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Introduction to Human Physiology. XIA Qiang, M.D. & Ph.D. Department of Physiology Room 518, Block C, Research Building School of Medicine, Zijingang Campus Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cn Tel: 88208252. Course Structure. Lectures: 80 academic hours 5 a.h./week 2 a.h. on Tue., 3 a.h. on Fri.
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Introduction to Human Physiology XIA Qiang, M.D. & Ph.D. Department of Physiology Room 518, Block C, Research Building School of Medicine, Zijingang Campus Email: xiaqiang@zju.edu.cn Tel: 88208252
Course Structure • Lectures: 80 academic hours • 5 a.h./week • 2 a.h. on Tue., 3 a.h. on Fri. • Practicals: 64 a.h. • 4 a.h./week
Evaluation Participation in practicals: 5% Practical reports: 15% Weekly assessments & midterm exam: 20% Final examination: 60%
Recommended textbook Widmaier EP, Raff H, Strang KT (2006) Vander’s Human Physiology: The Mechanisms of Body Function, Tenth Edition. McGraw-Hill.
Course website • University Course Center: • http://10.202.77.12/ • Course website: • http://10.202.77.12/JWCenterWeb/TemplateView?tempName=null&id=null&websiteId=26519&type=1&codeName=columnsun&courseWebsiteId=69995
Life Logic Study 生 理 学 Physiology: the study of the logic of life
Viral Physiology Bacterial Physiology …… Physiology Human Physiology Plant Physiology Animal Physiology
Human Physiology • Specificcharacteristics, functions and mechanisms of the human body that make it a living being What ? How ?
History of Physiology C. Galen (129-200) (Ancient Greco-Roman)
Rise of modern physiology De Motu Cordis “On The Motion Of The Heart And Blood In Animals” (1628) (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1628harvey-blood.html) W. Harvey (1578-1657) (English)
An Italian physiologist who used a microscope to discover the capillaries, crowning Harvey’s investigation M. Malpighi (1628-1694)
A French physiologist known for his idea of theinternal environment (1813-1878)
A Russian physiologist known chiefly for his development of the concept of the conditioned reflex Awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1904 Павлов (Ivan Pavlov) (1849-1936)
中国生理学会 Chinese Association for Physiological Sciences (founded in 1926) 林可胜(Robert Kho Seng Lim)(1897-1969) “Father of Chinese Modern Physiology”
1.3 340/380 0.6 5s 5s Measurement of [Ca2+]i 120 Cell length (m) 90 Measurement of cell shortening 1. Cellular and molecular Physiology
3. Integrative Physiology Acute experiment
Body Fluid = 60% of Body Weight (BW) Plasma 5% of BW Extracellular Fluid 1/3, 20% of BW Interstitial Fluid 15% of BW 70 kg Male, 42 L Intracellular Fluid 2/3, 40% of BW Internal environment
Plasma 5% of BW Extracellular Fluid 1/3, 20% of BW Interstitial Fluid 15% of BW Internal Environment External Environment
Extracellular Fluid= Internal Environment
Homeostasis Homeostasis(from the Greek words for “same” and “steady”): maintenance of static or constant conditions in the internal environment W. Cannon
Components of Homeostasis: • Concentration of O2 and CO2 • pH of the internal environment • Concentration of nutrients and waste products • Concentration of salt and other electrolytes • Volume and pressure of extracellular fluid
How is homeostasis achieved? ----Regulation Body's systems operate together to maintain homeostasis: Skin system Skeletal and muscular system Circulatory system Respiratory system Digestive system Urinary system Nervous system Endocrine system Lymphatic system Reproductive system
Regulation of body functions • Nervous Regulation • Humoral Regulation • Autoregulation
Nervous regulation Reflex Knee jerk reflex
Reflex Arc • Receptor • Afferent (sensory) nerve • Reflex center (brain or spinal cord) • Efferent (motor) nerve • Effector
Hormone Endocrine cells Receptor Hormone Humoral regulation Traditional description of humoral regulation by hormone
Endocrine action:the hormone is distributed in blood and binds to distant target cells • Paracrine action:the hormone acts locally by diffusing from its source to target cells in the neighborhood • Autocrine action:the hormone acts on the same cell that produced it
Neuroendocrine (Neurosecretion) Vasopressin Oxytocin
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Autoregulation Definition:Intrinsic (independent of any neural or humoral influences) ability of an organ to maintain a constant blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure Mechanism: Stretch-activated constriction of vessels Significance: Maintenance of near-constant cerebral, renal and coronary blood flow
Control systems of the body CYBERNETICS or Control and Communicationin the Animal and the Machine (MIT Press 1948) Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) Originator of Cybernetics
Stimulus Response Control Center Effectors 1. Non-automatic Control System Open-loop system Seldom seen under physiological conditions Stress
Stimulus Response Control Center Effectors 2. Feedback Control System Closed-loop system Automatic control Negative feedback Positive feedback
Negative feedback:common A change in a condition leads to responses from the effectors which counteracts that change
Examples: Regulation of blood pressure, Regulation of body temperature, Regulation of hormone release…
Correction Gain= Error Gain of the negative feedback: The degree of effectiveness with which a control system maintains conditions
+ Positive feedback:uncommon A change in a condition leads to responses from the effectors which amplifies that change
Examples: Child birth Micturition Blood coagulation Vicious circle under pathophysiological conditions…
3. Feed-forward Control Often seen in nervous system Rapid Adaptive control Examples: some muscle contraction, conditioned reflex