Physiology

From Conservapedia

Physiology is the study of how living organisms function, including their physical and chemical processes.

Organ systems[edit]

In physiology the various organs are grouped into systems based on their function. This makes it easier to understand how an organism works. More and more, however, we learn that the organs interface with one another in ways outside of the classic definitions of the systems. For example, the kidneys, generally thought of as being in the urinary system, are involved in producing hormones (endocrine system) that regulate blood pressure (circulatory system). The systems are: Circulatory, Immune/Lymphatic, Skeletal, Muscular, Digestive/Excretory, Endocrine, Respiratory, Reproductive, Nervous/Sensory, Integumentary, and Urinary. Not every physician or scientist uses the same groupings. For example, skeletal and muscular may be together, as the musculoskeletal system, and the reproductive and urinary system may be together, as the genitourinary system.

Circulatory[edit]

The circulatory system interface with the respiratory system to pump oxygenated blood throughout the body, thus supplying the organs with nutrients. The circulatory system consists of the heart and blood vessels. The heart is a special muscle which constantly and automatically pumps blood through the blodo vessels. The blood vessels consist of arteries, arterioles (smaller arteries), capillaries, venules (small veins), and veins. Arteries carry blood away from the heart, whereas veins carry blood to the heart. Normally arteries carry oxygenated blood and the veins normally carry oxygen-poor blood, but this is not always the case, as with the pulmonary arteries and veins which carry blood back and forth between the heart and lungs. Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels and are where oxygen exchange between blood and organs takes place.

Immune and Lymphatic[edit]

Skeletal[edit]

Bones (206 in all); joints, tendons, and cartilage.

Muscular[edit]

Consists of over 600 named muscles.[1] Muscles are classified into three types: smooth or involuntary, striated or voluntary, and cardiac.

Most smooth muscle, such as the lining of the stomach, is controlled by the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system. Some smooth muscles, such as the myometrium (smooth muscle of the uterus), act mostly in response to hormones.

Digestive and Excretory[edit]

Endocrine[edit]

Glands including the thyroid, pituitary, pineal, gonads, thymus, pancreas, and adrenals. They produce hormones to facilitate metabolic, reproductive, and circadian cycles.

Respiratory[edit]

Consists of the lungs, bronchi, trachea (windpipe), larynx (voice box), epiglottis, nose, and sinuses.

Reproductive[edit]

The reproductive system facilitates procreation, and is closely associated with the endocrine system.


Each male reproductive organ is homologous, or directly corresponding, to a particular female reproductive organ.

Nervous/Sensory[edit]

Integumentary[edit]

Consists of the skin and its glands (eccrine, apocrine, and sebaceous), and the hair follicles. The female mammary gland is also often considered part of the integumentary system, because it is structurally a modified form of the eccrine gland.

Urinary[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Stoppard, 1988.

Categories: [Physiology]


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