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Human Body Organs and Functions (part 1)

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1 Human Body Organs and Functions (part 1)
Big Idea 14 (#1) Classification Skeletal System Muscular System Circulatory System Respiratory System

2 Did you know? Your body is made of trillions of cells.
Do you remember what a cell is?

3 A Cell… All organisms are made of cells.
A cell is the smallest living part of an organism. The Human body is made of different kinds of cells. For example: bone cells, nerve cells, muscle cells, blood cells, heart cells, lung cells, etc. Each kind of cell performs a different function. Nerve cells carry messages to and from your brain, Muscles cells make parts of your body move, blood cells carry oxygen to all your other cells, etc. Since we have many different cells, humans and other animals are multicellular (many celled) organisms.

4 Your Body’s Systems: The Human Body has 11 organ systems. In 5th grade, you need to focus on these 8 organ systems: Skeletal System Respiratory System Muscular System Circulatory System Digestive System Nervous System Excretory System Reproductive System ** All the organ systems are woven together such that one cannot function without the other.

5 Levels of Organization…
Multicellular organisms have various levels of organization within them. Individual cells may perform specific functions and also work together for the good of the entire organism. The cells become dependent on one another: Cells work together to form tissues. Tissues work together to form organs. Organs work together to form organ systems.

6 Cells work together to form tissues.
Tissues work together to form organs. Organs work together to form organ systems. Department of Mathematics and Science

7 Skeletal System… Your body has two organ systems that work together to help you move. Do you know which ones they are? That’s right! They are the skeletal system and the muscular system. Let’s focus first on the skeletal system…

8 Fun Facts about the Skeletal System…
At birth the human skeleton is made up of around 300 bones. By adulthood, some bones have fused together to end up with 206 bones. Human bones grow continually from birth till about your mid 20’s. If broken our bones will re-grow and repair themselves. Doctor’s place a cast on splint to make sure these bones repair straight. The longest bone in the body is the thigh bone called the femur. The smallest bone in the body is located in the middle ear. Like our skin, the human body’s bones are also constantly worn down and re-made, to the point where every 7 years we essentially have a new bone. The area of our body with the most bones is the hand, fingers, and wrist (54 bones) Calcium is very important for our bones- helps keep them strong and healthy.

9 Skeletal System (what’s it made of ?)
The skeletal system is made of bones and cartilage. Cartilage: a strong tissue that is more flexible than bone. Connects bones together. It is found in the joints, the rib cage, the ear, the nose, the throat, and between the bones in the back.

10 Functions of the Skeletal System…
Supports your body and gives it shape. Protects your internal organs (skull protects your brain, rib cage protects your heart and lungs, etc.) Stores substances such as Calcium, phosphorus, and silicon Makes blood cells: red blood cells (carry oxygen), white blood cells (fight germs), and platelets (helps stop the bleeding). Allows you to move when muscles pull on bones Department of Mathematics and Science

11 Organs of the Skeletal System
There are four main organs of the skeletal system: Bones Cartilage Ligaments Tendons

12 What are bones made of? Living tissues Minerals Cartilage Bone marrow
Vitamin D helps build bones Calcium (mineral) helps keep bones strong

13 Joints… Two or more bones meet at a joint.
Different kinds of joints allow different kinds of movement: Examples: Shoulder joint: lets you move your arm in a large circle Elbow joint: lets you move your lower arm toward and away from your upper arm Hinge joint: the bones move back and forth like a door hinge (knee)

14 Muscular System Your muscular system is made of muscles that cause parts of your body to move. Muscles move your bones/body parts Muscles make your heart beat and pumps blood through your circulatory system Muscles make you breathe. Muscles move food through your digestive system

15 Why Are Muscles Important to the Body?
We can run, dance and even blink because of our muscles… Strong, flexible tissues that help our bodies move. Some muscles move our bones, but they can only pull bones in one direction. That is why muscles often work in pairs that pull bones in opposite directions. As one contracts, the other relaxes. Without muscles, you couldn’t move. Muscles have other functions besides movement. Muscle is what causes your heart to beat so blood can be pumped all through your body. Organs inside your body sometimes need to move. Blood vessels have to change their shape. These movements are caused by muscles. Did you know that there are around 650 skeletal muscles in our bodies?

16 Functions of the Muscular System…
There are three kinds of muscles in your body. Each kind has different functions: Skeletal Muscles Heart Muscles Smooth Muscles Let’s look at their individual functions! Department of Mathematics and Science

17 Skeletal Muscles… Skeletal muscles: Move bones. The skeletal muscles pull on the bones in your leg and you can kick, move, etc. You can control your skeletal muscles.

18 Smooth Muscles They are found in many of your organs.
Smooth Muscles are not under the control of your brain, but rather operate on their own without instructions. They work automatically. They are used to move food through your digestive system. They let you breathe, cough, and sneeze. They work automatically, but you can control some of them. Ex: you can cough on purpose if you want to. Smooth muscle cells are connected directly to one another, allowing electrical pulses to pass through them.

19 Heart Muscles… Heart Muscles make your heart beat and pump blood through your body. You cannot control your heart muscles. Your heart beats without you thinking about it. Like smooth muscle cells, cardiac muscle cells are not under the control of your brain, but instead operate independently. Also like smooth muscle cells, the cells of your heart are connected directly to one another, allowing electrical pulses to flow through them.

20 What Are the Two Main Types of Muscles?
Muscles that you have to think about using are called voluntary muscles. For example, your brain sends signals to muscles in your legs before you kick a soccer ball. How often do you decide to make your heart beat? You can’t! Your heart muscle beats without you thinking about it. Muscles that work without you thinking about them are called involuntary muscles. Department of Mathematics and Science

21 Let’s explore Muscles!

22 Bones and Muscles What do they do?
Support your body. Protect your vital organs. Store minerals like calcium. Produce red blood cells. Attach muscles. Come in different sizes and shapes. Move your body. Make your heart beat and pump blood through out the body. Let you breathe, cough and sneeze. Move food through your digestive system. How do our bones work with our muscles? Let’s watch a Discovery video Bones and Muscles. Listen and take notes on the functions of each. We can watch another video on just bones. Click on Bones. Then ask? What the functions of our bones? Let’s look at the muscles again. Click on Muscles. What are their functions. Department of Mathematics and Science

23 How are muscles different throughout the body?
Different parts of the body have different types of muscles. Some muscles are attached to bones with tendons, and other muscles are within organs and help them function. Some skeletal muscles work in pairs. When one muscle in the pair contracts, or shortens, the other muscle relaxes. Example: biceps and triceps

24 Fun Facts about Muscles:
Muscle is a soft tissue in the body of humans and animals. Its main purpose is to produce force and motion. There are around 650 skeletal muscles in the human body. Muscle makes up around half of the total human body weight. Muscle tissue is also around 15% denser than fat tissue. It takes 17 muscles in the face for us to smile and 43 muscles to frown. The jaw muscle is the strongest in the body.

25 Circulatory System… Your circulatory system moves blood throughout your body. Organs in the Circulatory System include: heart and blood vessels. Do not need to know the pathway!

26 The HEART… Your heart is really a muscle. It's located a little to the left of the middle of your chest, and it's about the size of your fist. The heart sends blood around your body. The blood provides your body with the oxygen and nutrients it needs. It also carries away waste. Our heart is sort of like a pump, or two pumps in one.

27 Right Side of Heart (Blue):
Oxygen poor or Unoxygeneted Blood Blood comes from the body (Superior and Inferior Vena Cava) into the heart . This blood has no oxygen but picked up CO2. Blood goes from the Right Atrium to the Right Ventricle and up to the Right and Left Pulmonary Arteries where the blood will go to the Lungs. There, the blood will receive Oxygen, get rid of CO2, and go back towards the left side of the heart. Do not need to know the path of blood!

28 Left Side of Heart (Red):
Oxygen Rich blood or oxygenated blood Blood is coming back from the lungs through the Pulmonary Veins, where it picked up O2 and left the CO2 behind. Blood will go through the ,Left Atrium, down the Left Ventricle and back up to go out through the Aorta. From the Aorta blood travels to give O2 to cells and pick up wastes. It will travel up again, and we start the cycle again.

29 How does blood travel? ARTERIES
Blood travels away from the heart in arteries. (Red). The arteries nearest the heart are very large. They get narrower as they branch out to different parts of the body. The narrowest vessels are called capillaries. The capillaries will then connect the artery blood with the veins. VEINS Veins carry blood back to the heart. This blood now has little or no Oxygen and lots of CO2.

30 In the intestines, a nutrient-waste exchange occurs.
Inside the capillaries in the lungs, an oxygen-carbon dioxide exchange occurs. In the intestines, a nutrient-waste exchange occurs. Department of Mathematics and Science

31 The movement of the blood through the heart and around the body is called circulation. It takes less than 60 seconds to pump blood to every cell in your body.

32 How Does the Heart Sound?
When you go for a checkup, your doctor uses a stethoscope to listen carefully to your heart. A healthy heart makes a lub-dub sound with each beat. This sound comes from the valves shutting on the blood inside the heart. The first sound (the lub) :mitral and tricuspid valves close. The next sound (the dub):aortic and pulmonary valves close after the blood has been squeezed out of the heart. A healthy heart makes a “lub dub” sound with each beat. that/ScienceIllustrations/humanbody/science_desk.cfm

33 How does exercise and emotions affect your heart rate?
We see and hear about hearts everywhere. A long time ago, people even thought that their emotions came from their hearts, maybe because the heart beats faster when a person is scared or excited. Emotions come from the brain, and in this case, the brain tells the heart to speed up. Department of Mathematics and Science

34 Explore Feel the Pulse When you take your pulse, you can feel what happens when your heart pushes a jet of blood into the arteries. Use your second and third fingers to take your pulse. Place your fingers firmly up against your jaw to feel your neck pulse, or inside your wrist near the base of your thumb. Copy chart below in your notebook. Take your pulse for 15 seconds and multiply by 4 to see what your heart rate is for one minute. Record. Run in place or do jumping jacks for 1 min. Then repeat step 3. Compare the data. ( Explore: Ask: What is the purpose or function of the heart? What does the blood travel in as the heart pumps it? Facilitate the Feel the Pulse activity. After step 5 you can click on the discovery link to hear a heart beat and compare the heart rate at rest, walking and running at the Iknowthat.com site from the Discovery Science Lab: Human Body site. Take it further and see the pulse working with the Grade 5 Essential Lab 13.

35 Breathe in…Breath out… (Respiratory System)
This system includes your airways, your lungs, the blood vessels and muscles attached to them that work together so you can breathe. The respiratory system’s main function is to supply oxygen to all the parts of your body. It does this through breathing: inhaling oxygen-rich air and exhaling air filled with carbon dioxide, which is a waste gas. The three major parts of the respiratory system all work together to carry out their task. The airways (nose, mouth, pharynx, larynx etc.) allow air to enter the body and into the lungs. The lungs work to pass oxygen into the body, while removing carbon dioxide from the body. The muscles of respiration, such as the diaphragm, work to pump air into and out of the lungs while breathing.

36 Department of Mathematics and Science

37 Cellular Respiration…
Our cells combine oxygen with food molecules. This produces energy for our cells and then releases CO2 and water.

38 In and Out… Inhale: The rib muscles and diaphragm contract.
This lifts the chest upward and outward. Try It! Take a deep breath. Don’t you feel your chest going up? Exhale: The rib muscles and diaphragm relax. The chest cavity is smaller. This causes squeezing air out of the lung.

39

40 Department of Mathematics and Science

41 https://video. search. yahoo
Department of Mathematics and Science


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