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Study in the app →Anatomy & Physiology · Foundations of the Body · Chapter 1
What anatomy & physiology are
Recall
- Anatomy studies the body's …
- structures — their form and how they relate
- Physiology studies the body's …
- function — how the structures work
- The Greek root of 'anatomy' means …
- 'to cut apart'
- Structures seen WITHOUT magnification = … anatomy
- gross (macroscopic)
- Cells are studied by …; tissues by …
- cytology; histology
- One region, all its structures together = … anatomy
- regional
- One system, throughout the whole body = … anatomy
- systemic
- Study of the nervous system's functions = …
- neurophysiology
- Physiology's central theme (steady internal conditions) = …
- homeostasis
- A structure's shape fits its job — the principle is …
- form follows function
Understand
- In one sentence, how do anatomy and physiology differ?
- Anatomy is the study of the body's structures (what they are); physiology is the study of their function (how they work).
- Why do we use imaging, not dissection, to study a living patient's insides?
- Dissection is done on the dead; imaging lets us see structures inside a living person without cutting.
- What single question decides whether you're doing gross or microscopic anatomy?
- Whether the structure is visible without magnification (gross) or needs a microscope (microscopic).
- Why are cytology and histology BOTH microscopic anatomy?
- Both study things too small to see with the naked eye — cells (cytology) and tissues (histology).
- Explain regional vs systemic anatomy, with one example each.
- Regional: all structures of one region together (e.g. the abdomen). Systemic: one system through the whole body (e.g. the muscular system).
- Why is 'form follows function' worth stating as a whole-course principle?
- Because a structure's shape is the reason it can do its job — you understand the structure and its function together, not separately.
Apply
- A CT scan shows a tumour and where it sits. Is identifying the tumour's location anatomy or physiology?
- Anatomy — it's about a structure and where it is. (How the tumour disrupts a function would be physiology.)
- A stroke damages a brain region and the patient can't move an arm. Which part is anatomy, which is physiology?
- The damaged region = anatomy (structure); the lost movement = physiology (a function failing). You need both to understand the case.
- A researcher studies every skeletal muscle in the body as one group. Regional or systemic — and why?
- Systemic — it follows one system (muscular) through the whole body, not the contents of one region.
- A pathologist examines a tissue sample under the microscope. Which branch of anatomy is that — and what would cytology be instead?
- Histology (the study of tissues); cytology would be studying individual cells.
- You must memorize WHERE the heart's valves sit AND understand HOW they control blood flow. Which goal is anatomy, which is physiology?
- Where the valves sit = anatomy (structure); how they control flow = physiology (function).
Lesson
Anatomy: the study of the body's structures
Lesson
Two scales: gross vs microscopic
Lesson
Two approaches: regional vs systemic
Lesson
Physiology: the study of function
Lesson
Form follows function
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