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Body Organization and Structure

Body Organization and Structure. P. Lobosco. Journal Entry. Match the following organ systems to their functions: Systems - respiratory, muscular, digestive, cardiovascular, and endocrine

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Body Organization and Structure

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  1. Body Organization and Structure P. Lobosco

  2. Journal Entry • Match the following organ systems to their functions: • Systems - respiratory, muscular, digestive, cardiovascular, and endocrine • Functions- to pump blood, to enable movement, to send out chemical messages, to absorb oxygen, and to break down food

  3. Objectives 22-1 • Describe how tissues, organs and organ systems are related • Discuss 11 organ systems • Analyze how organ systems work together to maintain homeostasis

  4. Body Organization • Homeostasis is the maintenance of a stable internal environment in the body

  5. Cells, Tissues and Organs • A group of similar cells is a tissue. • Your body has different kinds of tissue: • Epithelial • Nervous • Muscle • Connective • Cardiac • Smooth

  6. Organs • Tissues form organs • For instance, the stomach organ is made of muscle, connective, nervous, blood, epithelial

  7. Organ Systems • Organs form systems • The stomach is an organ in the digestive system • Other organs in the system are the large and small intestine, the gallbladder, the pancreas, the liver and the esophagus

  8. Body Organ Systems • 11 major organ systems • Integumentary • Muscular • Skeletal • Cardiovascular • Respiratory • Urinary • Reproductive • Nervous • Digestive • Lymphatic • Endocrine

  9. Integumentary System • Skin, hair and nails protect the tissue that beneath them

  10. Muscular System • The muscular system works with the skeletal system to help you move

  11. Skeletal system • The bones provide a framework to support and protect the body parts

  12. Cardiovascular System • The heart pumps blood through all of your blood vessels.

  13. Respiratory System • The lungs absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide.

  14. Urinary System • The urinary system removes wastes from the blood and regulates the body fluids

  15. Male Reproductive System • The male reproductive system produces and delivers sperm.

  16. Female Reproductive System • The female reproductive system produces eggs and nourishes and protects the fetus.

  17. Nervous System • The nervous system receives and send electrical messages throughout the body

  18. Digestive System • The digestive system breaks down the food into nutrients that the body can absorb.

  19. Lymphatic System • The lymphatic system returns leaked fluids to blood vessels and helps get rid of bacteria and viruses.

  20. Endocrine System • The glands send out chemical messages. Ovaries and testes are part of this system.

  21. Journal Entry • What problems would you face if you did not have bones?

  22. The Skeletal System Chapter 22-2 • Objectives: • Identify the major organs of the skeletal system • Describe the four functions of the bones • Describe five joints • Discuss three injuries and two disease that affect bones and joints

  23. Skeletal System • Bones, cartilage and the connective tissue that holds bones together make up your skeletal system.

  24. Bones • The average adult human has 206 bones. • Bones help support and protect parts of your body. • They work with muscles so you can move. • Bones also help your body maintain homeostasis by storing minerals and making blood cells.

  25. Bone Structure • A bone is made of several different tissues. • Bone is made of connective tissue and minerals. • These minerals are deposited by living cells called osteoblasts.

  26. Long Bones • Long bones are hard, dense bones that provide strength, structure, and mobility. The femur (thigh bone) is a long bone. A long bone has a shaft and two ends. • There are also bones in the fingers that are classified as "long bones," even though they are short in length. This is due to the shape of the bones, not the actual size. • Long bones contain yellow bone marrow and red bone marrow, which produces blood cells

  27. Compact Bone Tissue • There are two kinds of bone tissue: compact and spongy. • If the bone tissue does not have any visible open spaces, it is called compact bone. • Compact bone is rigid and dense. • Tiny canals within compact bone contain small blood vessels.

  28. Spongy Bone Tissue • Spongy bone tissue has many open spaces. • Spongy bone provides most of the strength and support for the bone.

  29. Bone Marrow • Bones contain a soft tissue called marrow. • There are two types of marrow.: red and yellow. • Red marrow produces both red and white blood cells. • Yellow marrow, found in the central cavity of long bones, stores fat.

  30. Yellow Marrow • In children, red marrow fills the center of long bones. • This red marrow is replaced with yellow marrow as they become adults.

  31. Bone Growth • Most bones start out as a flexible tissue called cartilage. • As the person grows most of the cartilage is replaced with bone. • During childhood, most bones still have growth plates of cartilage that provide a place for bones to continue to grow.

  32. Cartilage • In some places in the body the cartilage is never replaced. • Your nose is an example of cartilage.

  33. Joints • A place where two or more bones meet is called a joint. • A joint allows your body to move when your muscles contract. • Fixed joints allow little or no movement. Much of the skull has fixed joints.

  34. Types of Joints • There are five types of joints: • Gliding • Ball- and-socket • Hinge • Pivot • Fixed

  35. Gliding Joints • Gliding joints allow bones in the hand and wrist to glide over one another and give some flexibility to the area.

  36. Ball- and- Socket Joint • Ball and socket joints allow the bones to move freely. • Your shoulder is an example of a ball- and -socket joint

  37. Hinge Joint • A hinge joint enables a bone to move up and down. • You elbow is an example of a hinge joint

  38. Ligament • Joints are held together by ligaments. • Ligaments are strong elastic bands of connective tissue. • They connect the bones in a joint. • Cartilage covers the ends of many bones to act as a cushion.

  39. Skeletal System Injuries and Diseases • Bones in the skeletal system may be broken or fractured. • Joints can also be dislocated. • If a ligament is stretched too far, a sprain may occur. • Osteoporosis is a disease that causes bones to become less dense. It is caused by age and poor eating habits. • A disease that affects the joint is arthritis.

  40. Journal Entry • List at least five parts of your body that you use to drink a glass of water.

  41. The Muscular SystemChapter 22-3 • Objectives: • List three kinds of muscle tissue. • Describe how skeletal muscles move bones. • Compare aerobic exercise with resistance exercise. • Describe two muscular system injuries.

  42. Kinds of Muscle • There are three kinds of muscle tissue in your body: • Smooth found in the digestive tract and blood vessels • Cardiac found in the heart • Skeletal is attached to your bones for movement

  43. Movement and Tendons • Strands of tough connective tissues , called tendons, connect your skeletal muscles to your bones. • When a muscle that connects two bones together gets shorter, the bones are pulled closer to each other.

  44. Muscles work in Pairs • Your skeletal muscles work in pairs. One muscles bends and the other of the pair straightens. • A flexor, such as a bicep. bends part of your body. • An extensor , such as a tricep, straightens part of your body.

  45. Smooth Muscle • Smooth muscle is found in the walls of hollow organs like your intestines and stomach. They work automatically without you being aware of them. Smooth muscles are involved in many 'housekeeping' functions of the body. The muscular walls of your intestines contract to push food through your body. Muscles in your bladder wall contract to expel urine from your body. Smooth muscles in a woman's uterus (or womb) help to push babies out of the body during childbirth. The pupillary sphincter muscle in your eye is a smooth muscle that shrinks the size of your pupil.

  46. Cardiac Muscle • Your heart is made of cardiac muscle. This type of muscle only exists in your heart. Unlike other types of muscle, cardiac muscle never gets tired. It works automatically and constantly without ever pausing to rest. Cardiac muscle contracts to squeeze blood out of your heart, and relaxes to fill your heart with blood.

  47. Resistance Exercise • Resistance exercise strengthens skeletal muscles. • In resistance exercise people work against the weight of an object.

  48. Aerobic Exercise • Steady moderately intense activity that raise the heart rate is called aerobic activity. • This kind of exercise can strengthen the heart and increases endurance.

  49. Muscle Injury • A strain is an injury in which a muscle or tendon is overstretched and /or torn. Strains happen when a muscle has not been warmed up or has been worked too hard. • People who exercise too much can cause their tendons to become inflamed. This is called tendinitis. • Some people take Anabolic steroids to try to increase muscle size. These steroids can cause long term health problems which damage the heart, liver and kidneys. They may also cause bones to stop growing.

  50. Journal Entry • When do you see dogs panting?

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