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Chapter 1 Major Themes of Anatomy

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Title: Chapter 1 Major Themes of Anatomy


1
Chapter 1Major Themes of Anatomy Physiology
  • Form and Function
  • Origins of Biomedical Science
  • Scientific Method
  • Human Origins and Adaptations
  • Human Structure
  • Human Function
  • Language of Medicine

2
Anatomy - The Study of Form
  • Observation of surface structure
  • Cadaver dissection is cutting separation of
    organs to study their relationships
  • Comparative anatomy is the study of more than one
    species to analyze evolutionary trends
  • Physical examination
  • palpation, auscultation, percussion
  • Gross anatomy is what is visible with naked eye
  • Histology is examination of cells with microscope

3
Early Anatomical Drawings
4
Physiology - The Study of Function
  • Study of bodily functions by use of methods of
    experimental science
  • Comparative physiology involves the study of
    different species
  • Basis for the development of new drugs and
    medical procedures
  • Anatomy is what shapes there are, Physiology is
    what those shapes do

5
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6
Beginnings of Medicine
  • Physicians in Mesopotamia Egypt 3000 years ago
    used herbal drugs, salts physical therapy
  • Greek physician Hippocrates established a code of
    ethics urged physicians to seek causes of
    disease
  • Aristotle called causes for disease physiologi
    said that complex structures are built from
    simpler parts
  • Galen, physician to the Roman gladiators, saw
    science as a method of discovery
  • did animal dissections since use of cadavers
    banned
  • wrote book advising followers to trust their own
    observation

7
Birth of Modern Medicine
  • Vesalius published accurate gross anatomy atlas
    (1543)
  • Leeuwenhoek invented microscope to look at
    fabrics (1632-1723)
  • Hooke (1665) and Zeiss (1860) developed
    improved compound microscope (described plant
    cell walls in 1665)
  • Schleiden Schwann thought that all organisms
    were composed of cells -- cell theory of 1839
  • Clinical practice was in dismal state
  • bleeding to remove toxins, operate with dirty
    hands, no anesthesia for amputations

8
Early Microscopes
9
Living in a Revolution
  • Pioneers in 19th 20th centuries
  • established scientific way of thinking
  • replaced superstition with natural laws
  • momentous discoveries
  • germ theory of disease
  • heredity structure of DNA
  • Now at threshold of modern biomedical science
  • technology enhanced diagnostic ability
    life-support strategies
  • genetic revolution --library of the molecular
    structure of every human gene is finished
  • Gene therapy being used to treat disease

10
Scientific Method
  • Bacon (1561-1626) and Descartes (1596-1650)
  • were not scientists but did invent new habits of
    scientific thought
  • scientific method as habits of disciplined
    creativity, careful observations, logical
    thinking analysis of observations
  • way of seeking trends drawing generalizations
  • Convinced governments of England France to form
    academies of science that still exist today
  • Scientific way of thinking based on assumptions
    methods that are reliable, objective testable

11
Inductive Method
  • Making observations until capable of drawing
    generalizations and making predictions
  • anatomy is a product of inductive method
  • Proof in science can not go past proved beyond
    reasonable doubt
  • reliable methods of observation
  • tested and confirmed repeatedly
  • not falsified by any credible observation
  • In science, all truth is tentative

12
Hypothetico-Deductive Method
  • Physiological knowledge gained by this method
  • Ask a question and formulate a hypothesis -- an
    educated possible answer
  • Good hypothesis
  • consistent with what is already known
  • capable of being tested and falsified with
    certain evidence
  • If nothing could prove it wrong, it is not a
    scientific belief
  • Hypotheses are written as If-Then predictions
  • modified and rewritten after testing

13
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14
Experimental Design
  • Sufficient sample size to prevent chance event
  • Control group and treatment group receive the
    same treatment except for the variable being
    tested
  • Prevention of psychosomatic effects
  • use of placebo in control group
  • Experimenter bias
  • prevented with double-blind study
  • Statistical testing to be sure the difference
    between groups was not random, but was due to
    variable being tested

15
Peer Review
  • Critical evaluation by other experts in the field
  • prior to funding
  • verification and repeatability of results
  • Ensures honesty, objectivity quality in science

16
Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang of South
Africa, known for putting vegetable remedies
ahead of anti-retrovirals, endorses Dr Matthias
Rath's vitamin treatments.
17
Dr. Rath and his cure for AIDS Mega Doses of
Vitamin C
  • A doctor who worked with Nobel Prize winner Linus
    Pauling
  • has taken the advocacy of vitamins into all-out
    war on the pharmaceutical companies
  • Buys ad space in the NY Times, and fills them
    with editorials masked as facts
  • Without getting confirmation of his studies is
    taking his cure to the people of Africa
  • Problems Too much Vitamin C can lead to Diarrhea
    which can kill an AIDS patient.

18
Facts, Laws and Theories
  • Scientific fact is information that can be
    independently verified by any trained person
  • iron deficiency leads to anemia
  • Law of nature is a description of the way matter
    and energy behave
  • resulting from inductive reasoning repeated
    observations
  • written as verbal statements or mathematical
    formulae
  • Theory is a summary of conclusions drawn from
    observable facts
  • it provides explanations and predictions
  • sliding filament theory of muscle contraction

19
Logic is the anatomy of thought -John Locke
  • Conditional arguments the basis of hypothesis
    forming. Two parts
  • Part 1 If p then q
  • P antecedent
  • Q Consequent
  • Part 2 allows us to draw conclusions
  • If P happens then Q happens (Modus Ponens
  • If Q did not happen, P did not happen (Modus
    Tollens)

20
There is a claim that lycopene, the reddish
substance in tomatoes and peppers, is of value in
protecting people from Alzheimer Disease. How
would you, as a scientist, go about
substantiating or refuting this suggestion?
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