Intro to AnaPhy

Subdecks (10)

Cards (621)

  • If a person's intestines were stretched out, they would be as tall as a three-story building
  • By the time a person reaches old age, they will have produced enough saliva to fill more than one swimming pool
  • A person loses about two-thirds of a kilogram every year in dead skin cells, and will lose more than 50 kilograms of them in their lifetime
  • Anatomy
    The study of the structure and relationships between body parts
  • Physiology
    The science of how body parts come together to function and keep the body alive
  • Anatomy and physiology draw on other disciplines like chemistry and physics
  • For centuries, the dissection of human bodies was taboo in many societies, so the study of anatomy followed a long, slow, and often creepy road
  • Today, students of anatomy and physiology still use educational cadavers to learn, in person and hands-on, what's inside a human body by dissecting them
  • Complementarity of structure and function
    The basic idea that what a structure can do depends on its specific form
  • The human body is made up of about 7 octillion atoms
  • Cells
    The smallest units of living things, which vary widely in size and shape depending on their purpose
  • Tissues
    Groups of similar cells that perform specific functions
  • Organs
    Combinations of two or more tissue types that perform specific functions
  • Organ systems
    Organs working together to get things done
  • Organism
    The highest level of organization, the complete living body made from the precise organization of trillions of cells in nearly constant activity
  • Homeostasis
    The ability of all living systems to maintain stable, internal conditions no matter what changes are occurring outside the body
  • Everyone's ultimate cause of death is the extreme and irreversible loss of homeostasis
  • Anatomical position
    The standard position of the body, with the person standing erect and facing straight ahead, arms at the sides and palms forward
  • Anatomical planes
    • Sagittal
    • Parasagittal
    • Coronal
    • Transverse
  • Anatomical directions
    • Anterior/Ventral
    • Posterior/Dorsal
    • Superior/Cranial
    • Inferior/Caudal
    • Medial
    • Lateral
    • Proximal
    • Distal
  • Anatomical language and terms are used to precisely describe the location of body parts and structures
  • The human body is a magnificent, complex, and prolific system
  • If a person's intestines were stretched out, they would be as tall as a three-story building
  • By the time a person reaches old age, they will have produced enough saliva to fill more than one swimming pool
  • A person loses about two-thirds of a kilogram every year in dead skin cells, and will lose more than 50 kilograms of them in their lifetime
  • Anatomy
    The study of the structure and relationships between body parts
  • Physiology
    The science of how body parts come together to function and keep the body alive
  • Anatomy and physiology draw on other disciplines like chemistry and physics
  • Anatomy and physiology are about understanding why we are alive, how we came to be alive, how disease harms us, and how our body recovers from illness and injury
  • Anatomy and physiology are also about understanding processes like death, sex, eating, sleeping, and thinking
  • For centuries, the dissection of human bodies was taboo in many societies, so the study of anatomy followed a long, slow, and often creepy road
  • Today, students of anatomy and physiology still use educational cadavers to learn, in person and hands-on, what's inside a human body by dissecting them
  • Complementarity of structure and function
    The basic idea that what a structure can do depends on its specific form
  • The human body is made up of about 7 octillion atoms
  • Cells
    The smallest units of living things, which vary widely in size and shape depending on their purpose
  • Tissues
    Groups of similar cells that perform specific functions
  • Organs
    Combinations of two or more tissue types that perform specific functions
  • Organ systems
    Organs working together to get things done
  • Organism
    The highest level of organization, made up of trillions of cells in nearly constant activity
  • Homeostasis
    The ability of all living systems to maintain stable, internal conditions no matter what changes are occurring outside the body