A&P 1 The Sciences of Anatomy and Physiology (Basics for Ch. 1)
Cellular level
Cells basic units of structure and function in organisms
What forms if homeostasis is not contained within range?
Disease forms
Regional anatomy
Division of gross anatomy. Examines all of the structures in a particular region of the body.
Comparative anatomy
Division of gross anatomy. Examines anatomical similarities and differences in different species.
Surface anatomy
Division of gross anatomy. Focuses on superficial anatomic markings and internal body structures.
Systemic anatomy
Division of gross anatomy. Studies anatomy of each functional body system.
Embryology
Division of gross anatomy. Studies developmental changes from conception to birth.
Cytology
Division of microscopic anatomy .Study of the body cells and their internal structure (Cyto= cell).
Histology
Division of microscopic anatomy. Study of tissues
Pathologic Anatomy
Examines all anatomic changes resulting from disease.
Coronal Plane
Frontal plane- a vertical plane that divides the body or organ into front and back parts.
Transverse Plane
Horizontal plane or cross-sectional plane-divides the body or organ into top and bottom parts.
Oblique planes
pass through structure at an angle
Homeostasis
the ability of an organism to maintain consistent internal environment, or "steady state", in response to changing internal or external conditions.
Developing diagnosis
-Examine patient and gather data. -Initial hypothetical diagnosis -Order tests -Confirm, modify, or reject initial diagnosis -Make a diagnosis
Scientific Method
1. Make and observation 2. Develop a hypothesis 3. Collect data 4. Analyze data to determine whether it supports the hypothesis, or if the hypothesis should be rejected or modified
Gross anatomy
Also called macroscopic anatomy. Investigates structures visible to the unaided eye. Specimens dissected for examination.
Levels of Organization in the body (5 levels in order)
Chemical level, cellular level, tissue level, organ level, organ system level
Organ System level
Contains related organs working together to achieve a common function (11 organ systems)
Negative feedback
Controls most processes in the body. Homeostatic control responds to move variable in opposite direction to bring it into normal range. (Ex: withdraw reflex in response to injury)
Control Center
Interprets input from receptor and initiates changes through effector. -Nervous system can provide a quicker response (blood pressure upon rising) -Endocrine response is more sustained (hours or days)
Radiographic Anatomy
Looks at relationships among internal structures that may be visualized by scanning procedures (Sonography, MRI, x-ray)
Midsagittal Plane
Median plane- divides the body or organ into left and right halves.
Positive feedback
Occurs much less. Stimulus reinforced to continue moving variable in the same direction until and climactic even occurs, then body returns to homeostasis. (Ex: child birth or breast feeding)
Organ level
Organs contain 2 or more tissue types that work together to perform specific complex functions
What are the 3 components of homeostatic systems?
Receptor, Control Center, Effector
Receptor
detects changes in a variable caused by a stimulus
Sagittal plane
divide structure into left or right portions that are not equal
Physiology
examines how the body functions
Microscopic anatomy
examines structures that cannot be observed by unaided eye Specimens are examined under a microscope
Tissue level
groups of cells that perform functions. There are 4 major types of tissues (epithelial, connective, muscle, nervous)
Effector
is the structure that carries out the change
Appendicular region
relating to an appendage or limb (arms and legs)
Axial region
relating to the central part of body (head, neck, and trunk)
Chemical level
simplest level involving atoms and molecules
Anatomic postion
stands upright with feet parallel and flat on floor, upper limbs are at sides of body, palms facing toward front, head is level, eyes looking at observer.
Anatomy
studies the form and structure of the body
Are form and function interrelated?
yes. Anatomy and physiology work together