Name______PD ______EVEN/ODD
Body Systems – Part 1
Vocabularylesson 1
- cell membrane - the thin outer covering of a cell; holds the cell together
- nucleus – the small central core in almost every cell; stores information and directs all the activities of the cell.
- cytoplasm – the material between the cell membrane and the nucleus; made up of many parts that help the cell work
- cell – is the basic unit of all livingthings
- tissue – a group of cells that are alike and work together to do the same job.
- organ – a body part made up of various tissues; does a certain job in the body.
- body system – a group of organs that work together to do a certain job.
Notes – lesson 1
- What are your cells?
- Everything in your body is made of cells
- Different cells have different shapes and do different jobs
- Almost all have the same 3 parts
- Cell membrane – thin outer covering that holds the cell together, lets in water and everything else the cell needs, keeps out most things that could harm the cell
- Nucleus – small center that stores information and directs all the activities of the cell, “brain”, sends messages
- Cytoplasm – material that is between the nucleus and cell membrane. Made up of parts that help the cell work.
- What are your tissues?
- Tissue – a group of cells, ex: muscles, blood, skin, hair, bone
- Each does a different job and are specially formed for the work they do - “function”
- EX: bone cells are hard and cannot bend, skin cells are flat and thin and fit tightly together at the edges
- What are your organs?
- Tissues work together to make up organs
- Each organ does a specific job to help you stay alive and healthy
- EX: heart is an organ that pumps the blood, eyes are organs that help you see
- What are your body systems?
- Organs that work together are body systems
- Each system takes care of a different need
- EX: Digestive system is made up of the mouth, esophagus, stomach, and small intestines – help you digest your food and change the food into nutrients
- some organs are part of more than one system
- systems work together to make sure that the body maintains homeostasis – is the condition in which the body’s internal conditions are at a stable state
Review – lesson 1
- What are the three main parts of a cell?
- What are the three jobs of a cell membrane?
- Why are skin, hair, and bone considered tissues?
Vocabulary– lesson 2 – Skeletal and Muscular systems
- skeleton – the framework of connected bones in your body
- bone – is an organ of the skeletal system that stores minerals
- bone marrow – soft tissue inside a bone that makes blood cells and stores fat
- cartilage – the tissue between the bones in your movable joints
- joint – is a place where two or more bones meet
- ligament – connects bones together at joints
- tendon – attaches muscles to bones
- Osteoporosis – a disease in which the bones become weaker
- arthritis – painful joints
- voluntary muscles – muscles you have control over
- involuntary muscles – muscles you do not have control over
Notes – lesson 2
- What is your skeletal system
- The skeleton is the framework to hold you up and protect organs
- More than 200 bones – 206 as an adult
- Almost every bone is connected to another bone by a joint
- Ligaments hold two bones together at joints
- Joints also allow bones to move
- Tendons attach muscles to bones
- types of bones – long, short, flat, irregular
- Bone and joint development
- cartilage between bones in movable joints, keeps bones from grinding together
- soft flexible tissue when you are a baby, as you get older it hardens and becomes bone tissue as minerals, such as calcium
- types of joints – fixed, slightly moveable, and synovial (ball and socket, hinge, gliding, pivot, and saddle)
- Osteoporosis – is a disease in which the bones become weaker
- Arthritis – is irritation of the joints, painful joints
- What is your muscular system
- Made up of all your muscles
- Movement occurs by contracting the muscle (length shortens)
- Some muscles stretch across movable joints
- Connection of bone to muscle – tendons, bone to bone - ligaments
- Muscles only pull, not push – helped by working in pairs - ex: bicep and tricep
- When one contracts, the other relaxes
- muscles you have control over are voluntary – EX: moving your arm to catch a ball, muscles that you do not have control over are involuntary – EX: heart beating
- Kinds of muscles
- Skeletal muscle – muscles that is attached to bones, when they contract they pull on bones causing bone movement
- Smooth muscle – is muscle that forms some internal organs, contraction of this type of muscles pushes materials through the organ
- Cardiac muscle – is muscle that forms the heart
Review – lesson 2
- What does your skeleton do?
- What does bone marrow do?
- How do your muscles make your bones move?
Vocabulary – lesson3 – Digestive System
- saliva – a liquid in your mouth that starts to break down the food you eat
- peristalsis – the squeezing action of organs that moves food all the way through the digestive system
- pancreas – the digestive organ that makes pancreatic juices, which help break down starches, proteins, and fats
- bile – a digestive fluid made by the liver, helps digest fats
- gallbladder – the organ in the digestive system that stores bile
- digestion – is the process of breaking down food into a form your body can use
- nutrients – are substances in food that the body needs to work properly
Notes – Lesson3 (review on page 174)
- What happens in your mouth?
- Teeth chop and grind food into smaller pieces
- Chopped food mixes with saliva that helps break down food
- Liquids are called digestive juices
- More saliva is made when you eat
- What happens in your esophagus and stomach?
- After swallowing, food goes to the esophagus
- Food is moved by a wavelike, squeezing action called peristalsis
- Food then enters the stomach, which is a hollow, muscular organ that breaks down food
- Glands in the stomach make acid and other digestive juices
- The walls squeeze food and mix it with juices to form a thick liquid
- What happens in your small and large intestines?
- Food enters the small intestines after the stomach (most absorption occurs here)
- The pancreas makes pancreatic juices that break down starches, proteins, and fats in the food
- Cells in the pancreas also make a hormone called insulin, which helps your body use sugar
- The liver is another digestive organ that makes a fluid called bile, which flows into the gallbladder
- Gallbladder stores bile, and doesn’t make any of it’s own fluids
- Bile is squirted out when fats enter the small intestines
- nutrients enter the blood in the small intestines though capillaries
- not all food can be digested in the body – those parts pass to the large intestines
- wider and shorter than small intestines
- takes most of the remaining water out of food and forms solid waste removed during a bowel movement
- Eating food with water and indigestive materials, like fresh fruits and vegetables help the large intestine empty regularly
Review – Lesson3
- What does the digestive system do?
- What happens to food in the stomach?
- How do the materials in food get to the cells of your body?
Vocabulary – Lesson4 – Excretory System
- kidneys – two bean-shaped organs that remove most of the extra water and cell wastes from your blood
- urine – the liquid waste filtered from the blood by the kidneys
- ureter – a narrow tube that comes out of each kidney and connects to the urinary bladder
- urethra – a tube connected to the bladder that releases urine outside of the body
Notes – Lesson4
- How does the urinary system get rid of waste?
- Made up of kidneys, bladder, and tubes – all hold liquid waste
- Kidneys are in your back at about waist level, look like 2 beans
- Remove most of the cell wastes and extra water from the blood
- Water and waste combine to form urine
- a narrow tube called the ureter comes out of each kidney and connect to the urinary bladder (bag-like)
- bladder fills with urine and then is released through a tube called the urethra
- How does your skin help get rid of waste?
- Sweat glands remove water, salt, and other waste from the blood in the form of perspiration, or sweat
- Sweat leaves your body through small openings in the skin called pores, water in the sweat evaporates, other wastes stay on skin until you wash them away
- The excretory system helps keep wastes from remaining in your body, which keeps your cells healthy
Review – Lesson4
- What is the job of your excretory system?
- What does your urinary bladder do?
- How do the sweat glands remove wastes from your body?
Name ______PD ______EVEN/ODD
Body Systems – Part 2
Vocabulary – Lesson5
- plasma – the clear, light-yellow liquid that makes up most of your blood
- hemoglobin – a substance in red blood cells that picks up and carries oxygen
- carbon dioxide – a gas that is one of the wastes made by your cells.
- antibodies – substances in blood that attack and destroy microbes
- platelets – tiny parts of cells in your blood that help the blood thicken, or clot, when you have a cut or wound
- atrium – an upper chamber in your heart
- ventricle – a lower chamber in your heart
- lymph – a mixture of plasma and tissue fluid that collects cell wastes
Notes – Lesson5 – Circulatory System
- What is your blood?
- 1 gallon (4 liters) of blood in your body
- It circulates through your body over and over and never stops moving
- Body cells take from your blood what they need and send their wastes to be taken away
- Most of the red blood seen with a cut is made up of a clear, light-yellow liquid called plasma
- Cells in the plasma give your blood the red color
- Blood also contains (4 parts of the blood)
- red blood cells
- hemoglobin – makes the cells red and picks up oxygen in lungs, carries it to the body cells
- When cells pick up oxygen the release carbon dioxide to the hemoglobin – CO2 is a waste made by the cells
- Blood has more red blood cells than any other kind – 60,000 would fit in the dot of an “i”
- RBC looks like a doughnut with the hole filled in
- white blood cells
- largest cell
- actually have no color
- help fight disease by destroying germs (immune system)
- different kinds of WBC that defend the body in different ways
- some destroy disease causing microbes
- some make antibodies that attack and destroy microbes so that they cannot make you ill again
- made in lymph
- platelets
- platelets help your blood become thick by sticking to the walls of injured blood vessels
- other cells are trapped making a clot that closes the torn vessel
- scabs are dried clots
4. plasma – light yellow liquid
e. Blood Types
i. These are determined by the presence or absence of certain antigens – substances that can trigger an immune response if they are foreign to the body. Since some antigens can trigger a patient's immune system to attack the transfused blood, safe blood transfusions depend on careful blood typing and cross-matching.
1. A
2. B
3. AB
4. O
ii. RH factor – is an antigen that is either present (+) or
absent (-)
- Rh negative blood is given to Rh-negative patients, and Rh positive blood or Rh negative blood may be given to Rh positive patients
- Heart
- Hollow, muscular and about the size of your fist
- A wall divides the right side from the left and each side has an upper and lower half (4 chambers)
- Upper chamber – atrium
- Lower chamber – ventricle
- Right ventricle pumps blood to lungs to get oxygen and give off carbon dioxide
- Left ventricle pumps oxygen rich blood to the rest of your body where the cells take the oxygen from the blood and give carbon dioxide
- Blood flows back to the atrium on the right side of your heart
- Blood Vessels
- Arteries – carry blood away from your heart
- thick, flexible muscle walls to stand pressure of blood being pumped out of the heart
- Veins – carry blood toward your heart
- thinner walls than arteries because the pressure of blood is lower in veins
- they have small flaps in veins keep blood flowing in 1 direction
- Capillaries – thin blood vessels that connect arteries to veins
- very thin walls
- every tissue has these next to it
- nutrients, oxygen, and wastes pass in and out through capillary walls
- plasma also passes through walls
- lymph – excess plasma, plus tissue fluid that surrounds body cells, colorless (blister)
- carries cell wastes and other materials
- lymph tissue also produces a kind of white blood cell
Review – Lesson5
1. What are two main kinds of cells in blood?
2. How do white blood cells help fight disease?
3. What are the chambers of the heart called?
Vocabulary – Lesson6 – Respiratory System
- trachea – the tube through which air moves from your throat to your chest; the windpipe
- bronchial tubes – two branches of the trachea, which go into the lungs
- alveoli – small, hollow air sacs inside your lungs
- inhalation – is the process in which the air enters the lungs
- exhalation – is the process in which the air leaves the lungs
- breathing – moving air in and out of the lungs
7. diaphragm – is a muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen, helps to also force air out of the lungs
Notes – Lesson6
- Organs that help you breath make up the respiratory system – function - draws air into your lungs, takes oxygen from the air for your body to use, helps remove carbon dioxide
- How does air travel to your lungs
- Air comes into your body through your nose and mouth
- It then enters your throat (pharynx) to your voice box (larynx)
- From this point it moves through a pipe called the trachea, or windpipe
- The trachea is divided at the end into 2 branches called bronchial tubes or bronchi
- Air moves into your lungs through these tubes, which branch into smaller tubes (bronchioles), which lead to tiny air sacs called alveoli
- In the lungs (sponge like)
- Air you breathe in fills up the alveoli
- Oxygen passes from the alveoli into the capillaries
- RBC in the capillaries pick up the oxygen
- Your blood takes the oxygen to the rest of your cells
- Deoxygenated blood
- Blood delivers oxygen and picks up carbon dioxide given off by your cells
- Carbon dioxide moves through the body to the capillaries in the alveoli and into the lungs
- It then leaves the body when you breathe out or exhale
- The breathing process
- Breathing – moving air in and out of the lungs
- Breathing involves both inhalation and exhalation
- Inhalation – is the process in which the air enters the lungs
- Exhalation – is the process in which the air leaves the lungs
- Inhalation occurs when the diaphragm contracts and the rib cage expands
- Diaphragm – is a muscle that separates the chest from the abdomen, helps to also force air out of the lungs
- How does your body clean the air you breathe? (3 ways)
- Hairs in your nose being the cleaning by screening out some particles
- Sticky mucus traps more
- this lines your nasal passages and the walls of your trachea and bronchial tubes
- it may trap germs and other harmful matter
- Trachea and bronchial tubes have tiny hairs called cilia
- Cilia wave quickly back and forth and push mucus that has trapped dirt and dust up toward your throat
- When you swallow, much of the mucus passes into the digestive system
Review – Lesson6
- What does your respiratory system do?
- What is the job of the alveoli?
- How is the air you breathe cleaned by the respiratory system?
Vocabulary – Lesson 7 – Nervous system
- neurons – nerve cells, which make up your nervous system
- cerebrum – the largest part of the brain; where most of your thinking takes place
- cerebellum – the part of the brain that makes your muscles work together; controls most movements that you do without thinking
- hemispheres – two halves of a sphere, or ball-shaped object, such as the brain
- brain – the major organ in the nervous system
- spinal cord – an organ that carries messages to and from the brain
- nerve – is a bundle of cells that conducts messages from one part of the body to another
- reflex – an automatic response to stimuli
Notes – Lesson 7