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Summary Intro to college Anatomy and Physiology

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These Intro to Human Anatomy & Physiology notes provide a clear, simple, and high-quality overview of the foundational concepts every A&P student needs. Perfect for nursing, biology, and health science majors, this guide covers the definition of anatomy and physiology, levels of organization, major body systems, directional terminology, body planes, and the basics of homeostasis. Written in an easy-to-understand format, these notes are ideal for exam prep, lecture review, or quick revision. Whether you're just starting A&P or need a strong refresher, these notes give you everything you need to understand how the human body is structured and how it functions, all in one concise, organized resource.

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Human Anatomy And Physiology
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Human anatomy and physiology









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Human anatomy and physiology
Course
Human anatomy and physiology

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Uploaded on
December 7, 2025
Number of pages
7
Written in
2025/2026
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Summary

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Professional Intro notes
Anatomy and Physiology




1. What Is Anatomy & Physiology?

Anatomy = the study of body structures (what things are and where they’re located).​

Physiology = the study of how those body structures function.


They always go together because form determines function — the design of a structure enables

what it can do.




2. Levels of Structural Organization

The human body is organized from simplest to most complex:


1.​ Chemical Level – atoms & molecules (H₂O, proteins, DNA).​



2.​ Cellular Level – cells are the smallest units of life.​



3.​ Tissue Level – groups of similar cells doing a common function.​



4.​ Organ Level – structures with 2+ tissue types (heart, liver).​

, 5.​ Organ System Level – organs working together (digestive, respiratory).​



6.​ Organism Level – the entire human body.​




3. The Eleven Organ Systems & Their Main Functions

1. Integumentary: protection, temperature regulation, vitamin D.​

2. Skeletal: support, protection, blood cell production, mineral storage.​

3. Muscular: movement, posture, heat production.​

4. Nervous: fast communication, control, and coordination.​

5. Endocrine: slow, hormone-based control of body processes.​

6. Cardiovascular: pumps blood, transports nutrients & wastes.​

7. Lymphatic/Immune: fluid return, immune defense.​

8. Respiratory: gas exchange (O₂ in, CO₂ out).​

9. Digestive: breakdown & absorption of nutrients, waste elimination.​

10. Urinary: filtration of blood, removal of nitrogenous wastes, fluid balance.​

11. Reproductive: produce gametes, hormones, and offspring.
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