270 likes | 290 Views
By : Aguslina Kirtishanti. Introduction of Human Anatomy and Physiology. REFERENCES. Martini FH, 2006, Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology , 7 th edition, Benjamin Cummings, San Fransisco , CA 94111, USA. Fox SI, 1999, Human Physiology , 6 th edition, McGraw-Hill Copany , USA.
E N D
By : AguslinaKirtishanti Introduction of Human Anatomy and Physiology
REFERENCES • Martini FH, 2006, Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology, 7th edition, Benjamin Cummings, San Fransisco, CA 94111, USA. • Fox SI, 1999, Human Physiology, 6th edition, McGraw-Hill Copany, USA. • Guyton AC, 2000, Textbook Medical of Physiology, 10th edition, WB Saunder Co, Philadelphia, USA.
DEFINITION • Anatomy : the study of internal and external structures of the body and physical relationships among body parts. • Physiology is the study of the function of anatomical structures.
The Organ System • The Integumentary System • The Skeletal System • The Muscular System • The Nervous System • The Endocrine System • The Cardiovascular System • The Lymphatic System • The Respiratory System • The Digestive System • The Urinary System • The Reproductive System (Male and Female)
Homeostasis • Homeostasis : Physiological systems work together to maintain a stable internal environment. • Failure to maintain homeostasis due to illness or even death. • Two general mechanism are involved in homeostasic regulation : • Autoregulation or intrinsic regulation • Extrinsic regulation
Homeostasis • A homeostatic regulatory mechanism consists of three parts : • Receptor • Control center • Effector
Homeostasis • The homeostatic regulatory mechanism involve : • Negative feedback • Positive feedback
Cellular Level Organization • The basic concepts of this theory : • Cells are the building blocks of all plants and animals. • All cells come from the division of preexisting cells. • Cells are the smallest units that perform all vital physiological functions. • Each cell maintains homeostasis at the cellular level.
The Cell Membrane • Functions of cell membrane : • Physical isolation • Regulation of exchange with the environment • Sensitivity to the environment • Structural support • The cell membrane is extremely thin and delicate, ranging from 6 to 10 nm in thickness. This membrane contain lipids, proteins and carbohydrates.
The Cell Membrane Membrane Lipids Phospholipidbilayer(42%), in each half of the bilayer, the phospholipid lie with their hydrophilic heads at the membrane surface and their hydrophobic tails on the inside. Membrane Proteins 55% of the weight of a cell membrane. There are two general structural classes of membrane proteins : Integral proteins and Peripheral proteins.
The Cell Membrane The functional protein include the following : • Anchoring proteins • Recognition proteins • Enzymes • Receptor proteins • Carrier proteins • Channels
The Cell Membrane Membrane Carbohydrates The carbohydrates in the cell membrane are components of complex molecules such as proteoglycans, glycoproteins and glycolipids. The function of membrane carbohydrates are : • Lubrication and protection • Anchoring and locomotion • Specificity in binding • Recognition
How Things Get Into and Out of Cells The three major categories are as follows : • Diffusion : simple diffusion and osmosis. Diffusion is a passive process. • Carrier-mediated transport. It can be passive or active. For examples : facilitated diffusion, the sodium-potassium exchange pump, secondary active transport. • Vesicular transport : endocytosis and exocytosis.
BODY TISSUES • Epithelial Tissue: simple epithelia dan stratified epithelia, glandular epithelia • Connective Tissues : bone, hyaline cartilage, dense fibrous tissue, areolar tissue, adipose tissue, reticular connective tissue, blood. • Neural Tissue : neuron dan supporting cells. • Muscle Tissue : skeletal muscle tissue, smooth muscle tissue, cardiac muscle tissue.