified
Falsifiability means that certain evidence would prove something wrong
if nothing could prove it wrong, it is not a scientific belief
10. Proper Experimental Design Sufficient sample size to prevent chance event
Control group receiving the same treatment except for the variable being tested
Prevention of psychosomatic effects
use of placebo in control group
Experimenter bias
prevented with double-blind study
Statistical testing to be sure the difference between groups was not random, but was due to variable being tested
11. Peer Review Critical evaluation by other experts in the field
Ensures honesty, objectivity & quality in science
12. Facts, Laws and Theories Scientific fact is information that can be independently verified by any trained person
iron deficiency leads to anemia
Law of nature is a generalization about the way matter and energy behave -- resulting from inductive reasoning & repeated observations
first law of thermodynamics is that energy can be converted from one form to another but not destroyed
Theory is an explanatory statement that makes predictions and suggests areas for further study
sliding filament theory, fluid-mosaic theory, cell theory
13. Human Evolution Charles Darwin proposed the theory of natural selection to explain how species originate and change through time
On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (1859)
The Descent of Man (1871) discussed human evolution & our relationships to other animals
Changed our view of our origin, our nature & our place in the universe
Good understanding of our evolutionary history deepens our understanding of form & function
14. Evolution, Selection, and Adaptation Evolution is change in genetic composition of a population of organisms
development of bacterial resistance to antibiotics, new strains of AIDS virus and new species
Theory of natural selection
some individuals have hereditary advantages (adaptations) enabling them to produce more offspring
if they pass these characteristics on it brings about a genetic change in the population (evolution)
forces that favor some individuals over others are called selection pressures -- climate, disease, etc.
15. Evidence of Human Evolution DNA hybridization suggests a difference of only 1.6% in DNA structure between humans & chimpanzees
Evolutionary developments help explain some aspects of our anatomy
arrector pili muscle in the skin have no use
auricularis muscles do not move in most people
Evolutionary relationships help us chose animals for biomedical research
rats & mice used extensively
16. Life in the Trees Origin of primates began 60 million years ago
Squirrel-sized, insect-eating mammals became arboreal probably due to safety, food supply & lack of competition
shoulder became more mobile (reach any direction)
thumbs became opposable to be able to encircle branches with thumb & fingers (prehensile)
forward-facing eyes provide (depth perception)
judge distances accurately to jump & catch prey
color vision to distinguish ripe fruit
larger brains & good memory to remember food sources
17. Walking Upright African forest became grassland 5 million years ago
Bipedalism (standing & walking on 2 legs) evolved
spot predators, carry food or infants
Adaptations for bipedalism
pelvis, femur, knee, great toe, arch, skull, vertebrae, etc.
Australopithecus (2.5mya) gave rise Homo habilis
taller, larger brain volume, speech, tool-making
Homo erectus (1.1mya) and Homo sapiens (.3mya)
Homo sapiens include Neanderthal & Cro-Magnon
18. Primate Phylogeny
19. What is Life? Properties that distinguish from nonliving things:
organization & cellular composition
biochemical composition (DNA, proteins, etc)
metabolism is transformation of molecules into others
responsiveness is ability to sense & react to stimuli
homeostasis is to maintain stable internal environment
development is change over time (growth or differentiation)
reproduction is producing copies of themselves
evolution is genetic change between generations
Clinical death is no brain waves for 24 hours
20. What is a Human? Phylum Chordata
Subphylum Vertebrata
Class Mammalia
Order Primates
Family Hominidae
Genus Homo
Species Homo sapiens
21. Our Chordate Characteristics Notochord
flexible rod on upper side of body -- replaced by vertebral column during development
Dorsal hollow nerve cord
Gill pouches
bulges in throat region develop into gills in fish & amphibians
Postanal tail
GI tracts end before end of tail
tail in humans visible only in embryo
22. Our Vertebrate Characteristics Subphylum Vertebrata
Characteristics of all
internal skeleton
jointed vertebral (spinal) column
well developed brain & sense organs
cranium to protect the brain
23. Our Mammalian Characteristics Class Mammalia
Characteristics of all
mammary glands for nourishment of young
hair to retain body heat
endothermy is ability to generate most of body heat
heterodonty is possession of varied types of teeth
single lower jawbone provides for better chewing
3 middle ear bones
24. Primate & Hominid Characteristics Order Primates
Characteristics of all
4 upper and lower incisors for front cutting
pair of clavicles (collarbones)
only 2 mammary glands
pendulous penis, attached only at base
forward-facing eyes with stereoscopic vision
flat nails in place of claws
opposable thumbs
Family Hominidae are only bipedal primates
Homo sapiens are only surviving species
25. Structure - A Hierarchy of Complexity Subatomic particles compose atoms
Atoms compose molecules
Molecules compose organelles
Organelles compose cells
Cells compose tissues
Tissues compose organs
Organs compose organ systems
Organ systems compose the organism
26. Homeostasis Hippocrates noted that body normally returns to a state of equilibrium by itself
needs to detect the change & oppose it
Walter Cannon (1871-1945) coined the term homeostasis indicating stable internal environment
Internal environment described as dynamic equilibrium
fluctuates within a range around a certain set point
27. Negative Feedback and Stability Mechanism to keep a variable close to its set point
Body senses a change & activates mechanisms to reverse it
28. Negative Feedback, Set Point Room temperature does not stay at set point of 68 degrees -- it only averages 68 degrees
29. Human Thermoregulation Temperature sensing nerve cells in base of brain control shivering, sweating & vasomotor activity
vasodilation & vasoconstriction
Evaporation of water & heat radiation occur
30. Structures Needed for Feedback Loop Receptor = structure that senses change
stretch receptors in heart & large blood vessels send information of an elevated BP to integrator
Integrator = control center
cardiac center in brainstem that signals heart to slow
Effector = structures that carry out commands of the control center
heart slows and BP decreases
31. Positive Feedback Loops Self-amplifying cycle in which a physiological change leads to an even greater change in the same direction
Normal way of producing changes during birth, blood clotting, protein digestion & generation of nerve signals
32. Fever If temperature rises above 108 degrees
metabolic rate increases causing body to produce heat faster still
Temperature increases & cycle repeats again
Fatal at 113 degrees
33. Review of Major Themes Unifying principles behind all aspects of human anatomy and physiology
cell theory: all structure & function result from the activity of cells
homeostasis: maintaining stable conditions within the body
evolution: the body is a product of evolution, molded by years of natural selection
hierarchy of structure: levels of complexity
unity of form and function: physiology can not be separated from anatomy
34. Noninvasive Medical Imaging Radiography
x-rays discovered by William Roentgen in 1885
penetrate soft tissues of body & darken photographic film on other side of the body
Sonography
handheld device produces high-frequency ultrasound waves and receives echoes back from internal organs
obstetrics uses to locate placenta, evaluate fetal age, position and development
used medically in the 1950s but little value until computers could develop differences in echoes
35. Noninvasive Medical Imaging Computed Tomography (CT scan)
low-intensity X rays applied to the body
computer analysis produces an image of a slice of the body about as thin as a coin from which a three-dimensional image of the body is constructed
tumors, aneurysms, hemorrhages, kidney stones, etc
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
magnetic field aligns hydrogen atoms; radio waves realign the atoms; when radio is turned off the atoms give off energy depending on tissue type
computer analysis produces a “slice” type image
36. Noninvasive Medical Imaging Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
assesses the metabolic state of a tissue
injection of radioactively labeled glucose emits positrons; colliding positrons & electrons give off gamma rays that are analyzed by computer
color image which tissue were using glucose at the moment
extent of damaged heart tissue
activity of brain of neurology patients