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© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au Enabling Courses: Human Biology Principles of Anatomy and Physiology G.J. Tortora & B. Derrickson 13 th Edition, 2012 Copyright © 2012 by Biological Sciences Textbooks, Inc and Bryan Derrickson Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc, NJ. Module 1 Introduction to the Human Body
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Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

May 02, 2018

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Page 1: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Enabling Courses: Human Biology

Principles of Anatomy and Physiology

G.J. Tortora & B. Derrickson

13th Edition, 2012

Copyright © 2012 by Biological Sciences Textbooks, Inc and Bryan Derrickson

Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc, NJ.

Module 1

Introduction to the Human Body

Page 2: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Enabling Courses: Human Biology

o Enabling subjects:

• Introductory level of knowledge

• Self-paced and flexible

o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

medicines to some extent

o Aim: Develop a basic understanding of the human body

and knowledge of anatomical terminology

o Structure: 4 modules

• Best to complete in order

o Use activities, diagrams and quizzes to help you learn

Page 3: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Session Plan

o Introduction to anatomy and physiology

o Levels of organisation

o Basic life processes

o Homeostasis

• Positive and negative feedback

o Basic anatomical terminology

• Anatomical position

• Directional and regional terms

• Planes and sections

• Body cavities

• Abdominopelvic regions and quadrants

Page 4: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Key Words

o Bio = life, living

o -logy = study or science

o Cardi = heart

o Cerebro = brain

o Chondr = cartilage

o Crani = skull

o Derma = skin

o Epi = upon, on, above

o Endo = within, inside

o Hemi = half

o Micro = small

o Myo = muscle

o Osteo = bone

o Para = near

o Peri = around

o Pseudo = false

o Sub/Hypo = under,

beneath, below

o -itis = inflammation

Page 5: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Key Words Activity

List the meaning of the

following words:

1. Biology

2. Cardiology

3. Microbiology

4. Dermatology

5. Pericarditis

o Study of living things

o Study of the heart

o Study of microbes

o Study of the skin

o Inflammation of the

sack around the heart

Page 6: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Prokaryotes

o ~300 million years ago, in volcanic thermal springs, a

variety of chemical substances were in the process of

forming complex molecules (Attenborough, 1984)

Figure 1. Prokaryote (from

http://www.biology.about.com)

o After an immense period of

time, the first microscopic

living matter were produced:

bacteria, the first cells

o Bacterial cells are known as

prokaryotes

o Prokaryotes have a very basic

internal structure

Page 7: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Eukaryotes

o Over time, bacteria began to differentiate and specialise

into a variety of cells known as Eukaryotes

o Cells began to combine and form close relationships,

developing the first specialised tissues

o Tissues combined into complex

structures (organs) and allowed

growth, specialisation and

development of systems

o Eventually a very complex

collection of systems was formed:

The human body!

Figure 03.01 Tortora PAP 12/e

Copyright @ John Wiley & Sons Inc. All rights reserved

Page 8: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Anatomy & Physiology Defined

Human Biology

Science of human

anatomy and physiology

Physiology

How body systems function

Anatomy

Study of structure and

relation to other

structures

Anatomy and Physiology

Study of structure and

function

Page 9: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Levels of Organisation

1. Chemical

2. Cells

3. Tissues

4. Organs

5. Systems

6. Organism

Page 10: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Basic Life Processes

All living things have certain characteristics that set them apart from non-living things

Six important life processes of humans are:

1. Metabolism

2. Responsiveness

3. Movement

4. Growth

5. Differentiation

6. Reproduction

Page 11: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Homeostasis

o A process where the body’s internal environment remains steady even when there are changes in the external environment

• Homeo = sameness

• Stasis = standing still

o E.g. Internal body temperature maintained at 37º Celsius

o Feedback systems control homeostasis

• Continually monitoring, evaluating, changing, re-monitoring, re-evaluating, re-changing……

Page 12: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Negative Feedback Loops

o Negative feedback system reverses a change in a controlled condition

• E.g. When your body becomes hotter, it tries to cool itself down

o Negative feedback systems tend to regulate conditions that are held fairly stable.

Page 13: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Positive Feedback Loops

o Positive feedback

systems strengthen a

change in controlled

conditions

o Used for conditions that

don’t occur very often,

(e.g. childbirth, ovulation,

blood clotting)

Page 14: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Anatomical Position

o Stand erect facing the observer

o Head and eyes facing forward

o Feet are flat on the floor; toes pointing forward

o Hands on side; palm facing forward.

o Other body positions:

• Prone – reclining position, body is lying face down

• Supine – reclining position, body is lying face up

Page 15: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Common Regional Names

Page 16: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Regional Names Activity

o Where are the following regions?

1. Cranial

2. Thoracic

3. Brachial

4. Patellar

5. Cephalic

6. Gluteal

Page 17: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Directional Terms

Superior - Inferior

Anterior - Posterior

Medial - Lateral

Proximal - Distal

Superficial - Deep

Ipsilateral - Contralateral

Page 18: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Planes and Sections

o Planes (imaginary flat surfaces that pass through the

body parts)

• Sagittal

• Mid-sagittal plane (median plane)

• Parasagittal plane

• Frontal or Coronal plane

• Transverse plane

• Oblique plane

o Sections (one flat surface of a three dimensional

structure or a cut along a plane)

Page 19: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Planes and Sections

Page 20: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Planes and Sections Activity

In the diagram, which letter is:

o Transverse plane

o Oblique plane

o Frontal/coronal plane

o Midsagittal plane

o Parasagittal plane

Page 21: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Body Cavities

o Spaces within the body that help protect,

separate, and support internal organs.

o Bones, muscles, ligaments and other structures

separate various body cavities from one another.

o 4 major body cavities:

• Dorsal: Cranial, Spinal

• Ventral: Thoracic, Abdominal, Pelvic

(Abdominopelvic)

Page 22: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Body Cavities

Page 23: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Abdominopelvic

Regions and Quadrants

o Allows anatomists and medical clinicians to locate

organs for reference

Quadrants Regions

Left

upper

(LUQ)

Left

lower

(LLQ)

Right

lower

(RLQ)

Right

upper

(RUQ)

Umbilical

Epigastric

Hypogastric

L.

Lumbar

L.

Inguinal

R.

Lumbar

R.

Inguinal

L. Hypo-

chondriac

R. Hypo-

chondriac

Page 24: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Abdominopelvic Cavity

Page 25: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Regions and Quadrants Activity

If a patient presents with abdominal pain below their left

breast:

1. What is the quadrant called

2. What is the region called?

3. What organs are located there?

Page 26: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

Summary

o Introduction to anatomy and physiology

o Levels of organisation

o Basic life processes

o Homeostasis

• Positive and negative feedback

o Basic anatomical terminology

• Anatomical position

• Directional and regional terms

• Planes and sections

• Body cavities

• Abdominopelvic regions and quadrants

Page 27: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

References

o Attenborough, D, 1984. The Living Planet, British

Broadcasting Corporation, Britain.

o Tortora, G.J., Derrickson, B., 2012. Principles of

Anatomy and Physiology, 13th edn, John Wiley & Sons,

Inc, USA.

o Winston, R, 2004. Human, DK Publishing, London.

Page 28: Enabling Courses: Human Biology Courses: Human Biology o Enabling subjects: • Introductory level of knowledge • Self-paced and flexible o Anatomy and physiology underpins all complementary

© Endeavour College of Natural Health endeavour.edu.au

COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA

Copyright Regulations 1969

WARNING

This material has been reproduced and

communicated to you by or on behalf of

the Australian College of Natural Medicine pursuant to

Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act).

The material in this communication may

be subject to copyright under the Act.

Any further reproduction or

communication of this material by you

may be the subject of copyright

protection under the Act.

Do not remove this notice.