survey of anatomy & physiology chapter 11
TRANSCRIPT
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Survey of Anatomy & Physiology
Chapter 11 The Senses: The Sights and Sounds
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The Senses
Senses enable us to
experience ALL aspect of our
life
SEE, HEAR,SMELL, TASTE & FEEL
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The Senses
Our senses monitor and
detect changes in the environment
and send information
away from the receptor
(afferent) to the brainAFFERENT NEURONS
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The Senses
The brain interprets the information
and makes the appropriate
motor (efferent) response
EFFERENT NEURONS
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Special Senses &General Senses
Pain
Hot and coldnausea
Hunger and thirstPressure or touch
See, Hear, Smell and Taste
+
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Cutaneou
s
Touch
Heat and Cold
Pain
Visceral
Nausea
Hunger/Thirst
Eliminate
Receptors of Skin and Deep Organs
TWO TYPES OF SENSORS
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Sense of Sight
THE EYE IS SIMILAR TO A CAMERA:• Light rays pass through small
opening (pupil)• Through transparent lens (lens of
eye)• Rays are focused on
photoreceptive film (retina)• The shutter (iris) must allow just
the right amount of light to enter
EYES
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Sense of Sight
THE EYE IS SIMILAR TO A CAMERA:• Camera case is like external
structures that help protect eye from injury
• Lens cleaner for camera is like lacrimal glands secrete tears to clean eye
EYES
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External Structures
ORBITAL CAVITY
• Eyeball• Eyelids• Eyelashes• Conjunctiva• Lacrimal apparatus• Lacrimal gland
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External Structures
• A one inch sphere. The orbital is a cone shaped cavity padded with fatty tissue that cushions and protects eyeball from injury
• Contains several openings for nerves and blood vessels
EYEBALL
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External Structures
• Movable folds of skin which contain eyelashes to help keep large particles from entering and prevent injury
• Contain sebaceous glands to secrete sebum to keep them soft & trap particles
EYELID AND EYELASH
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External Structures
Protective membrane
lines the inner eye, covers
eyeball
CONJUNCTIVA
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Pink Eye-Infection of Conjunctivitis
Inflammation of conjunctival
membrane caused by bacteria, virus
or allergies/chemical
s
CONJUNCTIVITIS
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External Structures
• Produces and stores tears and includes lacrimal gland with its ducts
• Exocrine glands needed for cleansing and lubrication
• Drain in nasal cavity
• Tears are antisepticLACRIMAL GLANDS
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Internal Structures
• Aqueous & Vitreous Humors
• Sclera, choroid & retina
• Cornea• Iris • Pupil • Lens• Ciliary muscles
INSIDE THE EYEBALL
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HUMORSFluids of the Eye
AQUEOUS & VITREOUS
Eyeball separated into two chambers of fluid that helps to protect the eye:• Aqueous-watery
and fill area in front of eye
• Vitreous is clear, jellylike fluid behind the eye-maintains eye shape and refracts light rays
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3 Layers of Eye
SCLERA
• Sclera-outermost layer with tough fibrous tissue. It is the WHITE OF THE EYE
• Transparent cornea is specialized portion and allows light in and bends the rays to focus them on retina.
• Muscles responsible for moving eye are attached to the sclera
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3 Layers of Eye
CHOROID
• Middle layer• Highly vascularized
and pigmented• Nourishes the eye• Contains the iris
and the pupil where light passes into the eye
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IRIS AS SPHINCTER
CHOROID CONTAINS IRIS
• Iris is colored portion of the eye and controls the size of the pupil
• It is a sphincter that has intrinsic muscles that relax and contract depending on light conditions
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3 Layers of Eye
RETINA
• Innermost layer contains nerve endings and receives and interprets rays of light
• The lens is behind the iris and pupil; elastic and disc shaped with biconvex crystalline structure
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LENS & CILIARY MUSCLES
LENS & CILIARY MUSCLES
Light is refracted or bent by the
lens with shape
altered by ciliary
muscles
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ACCOMODATION
Ciliary muscles can alter the shape of lens
making it thicker and thinner to
change angle of refraction to
focus incoming light
rays on the retinal areaFOCUS ON THE RETINA
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Anatomy of Eye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RE1MvRmWg7I
Watch the video “Anatomy of the Eye”
Summarize how the eyes take what we see and carry it to the brain for the interpretation we call vision
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PA/Instructor Asks:
The condition in which the lens loses its flexibility and transparency and light cannot easily pass through a
clouded lens is called:
A. GlaucomaB. AmblyopiaC. StrabismusD. Cataract
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PA/Instructor Asks:
The condition in which the lens loses its flexibility and transparency and light cannot easily pass through a
clouded lens is called:
A. GlaucomaB. AmblyopiaC. StrabismusD. Cataract
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Sense of Hearing
Ears are responsible for hearing and maintaining balance
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Sense of Hearing
We hear by receiving sound vibrations via
the air and translating them into sound via
the vestibulocochl
ear nerve
8TH CRANIAL NERVE
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External Ear
Middle Ear (tympanic cavity)
Inner ear (labyrinth)
3 Divisions of Ear
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External Ear
• Pinna (or auricle) projects out and collects and directs sound into
• Auditory canal (external auditory meatus)
• Canal contains cerumen to lubricate and protect ear
• Eardrum (tympanic membrane) at end
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Middle Ear
• Contains 3 smallest bones called
• Ossicles, joined to amplify sound received from tympanic membrane
• Sound waves transmitted to fluid in internal earHAMMER, ANVIL, STIRRUP
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Middle Ear
• The stapes (stirrup) connected to membrane called oval window
• Carries amplified vibrations
• Amplified up to 22 times as original level
MALLEUS, INCUS, STAPES
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Middle Ear
• Connects the pharynx to the middle ear
• Equalizes pressure on either side of eardrum
• Eardrum then vibrates freely with incoming sound waves
EUSTACHIAN TUBE
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PA/Instructor Asks:
Why is it a good idea to chew gum or swallow when you experience sudden pressure change such as flying in an
airplane?
So the inner ear can better sense and adjust to the rapidly changing outside atmosphere
via the eustachian tubes
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Inner Ear
Oval window is portal to inner ear with three hollow bony spaces
that form maze of winding and twisting
channels
LABYRINTH
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Cochlea
Vestibular Chamber
Semicircular Canals
LABYRINTH-3 PARTS
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LABYRINTH-3 PARTS
COCHLEA
• Bony, snail shaped portion containing perilymph to transmit sound to brain via
• ACOUSTIC nerve or VESTIBULOCOCHLEAR NERVE
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LABYRINTH-3 PARTS
VESTIBULE CHAMBER
Houses the inner ear
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LABYRINTH-3 PARTS
SEMICIRCULAR CANALS
3 canals containing endolymph transmitting
positional changes to tiny
hair like receptors
stimulated and conduct signal
to brain to maintain balance
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HEARING
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0jyxhozq89g
Watch the video on 3D Human Ear
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Vibrations now vibrate auditory ossicles
Hammer Anvil & Stirrup
Sound waves vibrate the ear drumTympanic membrane
Sound waves enter the outer earAuricle
6 STEPS IN HEARING
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Signals travel to auditory center via 8th cranialVestibulocochle
arHairlike
receptors
Vibrations travel through the cochlear ductTo the semicircular canals with endolymph
Pressure waves created by stapes transfer to oval window causing
cochlea fluid to vibrateCochlea contains perilymph
6 STEPS IN HEARING
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Sense of Taste
The tongue is covered with tiny bumps called papillae
Taste receptors are called taste buds, found on the tongue, soft palate and back of the throat
TONGUE
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Sense of Taste
TONGUE
Sweet
Sour
Salty
BitterUmami-glutamate
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Sense of Smell
Receptors located in
OLFACTORY region of nasal
cavity
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Sense of Smell
Olfactory epithelium has
specialized nerve cell receptors
90% OF TASTE COMES FROM SMELL
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Sense of Smell
Inflammation of the mucous membranes that line nasal
passage
RHINITIS
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Release of Histamine
Histamine is a molecule released during an immune response
RHINITIS
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Senses of Touch
Tactile corpuscles
located in the skin and
concentrated in the
fingertips are the bodies
touch receptorsTOUCH RECEPTORS
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Senses of Touch
The body has separate heat
and cold receptors
Adaptation occurs with continued stimulation
TEMPERATURE RECEPTORS
Cold & Heat
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Senses of Touch
Pain receptors are branches
of nerve fibers called
nociceptors (free nerve endings)
PAIN RECEPTORS
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Types of Pain
Referred pain
originates in an internal organ and
felt in another regionREFERRED PAIN
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Sense Your Body
Your body’s orientation sense that
allows you to locate a
body part with your
eye closedPROPRIOCEPTORS
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Sense Your Body
Found in muscles, tendons, joints and the inner ear where they help
with equilibriumPROPRIOCEPTORS
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PA/Instructor Asks:
Motion sickness, such as sea sickness or car sickness, occurs because of
excessive stimulation of equilibrium centers in what part of the body?
A. EyeB. EarC. NoseD. Stomach