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Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.
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Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

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Page 1: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Human Anatomy & Physiology IBIO 201

Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology

Chapter 1

By

Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Page 2: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology

• Form and Function

• Origins of Biomedical Science

• Scientific Method

• Human Origins and Adaptations

• Human Structure

• Human Function

• Language of Medicine

Page 3: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Anatomy - The Study of Form

• Observation of surface structure• Cadaver dissection is cutting & separation of

organs to study their relationships• Comparative anatomy is the study of more than

one species to analyze evolutionary trends• Physical examination

– palpation, auscultation, percussion

• Gross anatomy is what is visible with naked eye• Histology is examination of cells with microscope

Page 4: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Physiology - The Study of Function

• Study of bodily functions by use of methods of experimental science

• Comparative physiology involves the study of different species

• Basis for the development of new drugs and medical procedures

Page 5: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Beginnings of Medicine

• Physicians in Mesopotamia & Egypt 3000 years ago used herbal drugs, salts & physical therapy

• Greek physician Hippocrates established a code of ethics & urged physicians to seek causes of disease

• Aristotle called causes for disease physiologi & said that complex structures are built from simpler parts

Page 6: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Beginnings of Medicine

• Galen, physician to the Roman gladiators, saw science as a method of discovery

– did animal dissections since use of cadavers banned

– wrote book advising followers to trust their own observation

Page 7: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Birth of Modern Medicine

• Little advancement during the Middle ages since medicine was taught as dogma with no new ideas

• Avicenna from Muslim world supported free inquiry over authority– wrote The Canon of Medicine, used in medical schools

until 16th century

• Vesalius published accurate gross anatomy atlas (1543)

• Harvey realized blood flow out from heart & back in 1628

• Leeuwenhoek invented microscope to look at fabrics (1632-1723)

Page 8: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Birth of Modern Medicine

• Hooke (1665) and Zeiss (1860) developed & improved compound microscope (described plant cell walls in 1665)

• Schleiden & Schwann thought that all organisms were composed of cells -- cell theory of 1839

• Clinical practice was in dismal state– bleeding patients to remove toxins, operate with

dirty hands, no anesthesia for amputations

Page 9: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Early Microscopes

Page 10: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Living in a Revolution

• Pioneers in 19th & 20th centuries– established scientific way of thinking– replaced superstition with natural laws– momentous discoveries

• germ theory of disease• heredity & structure of DNA

• Now at threshold of modern biomedical science– technology enhanced diagnostic ability & life-support

strategies– genetic revolution --library of the molecular structure of

every human gene is finished

• Gene therapy being used to treat disease

Page 11: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Scientific Method

• Bacon (1561-1626) and Descartes (1596-1650)– were not scientists but did invent new habits of scientific

thought• scientific method as habits of disciplined creativity,

careful observations, logical thinking & analysis of observations

• way of seeking trends & drawing generalizations

• Convinced governments of England & France to form academies of science that still exist today

• Scientific way of thinking based on assumptions & methods that are reliable, objective & testable

Page 12: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Inductive Method

• First described by philosopher Francis Bacon

• Making observations until capable of drawing generalizations and making predictions– anatomy is a product of inductive method

• Proof in science can not go past “proved beyond reasonable doubt”– reliable methods of observation– tested and confirmed repeatedly– not falsified by any credible observation

• In science, all truth is tentative

Page 13: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Hypothetico-Deductive Method• Physiological knowledge gained by this

method• Ask a question and formulate a hypothesis --

an educated possible answer• Good hypothesis

– consistent with what is already known– capable of being tested and falsified with certain evidence

• If nothing could prove it wrong, it is not a scientific belief

• Hypotheses are written as If-Then predictions– modified and rewritten after testing

Page 14: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Experimental Design

• Sufficient sample size to prevent chance event• Control group and treatment group receive the

same treatment except for the variable being tested

• Prevention of psychosomatic effects – use of placebo in control group

• Experimenter bias – prevented with double-blind study

• Statistical testing to be sure the difference between groups was not random, but was due to variable being tested

Page 15: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Peer Review

• Critical evaluation by other experts in the field– prior to funding– verification and repeatability of results

• Ensures honesty, objectivity & quality in science

Page 16: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Facts, Laws and Theories

• Scientific fact is information that can be independently verified by any trained person– iron deficiency leads to anemia

• Law of nature is a description of the way matter and energy behave – resulting from inductive reasoning & repeated observations– written as verbal statements or mathematical formulae

• Theory is a summary of conclusions drawn from observable facts– it provides explanations and predictions– sliding filament theory of muscle contraction

Page 17: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Human Origins and Adaptations• Charles Darwin’s theory of natural selection

explains how species originate and change through time– On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural

Selection (1859)– The Descent of Man (1871) discussed human

evolution & our relationships to other animals

• Changed our view of our origin, our nature & our place in the universe

• Good understanding of our evolutionary history deepens our understanding of form & function

Page 18: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Evolution, Selection, and Adaptation

• Evolution is change in genetic composition of a population of organisms– development of bacterial resistance to antibiotics,

new strains of AIDS virus and emergence of new species

• Theory of natural selection– some individuals have hereditary advantages

(adaptations) enabling them to produce more offspring

– if they pass these characteristics on it brings about a genetic change in the population (evolution)

– forces that favor some individuals over others are called selection pressures -- climate, disease, etc.

Page 19: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Adaptations

• Adaptations are useful features that evolved in response to selection pressures

• DNA hybridization suggests a difference of only 1.6% in DNA structure between humans & chimpanzees

• Evolutionary developments help explain some aspects of our anatomy (vestigial organs)– piloerector muscle in the skin have no use– auricularis muscles do not move in most people

• Evolutionary relationships help us chose animals for biomedical research– rats & mice used extensively

Page 20: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Primate Adaptations

• Some human features can be traced to the earliest primates

• Squirrel-sized, insect-eating mammals became arboreal probably due to safety, food supply & lack of competition– shoulder became more mobile (reach any direction)– thumbs became opposable to encircle branches with

thumb & fingers (prehensile)– forward-facing eyes provide depth perception

• judge distances accurately for leaping & catching prey– color vision to distinguish ripe fruit– larger brains & good memory to remember food sources

Page 21: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Walking Upright

• African forest became grassland 5 million years ago• Bipedalism (standing & walking on 2 legs) evolved

– spot predators, carry food or infants

• Adaptations for bipedalism– pelvis, femur, knee, great toe, arch, skull, vertebrae, etc.

• Australopithecus (2.5mya) gave rise Homo habilis– taller, larger brain volume, speech, tool-making

• Homo erectus (1.1mya) and Homo sapiens (.3mya)• Homo sapiens include Neanderthal & Cro-Magnon• Evolutionary medicine traces our diseases to

evolutionary past

Page 22: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Primate Phylogeny

Page 23: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Human Structure

• Hierarchy of complexity– organism is composed of organ

systems– organ systems composed of

organs– organs composed of tissues– tissues composed of cells– organelles composed of

molecules– molecules composed of atoms– Atoms compose molecules

• Reductionism versus holism

Page 24: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Anatomical Variation• No 2 humans are exactly alike• Missing organs

– palmaris longus or plantaris muscles

• More or less organs than normal– 2 spleens, single kidney, 6 or 4 lumbar vertebrae

• Variation in organ locations (situs inversus, dextrocardia, situs perversus)

Page 25: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Human Function• Characteristics of life

– organization – cellular composition– excretion– metabolism– responsiveness and movement– homeostasis – development (growth or differentiation)– reproduction– evolution

• Clinical death is no brain waves for 24 hours

Page 26: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Physiological Variation

• Differs with sex, age, diet, weight, degree of physical activity

• Typical human values– reference man

• 22 years old, 154 lbs, light physical activity• 2800 kcal/day

– reference woman• same as man except 128 lbs and 2000 kcal/day

Page 27: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Homeostasis• Hippocrates noted that body normally returns to a

state of equilibrium by itself – needs to detect the change & oppose it

• Walter Cannon (1871-1945) coined the term homeostasis indicating stable internal environment

• Internal environment described as dynamic equilibrium– fluctuates within a range around a certain set point

• Loss of homeostatic control causes illness or death

Page 28: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Negative Feedback Loops• Mechanism to keep a variable close to its set point• Body senses a change & activates mechanisms to

reverse it

Page 29: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Negative Feedback, Set Point

• Room temperature does not stay at set point of 68 degrees -- it only averages 68 degrees

Page 30: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Human Thermoregulation

• Blood temperature sensing nerve cells in base of brain control shivering, sweating & vasomotor activity– vasodilation with heat & vasoconstriction with cold

• Evaporation of water & heat radiation occur

Page 31: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Control of Blood Pressure

• Rise in blood pressure detected – stretch receptors in wall of heart and

major arteries

• Nerve signals travel to cardiac center in brainstem

• Nerve signals slow heart and lower blood pressure

Page 32: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Structures Needed for Feedback Loop

• Receptor = structure that senses change– stretch receptors in heart & large blood vessels

send information of an elevated BP to integrator

• Integrator = control center– cardiac center in brainstem that signals heart to

slow

• Effector = structures that carry out commands of the control center– heart slows and BP decreases– sweating begins and evaporation cools the body

Page 33: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Positive Feedback Loops• Physiological change that leads to an even greater

change in the same direction (self-amplifying)• Normal way of producing rapid changes

– birth, blood clotting, protein digestion, generation of nerve signals

Page 34: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Life-Threatening Fever• If temperature rises above 108 degrees due

to bacterial infection– metabolic rate

increases causing body to produce heat faster still

• Temperature increases & cycle repeats

• Fatal at 113 degrees

Page 35: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

History of Anatomical Terminology

• Most medical terms are formed from Greek and Latin roots

• Fast-paced anatomical discoveries during the Renaissance resulted in naming confusion– different countries naming same structures with different

names– structures being named after people (eponyms)

• Anatomy meetings in 1895 began search for uniform international terminology– Nomina Anatomica (NA) rejected all eponyms

• gave each structure a unique Latin name to be used worldwide

– Terminologia Anatomica was codified in 1998

Page 36: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Analyzing Medical Terms

• Medical terminology based on word elements– lexicon of 400 common word elements in back of

book

• Scientific terms are composed of the following elements– at least one root (stem) that bears the core

meaning– combining vowels that join roots together– prefix that modifies the core meaning of the word– suffix that modifies the core meaning of the word

• acronyms – words composed of the first few letters of a series of words

Page 37: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Useful Tables in Textbook

Page 38: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Review of Major Themes

• Unifying principles behind all aspects of human anatomy and physiology– cell theory: all structure & function result from the

activity of cells– homeostasis: maintaining stable conditions within

the body– evolution: the body is a product of evolution,

molded by years of natural selection– hierarchy of structure: levels of complexity– unity of form and function: physiology can not be

separated from anatomy

Page 39: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Medical Imaging • Radiography

– x-rays discovered (William Roentgen) in 1885– penetrate soft tissues & darken photographic

film on other side of the body– dense tissue (bone, teeth and tumors) are not

penetrated so photographic film remains white– radiopaque substances can be either injected

(angiography) or swallowed for examination of the gastrointestinal tract

• Sonography– high-frequency ultrasound waves echoes

back from internal organs– obstetrics uses to locate placenta, evaluate fetal

age, position and development

Page 40: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Medical Imaging• Computed Tomography (CT scan)

– low-intensity X rays applied to the body– computer analysis produces an image of a

slice of the body about as thin as a coin– tumors, aneurysms, hemorrhages, kidney

stones, etc

• Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)– magnetic field aligns hydrogen atoms; radio

waves realign the atoms; when radio is turned off the atoms give off energy depending on tissue type

– computer analysis produces a “slice” type image

– better for soft tissue analysis than CT

Page 41: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Medical Imaging

• Positron Emission Tomography (PET scan)– assesses the metabolic state of a tissue– injection of radioactively labeled glucose emits

positrons– colliding positrons & electrons

give off gamma rays that are analyzed by computer

– color image of glucose usage at that moment

• extent of damaged heart tissue• activity of brain of neurology patients

Page 42: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Basic Anatomical Terminology

• Anatomical position

• Regions of the body

• Anatomical planes, sections and directional terms

Page 43: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Anatomical Position

• Standardized position from which to describe directional terms– standing upright

– facing the observer, head level

– eyes facing forward

– feet flat on the floor

– arms at the sides

– palms turned forward

• Prone position = lying face down• Supine position = lying face up

anatomical position?

Page 44: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Common Regional Names

• Clinical terminology based on a Greek or Latin root word.

Page 45: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Planes and Sections

• A plane is an imaginary flat surface that passes through the body.

• A section is one of the 2 surfaces (pieces) that results when the body is cut by a plane passing through it.

Page 46: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Sagittal Plane

• Sagittal plane– divides the body or an

organ into left and right sides

• Midsagittal plane– produces equal halves

• Parasagittal plane– produces unequal

halves

Page 47: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Other Planes and Sections

• Frontal or coronal plane– divides the body or an organ

into front (anterior) and back (posterior) portions

• Transverse(cross-sectional) or horizontal plane– divides the body or an organ

into upper (superior) or lower (inferior) portions

• Oblique plane– some combination of 2 other

planes

Page 48: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Planes and Sections of the Brain(3-D anatomical relationships revealed)

• Horizontal Plane

• Frontal Plane

• Midsagittal Plane

Page 49: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Major Directional Terms

• See Definitions page 14

Page 50: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Superior or Inferior

• Superior

– towards the head

– The eyes are superior

to the mouth.

• Inferior

– away from the head

– The stomach is

inferior to the heart.

Page 51: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

• Dorsal or Posterior– at the back of the body

– The brain is posterior to the forehead.

• Ventral or Anterior– at the front of the body

– The sternum is anterior to the heart.

Dorsal or Ventral

Page 52: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Medial or Lateral• Medial

– nearer to the midline of the body– The heart lies medial to the lungs.

• Lateral– farther from the midline of the body– The thumb is on the lateral side of the

hand.

Page 53: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Proximal or Distal• Proximal

– nearer to the attachment of the limb to the trunk

– The knee is proximal to the ankle.

• Distal

– farther from the attachment of the limb to the trunk

– The wrist is distal to the elbow.

Page 54: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Dorsal Body Cavity• Near dorsal surface of

body• 2 subdivisions

– cranial cavity• holds the brain

• formed by skull

– vertebral or spinal canal• contains the spinal cord

• formed by vertebral column

• Meninges line dorsal body cavity

Page 55: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Ventral Body Cavity• Near ventral surface of

body• 2 subdivisions

– thoracic cavity above diaphragm

– abdominopelvic cavity below diaphragm

• Diaphragm = large, dome-shaped muscle

• Organs called viscera• Organs covered with

serous membrane

Page 56: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Abdominopelvic Cavity

• Inferior portion of ventral body cavity below diaphragm• Encircled by abdominal wall, bones & muscles of

pelvis

Page 57: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Thoracic Cavity

• Encircled by ribs, sternum, vertebral column and muscle• Divided into 2 pleural cavities by mediastinum • Mediastinum contains all thoracic organs except lungs

Page 58: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Mediastinum

• Midline wall of tissue that contains heart and great vessels, esophagus, trachea and thymus.

Page 59: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Serous Membranes

• Thin slippery membrane lines body cavities not open to the outside– parietal layer lines walls of cavities– visceral layer covers viscera within the cavities

• Serous fluid reduces friction

Page 60: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Pleural & Pericardial Cavities

• Visceral pleura clings to surface of lungs --- Parietal pleura lines chest wall

• Visceral pericardium covers heart --- Parietal pericardium lines pericardial sac

Page 61: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Peritoneum

• Visceral peritoneum --- serous membrane that covers the abdominal viscera

• Parietal peritoneum --- serous membrane that lines the abdominal wall

Page 62: Human Anatomy & Physiology I BIO 201 Major Themes of Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 1 By Abdul Fellah, Ph.D.

Abdominopelvic Regions & Quadrants

• Describe locations of organs or source of pain• Tic-tac-toe grid or intersecting lines through navel