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INTRODUCTION to LOCOMOTOR SYSTEM PHARMACY, Papers of Anatomy

INTRODUCTION to LOCOMOTOR SYSTEM PHARMACY

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HU SSE IN 77 7
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ANATOMY
L-2
04-Mar-21
PHARMACY DEPARTMENT
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ANATOMY

L- 2

04 - Mar- 21

PHARMACY DEPARTMENT

INTRODUCTION to ANATOMY & MAJOR ORGAN SYSTEMS REGIONS of the BODY

  • Head: The most upper part of the body. Accommodates CNS, orbit, nasal cavity, oral cavity and related organs.
  • Neck: The part between head and body.
  • Trunk (body): Has 3 sub-regions: thoracic cage , abdomen and pelvis.
  • Upper limb: Arm, forearm, wrist and hand
  • Lower limb: Thigh, leg, ankle and foot REGIONAL TERMS

SKELETAL SYSTEM

- Major Components

  • Bones
  • Cartilages
  • Tendons
  • Ligaments
  • Joints - Major Functions
  • Provide protection for internal organs (skull, ribs)
  • Provide support for body
  • Mechanical advantage for muscular actions (levers)
  • Storage of vital minerals - calcium (99%)
  • Site of blood cell formation (red bone marrow) **MUSCULAR SYSTEM
  • Muscular System**
  • Major Components, muscles of different type/function
  • Striated muscle (voluntary)
  • Smooth muscle (involuntary)
  • Cardiac muscle (heart) - Major Functions
  • Striated muscle
  • Primarily to contract on command
  • Allows voluntary motions such as walking, grasping, and moving in general, facial expressions
  • Smooth muscle
  • Contracts to allow involuntary motion
  • Along arteries, digestive tract
  • Cardiac muscle
  • Contracts in rhythmic fashion involuntarily
  • Propels blood through lungs and body

NERVOUS SYSTEM

- Major Components

  • Brain and spinal cord (CNS)
  • Nerves and sensory organs (PNS) - Major Functions
  • Detect changes in internal and external environment
  • Respond to changes to keep body homeostatic
  • Organize activities of muscles and glands
  • Thoughts, ideas, behavior, emotions, memory… ENDOCRINE SYSTEM - Major Components
  • Pituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, adrenal, pineal glands
  • Ovaries, testicles, pancreas - Major Functions
  • Maintains body homeostasis, growth, development
  • Produce hormones in response to a variety of stimuli (increased sugar level, sexual attraction, length of day)
  • Hormones then act on target organ to cause change CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
    • Major Components
  • Heart
  • Blood vessels (arteries, veins, capillaries)
  • Blood (serum, proteins, red & white cells)
  • Major Functions
  • Primarily a transport system moving blood
  • Oxygen, carbon dioxide, ions (salts, Na,K,Ca,Cl)
  • Nutrients and waste
  • Hormones and proteins
  • White blood cells and antibodies

DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

- Major Components

  • Oral cavity
  • Esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Small and large intestine
  • Rectum
  • Other: teeth, salivary glands, liver, pancreas - Major Functions
  • Breakdown foods into minute particles to be absorbed by the blood and delivered to body
  • Remove unused foodstuff from the body as feces **URINARY SYSTEM
  • Major Components**
  • Kidneys
  • Ureters
  • Bladder
  • Urethra - Major Functions
  • Remove nitrogen-based waste molecules (urea, uric acid, ammonia) from the blood and body
  • Maintain water balance and ion/acid balance of blood

REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM

- Major Components

  • Male: testicles, scrotum, penis, and production and transport system for sperm
  • Female: ovaries, uterine tubes, uterus, vagina - Major Functions
  • Produce gametes (sperm and egg)
  • Allow means for conception to occur
  • Provide environment for fetal development **IMMUNE SYSTEM
  • Major Components**
  • Tonsils
  • Lymphatic system
  • Thymus
  • Spleen
  • Appendix
  • Bone marrow
  • White blood cells
  • Other special immune cells - Major Functions
  • Identify foreign particles and eliminate S

BONES

  • Bones are living structures having a blood and nerve supply
  • All bones are covered with a layer called periosteum except their joint Surfaces
  • Bones in the living body have some elasticity (provided by the organic substances) and great rigidity (provided by the unique internal anatomy constituted by inorganic substances, mainly CaPo4)

- Periosteum - Fibrous layer - Cambium layer (osteogenic) (growth in width) **- Endosteum

  • Articular cartilage
  • Outer bony substance**
    • Cortical (compact) bone
      • (Haversian + Volkmann’s canals)
      • Osteon
  • Cancellous (trabecular, spongy)bone
    • Medullary cavity - Bone marrow
    • Red bone marrow
      • sternum, ilium, vertebrae
    • Yellow bone marrow
  • Nutrient foramens (nutrient arteries) DIFFERENT TYPES of BONES . • Long bones (have a shaft and two extremities)
  • Short bones (more or less cuboidal in shape)
  • Flat bones
  • Irregular bones
  • Pneumatic bones (contains air cells or sinuses)
  • Sesamoid bones (round or oval nodules of bones that develop in certain tendons)
  • Accessory bones (develops as a result of additional ossification center or lack of fuse)

SURFACE FEATURES on the BONES

  • Surfaces of the bones are not smooth, bones display elevations, depressions and holes
  • The surface features on the bones are given names to distinguish and define them. - Linear elevations
    • line, crest - Round elevations
    • tubercule (small eminence), protuberance (swelling) - Sharp elevations
    • spine, process - Rounded articular areas
    • head, condyle - Openings
    • foramen, fissure, aperture - Facets
    • area with a smooth surface where a bone articulates with another bone - Depressions
    • fossae (small depression), groove (sulcus, long narrow depressions) - Canal
    • a foramen having length - Orifice
    • opening - Meatus
    • a canal entering a structure

ARTHROLOGY study of joints ARTHROLOGY

  • Arthrology is the study of joints. Joints hold bones together and allow muscles action
  • Joints are formed by the articulation between the articular surfaces of two or more bones
    • Joints btw. 2 bones; simple joints
    • Joints btw. more than 2 bones; composite joints
    • Joints with a disc or meniscus; complex joints
  • Articular system consists of joints and their associated bones and ligaments
  • Joints are classified into 2 groups;
    • Synarthrosis (solid joints)
    • Diarthrosis (freely movable joints)

GOMPHOSIS (DENTOALVEOLAR JOINT) & SYNDESMOSIS

SYNOVIAL JOINTS

ESSENTIAL FEATURES

  • Articular (joint) cavity (space btw. The articular surfaces)
  • Articular cartilage (hyaline cartilage covering the articular surfaces)
  • Articular capsule (capsule surrounding the joint formed of two layers)
    • Fibrous membrane (protects and give firmness to the joint stability)
    • Synovial membrane (lines the inner surface of the fibrous membrane but does not cover the articular cartilage. Secretes a fluid known as synovial fluid. This fluid helps to minimize the friction btw articular surfaces)

MYOLOGY

study of muscles MUSCLES

  • Motion
  • Position (posture)
  • Body heat (%85) MUSCLES
  • Skeletal muscles (striated muscles) (voluntary)
    • 42% of the total body weight
    • Contracts & be tired fast
    • Myosin (%55), actin, troponin (binds Ca), tropomyosin
    • Myoglobin (protein that binds O2)
    • Innervated by the somatic nerves
  • Straight muscles (involuntary)
    • 10% of the total body weight
    • Contracts slowly
    • On the walls of the organs & vessels
    • Calmodulin (binds Ca)
    • Lack of myoglobin
    • Innervated by the autonomic nerves
  • Heart muscle
    • Contracts rhythmic & autonomic
    • Intercalated discs btw. adjacent cells
    • Innervated by the autonomic nerves
    • Conduction is provided by myocytes