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Skeletal System Muscular System Circulatory System Respiratory System Digestive System Excretory System THE HUMAN BODY
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Epithelial Tissue Line or cover all body surfaces Protects, allows diffusion, reduces friction, assists in cleaning Tightly bound 3 basic types: squamous, cuboidal and columnar Squamous Lining of capillaries and alveoli Cuboidal Lining of Kidney tubes Columnar Lining of stomach, intestines
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Connective Tissue Most abundant and diverse Binds, supports and protects structures Cells embedded protein fibers and large amounts of matrix –Intercellular substance –Solid, semisolid or liquid Ex: cartilage, tendons, fat and blood Loose Connective Dense Connective Cartilage
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Muscle Tissue Cells that can contract 3 types: skeletal, smooth, cardiac Smooth: individual cells, lines blood vessels and all organs, not striated Involuntary except for anus sphincter muscle which we learn to control Skeletal: attached to bone by tendons and ligaments No individual cells, striated, voluntary Mass of cytoplasm with numerous nuclei filled with actin and myosin Cardiac: heart, involuntary, striated
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Nervous Tissue Cells (neurons) that receive and transmit messages Brain, spinal cord, nerves, retina of eye Coordinate voluntary/involuntary responses, response, regulation of body processes
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Anterior Superior Inferior Posterior
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Bones of the skull, ribs, spine and sternum Bones of the arms, legs, scapula, clavicle and pelvis 0 Adult Human Body has 206 bones O A baby has about 300 bones 0 Make up less than 20% of your body mass 0 Bones are not dry and rigid……. They are moist, living tissue! ***You have to memorize 25!!! (spelling counts)
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cranium clavicle maxilla mandible sternum humerus ribs cervical vertebrae lumbar vertebrae sacral vertebrae pelvis ulna radius carpals metacarpals phalanges femur patella tibia fibula tarsals metatarsals phalanges pubis scapula
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Periosteum: tough membrane that covers the surface Hard bone (compact): dense connective tissue-provides support Spongy Bone: network of separated connective tissues: makes them light and strong Yellow Bone Marrow: mostly fat-energy reserve Red Bone Marrow: production of blood and platelets Blood Vessels: supplies nutrients Periosteum (Red and Yellow) http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/daniel_kraft_invents_a_better_way_to_harvest_bone_marrow.html
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Joints Fixed (Immovable): prevent movement. Small amount of connective tissue absorbs impact Ex: Skull Cartilaginous (Semimovable): permit limited movement Separated by disks of cartilaginous tissue to compress and absorb shock Ex: vertebral column, rib cage Synovial (movable): Ex: shoulder, hip, elbow, saddle, gliding
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Osteoporosis Thinning of bone tissue and loss of bone density over time –1 in 5 American women (over 50) –Fails to form enough new bone, when too much old bone is reabsorbed by the body –Not enough calcium/phosphate
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Arthritis Inflammation of joints Over 100 different types Breakdown of cartilage due to –Autoimmune disease –Broken bone –General wear and tear –infection http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/en/kevin_stone_the_bio_future_of_joint_replacement.html
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MUSCULAR SYSTEM
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Muscular System Myofibrils: bundle of threadlike structures Two types of protein (thick and thin) Myosin: thick Actin: thin Form overlapping pattern, gives striation Anchored at their endpoints to a Z line Sarcomere: one Z line to another Make up the bulk of the body
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Muscle Contraction
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Tendon: connects bone to muscle Origin: point at which the muscle attaches to the stationary bone Ex: bicep-scapula Insertion: point at which muscle attaches to the moving bone Ex: bicep-radius Muscles arranged in pairs Flexor: muscle that bends (biceps) Extensor: muscle that straightens (triceps) (Ligaments: bone to bone)
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Bill Nye http://www.gamequarium.org/cgi- bin/search/linfo.cgi?id=7673http://www.gamequarium.org/cgi- bin/search/linfo.cgi?id=7673
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