Utilisateur
Diffusion
Active
- Gated ion channels open or close in response to specific stimuli
- Voltage-gated channels responding to changes in membrane potential
- Mechanically-gated channels responding to physical forces like pressure or stretch
- Chemically-gated channels opening in response to the binding of a specific molecule.
- Epithelial tissue: Epithelial tissue forms protective layers covering body surfaces and lining cavities, and is involved in absorption, secretion, and sensation.
- Connective tissue: Connective tissue supports, binds, and connects other tissues and organs, and includes bone, blood, and adipose tissue.
- Muscle tissue: Muscle tissue is responsible for movement and includes skeletal, cardiac, and smooth muscle types, each specialized for specific functions.
- Nervous tissue: Nervous tissue is involved in transmitting electrical signals throughout the body, with neurons that carry signals and glial cells that provide support.
Thick skin has a thicker epidermis, lacks hair follicles, and is found on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet, provides extra protection. Thin skin is found on most other areas of the body, has a thinner epidermis, contains hair follicles, and is more flexible and less protective.
1. Activation: Osteoclasts move to bone surface
2. Resorption: Osteoclasts break done/remove old bone tissue and release Ca+ or P into bloodstream
3. Reversal: Osteoblasts prepare for new bone formation
4. Formation: Osteoblasts lay down new bone matrix
Neuron excitability
Sensory neurons carry signals from sensory receptors to the central nervous system (CNS) to detect stimuli, while motor neurons transmit signals from the CNS to muscles or glands to initiate a response
Parasympathetic nervous system promotes rest-and-digest activities while the sympathetic nervous system activates the fight-or-flight response
- Sensory receptors located within muscles
- Detect changes in muscle length and stretch
- Send signals to the central nervous system to help regulate muscle tone and maintain posture
Malleus
Incus
Stapes
1. Cranial cavity: Encloses the brain within the skull.
2. Spinal (vertebral) cavity: Spinal cord in the vertebral column.
3. Thoracic cavity: Heart and lungs, divided by the mediastinum.
4. Abdominal cavity: Stomach, liver, and intestines.
5. Pelvic cavity: Reproductive organs, the bladder, and rectum.
6. Oral cavity
7. Nasal cavity
9. Orbital cavity
Middle ear cavity: Malleus, incus, and stapes
1. Hypotonic - Lower solute concentration causing swelling/bursting
2. Hypertonic - Higher solute concentration causing shrinking
3. Isotonic - Solution = concentration, same cell size
1. Calcium
2. Phosphorus
3. Magnesium
Wrist
Shoulder
Knee
Vertebral Joints
Anterior, posterior
Travels through the outer ear, where it vibrates the eardrum (tympanic membrane), which then transmits the vibrations to the ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes) in the middle ear, and finally to the cochlea in the inner ear, where the vibrations are converted into electrical signals
Light enters the eye through the cornea, passes through the pupil, and is focused by the lens onto the retina, where it is converted into electrical signals that are sent to the brain for visual processing