400 likes | 922 Views
Anatomy and Physiology. OBJECTIVE Without reference, identify at least four out of six principles about anatomy and physiology as they relate to general medical equipment. Anatomy and Physiology (Continued). Circulatory System Functions Respiration
E N D
Anatomy and Physiology OBJECTIVE Without reference, identify at least four out of six principles about anatomy and physiology as they relate to general medical equipment.
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Circulatory System • Functions • Respiration • Oxygenated blood is delivered from the lungs to the body • Carbon dioxide enriched blood is carried from the body to the lungs • Nutrition - erythrocytes carry food absorbed from the intestines to the tissue cells
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Protection • Leukocytes fight infection • Thrombocytes aid in the clotting process to stop bleeding • Excretion - waste products are removed from the cells and carried to kidneys for filtration and removal
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Regulation • Temperature - the circulation of blood in the body acts similar to the circulation of anti-freeze in a combustion engine • Hormone distribution
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Two main divisions • Pulmonary - refers to the respiratory functions of the circulatory system (oxygenation and de-oxygenation of blood) • Systemic - refers to the distribution of nutrients throughout the body
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Heart – a four chambered muscular pump about the size of a fist that lies tilted to the right in the chest with the apex (pointed end) resting on the top diaphragm and the base (broad end) on the top
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • The pericardiumis a sac like structure surrounding the heart that contains a fluid which cushions and lubricates the heart • The right atrium is the chamber that collects de-oxygenated blood from the body
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • The right ventricle is the pumping chamber that sends de-oxygenated blood to the lungs for oxygenation • The left atrium is the chamber use for collecting oxygenated blood from the lungs • The left ventricle is the pumping chamber that sends oxygenated blood to the body
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Layers of the Heart • The outer layer is the epicardium • The middle layer which is comprised of muscle tissue is the myocardium • The inner layer lining the camber walls is the endocardium.
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • The sinoatrial node is the impulse generating (pacemaker) tissue located in the right atrium • The atrioventricular node conducts the normal electrical impulse from the atria to the ventricles, located between the atria and ventricles
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • The bundle of hiss is the small band of specialized cardiac muscle fibers that maintain the normal sequence of the heartbeat by conducting energy from the right atrium to the ventricles • Purkinje fibers – conducts the pacemaker stimulus along the inside walls of the ventricles to all parts of the heart
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Myocardial cell activity • Polarization • Heart cells are charged (polarized) negatively in the resting state • Negatively charged interior • Positively charged surface • No physical response, only electrical activity
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Depolarization • When electrically stimulated, the heart cells become positively charged (depolarized) • The physical response of the cells to depolarization is contraction of the heart • Repolarization • Following contraction, the electrical realigning of the heart cells to their polarized state • Returns to resting state
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Electrical activity of the heart cells • Produces approximately -90 mvof electricity in the resting state (polarized) • +20 to +40 mvof electricity when fully depolarized • Passes through the heart and is picked up by external skin electrodes and recorded as an electrocardiogram
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Blood vessels • Arteries - thick walled, elastic vessels which carry blood away FROM the heart • Arterioles - small branches of arteries which control blood flow by constriction and dilation
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Capillaries- smallest blood vessels with walls only one cell thick. All exchanges of food and oxygen occur here • Veins - large, thin walled, non-muscular vessels which carry blood back to the heart. Veins also contain valve to prevent back flow • Venules - small beginning branches of veins
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Blood • Cellular portion makes up about 45% of the blood volume • Red blood cells (RBC) - carry oxygen • White blood cells (WBC) - fight infection • Platelets - aid in coagulation
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Liquid (plasma) portion makes up about 55% of the blood volume • Acts as a support for the cellular portion of the blood • Contains dissolved nutrients and chemicals
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Major arteries • Pulmonary - connects the right ventricle with the lungs • Aorta - carries blood from the left ventricle to the body
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Coronary(right and left) - first branch from the aorta, supplies the heart muscle with blood • Femoral - supplies the legs • Brachial - supplies the arms • Carotid - supplies the head
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) Coronary Artery
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Major veins • Superior vena cava - returns blood from the head, arms and upper chest • Inferior vena cava - returns blood from the legs, abdomen and lower chest • Most veins have the same name as their corresponding artery
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) Vein Viewer – uses infrared and projector to view veins in real time
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Respiratory system • Terms • External respiration is the exchange of gases between an organism and its environment • Diffusion is the gaseous exchange of air in the alveoli of the lungs with the blood • Internal respiration is the exchange of air in the capillaries with body cells
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Structures of the respiratory system • Nasal cavity • Warms and moistens the air entering the body • Lined with cilia to remove dust and foreign particles (aided by mucous) • The Pharynx is thepathway for breathing as well as a muscular tube for the passage of food • The larynx is known as theorgan of sound (voice box)
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Trachea (windpipe) • A rigid tube constructed of cartilaginous rings • Lined with cilia to acts as a filter • Runs anterior to the esophagus from the larynx to where it branches
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Bronchial tree • Bronchi – a branching set of tubes from the trachea which leads to the lungs • Bronchioles – smaller branches of bronchi which conduct air into the lungs
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Alveoli • Small sac like structures at the end of the bronchioles • Alveoli sacs are surrounded by capillaries • Separation between the sacs and capillaries is very thin • Oxygen and carbon dioxide readily diffuse between air and the blood in the capillaries • This is the only place gas exchangetakes place in the body
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Lungs • The primary organ for respiration • Consists of two cone shaped organs
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Divided into lobes – the right lung has three lobes and the left lung has two lobes • The pleura is themembrane which surrounds the lungs • Each lung has its own pleura • Filled with pleura fluid to reduce friction
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Muscles of respiration • The diaphragm is a dome shaped muscle which forms the floor of the thoracic cavity • The main muscle of respiration • Contraction causes inspiration by moving down and enlarging the cavity
Anatomy and Physiology (Continued) • Intercostalmuscles are located between the ribs; contraction causes inspiration • Phases of respiration • Inspiration • Fresh air is taken into the lungs • Oxygen diffuses in the blood and carbon dioxide diffuses into the air • Expiration – air is expelled