Anatomy Basics
This section of the anatomy and physiology basics guide book introduces fundamental concepts in anatomy and physiology, including homeostasis and cellular environment.
Anatomy and Physiology Defined
Anatomy is the study of body structures and their relationships, while physiology examines how the body and its parts function.
Example: Specialized branches of physiology include neurophysiology, cardiac physiology, endocrinology, and renal physiology.
Homeostasis and Cell Environment
Homeostasis is crucial for understanding how the body maintains stability.
Definition: Homeostasis is the body's ability to maintain relatively stable internal conditions despite continuous changes in the external environment.
Key aspects of homeostasis include:
- Metabolism: All chemical reactions in the body
- Survival needs: Water, nutrients, body temperature
- Feedback control loops: Allow the body to self-regulate
Highlight: When the body's needs are met, it is in a homeostatic state.
Feedback Mechanisms
- Negative Feedback
- Inhibits or negates changes to maintain balance
- Examples: Blood glucose and body temperature regulation
Example: Blood Glucose Regulation
- Change: Blood glucose increases after a meal
- Control: Insulin increases glucose transport into cells
- Effect: Blood glucose level decreases back to normal
- Positive Feedback
- Enhances or amplifies changes
- Examples: Childbirth and blood clotting
Example: Childbirth
- Change: Baby's head pushes on cervix, stretching uterus
- Control: Oxytocin increases uterine contractions
- Effect: Baby's head pushes harder on cervix, eventually leading to birth