Introduction To Physiology ~ LECTURE NOTES

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Introduction  To  Physiology  ~  LECTURE  NOTES   WEEK  ONE:  INTRODUCTION  TO  PHYSIOLOGY,  HOMEOSTASIS  AND  THE  NERVOUS  SYSTEM   Physiology  =  functions  of  the  human  body.  Comparative  physiology  is  the  study  of  different  species;  it  is   the  basis  for  the  development  of  new  drugs  and  medical  procedures   Homeostasis   • • •

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Homeostasis  is  the  process  of  maintaining  a  constant  internal  environment  despite  the  changing  external   environment.  Maintaining  homeostasis  is  absolutely  vital  to  an  organisms  survival   Claude  Bernard  (1813-­‐78):  stable  internal  conditions  regardless  of  external  conditions.  Walter  Cannon   (1871-­‐1945)  coined  the  term  ‘homeostasis’:  it  fluctuates  within  limited  range  around  a  set  point   Homeostasis  mechanisms:     1. Receptor-­‐  sensitive  to  environmental  change   2. Control  centre-­‐  receives  and  processes  the  information  supplied  by  the  receptor  and  sends  out   commands   3. Effector  –  responds  to  commands  by  opposing  the  stimulus   Room  temperature  does  not  stay  at  set  point,  it  oscillates  around  the  set  point;  this  is  the  same  for   homeostatic  control   The  body  is  said  to  be  in  homeostasis  when  its  cellular  needs  are  adequately  met  and  functional  activities   are  occurring  smoothly.  Every  organ  system  plays  a  role  in  maintaining  the  internal  environment   Feedback  occurs  when  receptor  stimulation  triggers  a  response  that  changes  the  environment  at  the   receptor   Negative  feedback  is  when  an  effector  activated  by  the  control  center  opposes  the  original  stimulus;  it   tends  to  minimise  change   In  positive  feedback,  an  initial  stimulus  produces  a  response  that  enhances  the  change  in  the  original   conditions.  It  accelerates  a  process  to  completion.     The  Nervous  System  

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Master  control  and  communication  centre.  Every   though,  action,  and  emotion  involves  the  NS   3  overlapping  functions:  sensory  input,  integration   and  motor  output   Subdivisions  of  the  Nervous  System:   1. Central  Nervous  System  (CNS):  brain  and   spinal  cord   2. Peripheral  Nervous  System  (PNS):  nerves   (spinal  and  cranial)  and  ganglia   Divisions  of  PNS:  Sensory  division  =  visceral   sensory  (from  visceral  organs)  or  somatic  sensory   (from  skin,  skeletal  muscles  and  joints)  Motor   division  =  somatic  motor  (nerve  fibres  conduct   impulse  from  CNS  to  skeletal  muscles,  voluntary  or   involuntary  in  somatic  reflexes)  or  autonomic   motor  (nerve  fibres  regulate  activity  of  smooth   muscles,  cardiac  muscles  and  glands,  consists  of  



the  sympathetic  division-­‐  “fight-­‐or-­‐flight”  and  the  parasympathetic  division-­‐  “resting  and  digesting”)   Functional  types  of  neurons:   1. Sensory  (afferent)  neurons:  detect  changes  in  the  body  and  external  environment.  Information  is   transmitted  into  the  brain  or  spinal  cord   2. Interneurons  (association  neurons):  lie  between  the  sensory  and  motor  pathways  in  the  CNS.  Make   up  90%  of  our  neurons.  They  process,  store  and  retrieve  information   3. Motor  (efferent)  neurons:  send  signals  out  to  effectors  which  carry  out  the  response