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Introduction to Human Physiology
XIA Qiang(夏强), MD & PhD Department of Physiology Room 518, Block C, Research Building School of Medicine, Zijingang Campus Tel: ☆ (Undergraduate School), (Medical School)
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Graduate Attributes and Capabilities
Attitudes Knowledge Skills
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Learning Philosophy I hear and I forget, I see and I remember,
I do and I understand.
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Handheld device software
Epocrates: drugs manual >3300 drugs More than 45% medical doctors used DynaMed: evidence based medicine database
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Course Structure Lectures: 80 academic hours Practicals: 64 a.h.
5 a.h./week 2 a.h. on Mon., 3 a.h. on Wed. Practicals: 64 a.h. 4 a.h./week Begin from second week
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Evaluation Participation: 5% Practical reports: 15%
Weekly assessments (from Summer Week 2 on), mini-tests at lecture & midterm exam: 30% Final examination: 50% “Double pass” policy: Total >= 60 Final examination >= 60 Weekly assessments & midterm exam >= 60
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Recommended textbook Widmaier EP, Raff H, Strang KT (2010 or later) Vander’s Human Physiology: The Mechanisms of Body Function, McGraw-Hill.
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Course website Course website: Demo
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Human Physiology Specific characteristics, functions and mechanisms of the human body that make it a living being What ? How ?
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Body Components Differentiated Cells - specialized function
Tissues - groups of cells with related function (muscle, nervous, connective, & epithelium) Organ- functional unit Organ system – several organs act together to perform specific function skin = barrier entry = respiratory & GI transport = CV & diffusion exit = renal & GI
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Fluid Compartments ICF ISF plasma organs external environment
internal environment
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Body Fluid = 60% of Body Weight (BW)
Internal environment Body Fluid = 60% of Body Weight (BW) Intracellular Fluid 2/3, 40% of BW Extracellular Fluid 1/3, 20% of BW Plasma 5% of BW Interstitial Fluid 15% of BW 70 kg Male, 42 L
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Extracellular Fluid= Internal Environment
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Homeostasis Homeostasis (from the Greek words for “same” and “steady”): maintenance of static or constant conditions in the internal environment Central theme of physiology Walter B. Cannon
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Components of Homeostasis:
Concentration of O2 and CO2 pH of the internal environment Concentration of nutrients and waste products Concentration of salt and other electrolytes Volume and pressure of extracellular fluid
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How is homeostasis achieved?
----Regulation Body's systems operate together to maintain homeostasis: Skin system Skeletal and muscular system Circulatory system Respiratory system Digestive system Urinary system Nervous system Endocrine system Lymphatic system Reproductive system
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Homeostasis and Illness
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Regulation of body functions
Nervous Regulation Humoral Regulation Autoregulation
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Nervous regulation Reflex Knee jerk reflex
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Reflex Arc Receptor Afferent (sensory) nerve
Reflex center (brain or spinal cord) Efferent (motor) nerve Effector
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Humoral regulation Endocrine cells Hormone Traditional description of humoral regulation by hormone Receptor
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Endocrine action: the hormone is distributed in blood and binds to distant target cells
Paracrine action: the hormone acts locally by diffusing from its source to target cells in the neighborhood Autocrine action: the hormone acts on the same cell that produced it
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Neuroendocrine (Neurosecretion) Vasopressin Oxytocin
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Autoregulation Definition: Intrinsic (independent of any neural or humoral influences) ability of an organ to maintain a constant blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure Mechanism: Stretch-activated constriction of vessels Significance: Maintenance of near-constant cerebral, renal and coronary blood flow
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80~180 mmHg
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Control systems of the body
CYBERNETICS or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine (MIT Press 1948) Norbert Wiener ( ) Originator of Cybernetics
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1. Non-automatic Control System
Open-loop system Seldom seen under physiological conditions Stress Control Center Effectors Stimulus Response
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2. Feedback Control System
Control Center Effectors Stimulus Response Closed-loop system Automatic control Negative feedback Positive feedback
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Negative feedback: common
A change in a condition leads to responses from the effectors which counteracts that change
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Examples: Regulation of blood pressure, Regulation of body temperature, Regulation of hormone release…
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Gain of the negative feedback:
The degree of effectiveness with which a control system maintains conditions Correction Error Gain=
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Positive feedback: uncommon
A change in a condition leads to responses from the effectors which amplifies that change +
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Examples: Child birth Micturition Blood coagulation Vicious circle under pathophysiological conditions…
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3. Feed-forward Control Often seen in nervous system Rapid
Adaptive control Examples: some muscle contraction, conditioned reflex Control Center Effectors Stimulus Response Monitor Disturbance
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Summary Terms: Regulation of body functions Internal environment
Homeostasis Negative feedback Positive feedback Regulation of body functions
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THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
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