KENNETH S. SALADIN Georgia College
Digital Authors
CHRISTINA A. GAN Highline Community College
HEATHER N. CUSHMAN Tacoma Community College
ANATOMY PHYSIOLOGY The Unity of Form and Function
Eighth Edition
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ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY: THE UNITY OF FORM AND FUNCTION, EIGHTH EDITION
Published by McGraw-Hill Education, 2 Penn Plaza, New York, NY 10121. Copyright © 2018 by McGraw- Hill Education. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Previous editions © 2015, 2012, and 2010. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education, including, but not limited to, in any network or other electronic storage or transmission, or broadcast for distance learning.
Some ancillaries, including electronic and print components, may not be available to customers outside the United States.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
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ISBN 978-1-259-27772-6 MHID 1-259-27772-0
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Saladin, Kenneth S., author. | Gan, Christina A., author. | Cushman, Heather N., author. Title: Anatomy & physiology : the unity of form and function / Kenneth S. Saladin, Georgia College & State University ; digital authors, Christian A. Gan, Highline Community College, Heather N. Cushman, Tacoma Community College. Other titles: Anatomy and physiology Description: Eighth edition. | New York, NY : McGraw-Hill Education, [2018]
Includes index. Identifiers: LCCN 2016033675 | ISBN 9781259277726 (alk. paper) Subjects: LCSH: Human physiology—Textbooks. | Human anatomy—Textbooks. Classification: LCC QP34.5 .S23 2018 | DDC 612—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016033675
The Internet addresses listed in the text were accurate at the time of publication. The inclusion of a website does not indicate an endorsement by the authors or McGraw-Hill Education, and McGraw-Hill Education does not guarantee the accuracy of the information presented at these sites. mheducation.com/highered
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BRIEF CONTENTS
About the Authors iv
PART ONE ORGANIZATION OF THE BODY 1
1 Major Themes of Anatomy and Physiology 1
ATLAS A General Orientation to Human Anatomy 27
2 The Chemistry of Life 41 3 Cellular Form and Function 75 4 Genetics and Cellular Function 111 5 Histology 139
PART TWO SUPPORT AND MOVEMENT 175
6 The Integumentary System 175 7 Bone Tissue 201 8 The Skeletal System 228 9 Joints 273 10 The Muscular System 307 ATLAS B Regional and Surface
Anatomy 373 11 Muscular Tissue 395
PART THREE INTERNAL COORDINATION AND CONTROL 431
12 Nervous Tissue 431 13 The Spinal Cord, Spinal Nerves, and
Somatic Reflexes 471 14 The Brain and Cranial Nerves 504 15 The Autonomic Nervous System and
Visceral Reflexes 554 16 Sense Organs 575 17 The Endocrine System 626
PART FOUR CIRCULATION AND DEFENSE 669
18 The Circulatory System: Blood 669 19 The Circulatory System: Heart 705 20 The Circulatory System: Blood Vessels and
Circulation 741 21 The Lymphatic and Immune Systems 800
PART FIVE INTAKE AND OUTPUT 845
22 The Respiratory System 845 23 The Urinary System 886 24 Fluid, Electrolyte, and Acid–Base
Balance 921 25 The Digestive System 944 26 Nutrition and Metabolism 991
PART SIX REPRODUCTION AND THE LIFE CYCLE 1025
27 The Male Reproductive System 1025 28 The Female Reproductive System 1055 29 Human Development and Aging 1093
APPENDIX A: Periodic Table of the Elements A-1
APPENDIX B: Answer Keys A-2
APPENDIX C: Symbols, Weights, and Measures A-15
APPENDIX D: Biomedical Abbreviations A-18
APPENDIX E: The Genetic Code A-19
APPENDIX F: Lexicon of Biomedical Word Elements A-20
APPENDIX G: Eighth Edition Changes in Terminology A-24
Glossary G-1
Index I-1
iii
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iv
KENNETH S. SALADIN has taught since 1977 at Georgia College in Milledgeville, Georgia. He earned a B.S. in zoology at Michigan State University and a Ph.D. in parasitology at Florida State University, with interests especially in the sensory ecology of freshwater invertebrates. In addition to human anatomy and physiology, his teaching experience includes histology, parasitology, animal behavior, sociobiology, introductory biology, general zoology, biological etymology, and study abroad in the Galápagos Islands. Ken has been recognized as “most significant undergraduate men- tor” nine times over the years by outstanding students inducted into Phi Kappa Phi. He received the university’s Excellence in Research and Publication Award for the first edition of this book, and was named Distinguished Professor in 2001.
Ken is a member of the Human Anatomy and Physiology Society, the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology, American Physiological Society, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He served as a developmental reviewer and wrote supplements for several other McGraw-Hill anatomy and physiology textbooks for a number of years before becoming a textbook writer.
Ken’s outside interests include the Galápagos Conservancy, and he has endowed student schol- arships, the natural history museum, and a faculty chair at his university. Ken is married to Diane Saladin, a registered nurse. They have two adult children.
CHRISTINA A. GAN, digital coauthor for Connect®, has been teaching anatomy and physiol- ogy, microbiology, and general biology at Highline Community College in Des Moines, Washington, since 2004. Before that, she taught at Rogue Community College in Medford, Oregon, for 6 years. She earned her M.A. in biology from Humboldt State University, researching the genetic variation of mitochondrial DNA in various salmonid species, and is a member of the Human Anatomy and Physiology Society. When she is not in the classroom or developing digital media, she is climbing, mountaineering, skiing, kayaking, sailing, cycling, and mountain biking throughout the Pacific Northwest.
HEATHER N. CUSHMAN, digital coauthor for Connect®, teaches anatomy and physiology at Tacoma Community College in Tacoma, Washington, and is a member of the Human Anatomy and Physiology Society. She received her Ph.D. in neuroscience from the University of Minnesota in 2002, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Vollum Institute at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, Oregon, where she studied sensory transduction and the cellular and molec- ular mechanisms of muscle pain. She currently resides in Tacoma, Washington, and enjoys climbing, camping, and hiking with her husband Ken and their daughter Annika.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
© JC Penney Portraits/Lifetouch Portrait Studios, Inc.
© Tim Vacula
© Chris Gan/Yuen Lui Studios
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v
THE EVOLUTION OF A STORYTELLER
Ken Saladin’s first step into authoring was a 318-page paper on the ecology of hydras written for his tenth-grade biology class. With his “first book,” featuring 53 original India ink drawings and photomicrographs, a true storyteller was born.
Ken in 1964
When I first became a textbook writer, I found myself bringing the same
enjoyment of writing and illustrating to this book that I first discovered
when I was 15.
—Ken Saladin
Ken’s “first book,” Hydra Ecology, 1965 Courtesy of Ken Saladin
One of Ken’s drawings from Hydra Ecology Courtesy of Ken Saladin
Ken began working on his first book for McGraw-Hill in 1993, and in 1997 the first edition of The Unity of Form and Function was published. In 2017, the story continues with the eighth edition of Ken’s best-selling A&P textbook.
The first edition (1997)
The story continues (2017)
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vi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Peer review is a critical part of the scien- tific process, and very important to ensure the content in this book continues to meet the needs of the instructors and students who use it. We are grateful for the people who agree to participate in this process and thank them for their time, talents, and feed- back. The reviewers of this text have con- tributed significant comments that help us refine and update the print and digital components of this program.
Mervan Agovic City University of New York
Rita Bagwe GBC, Pahrump
Neda Baniasadi North Shore Community College
Joan Barber Delaware Technical Community College
Jennifer Biederman Winona State University
Carol Britson University of Mississippi
Susan Capasso St. Vincent’s College
Kwan Christenson Georgia College
Joseph Comber Villanova University
Suzanne Cooke UNH Manchester
Andrew Corless Vincennes University
Rupa De Purdue University
Elizabeth Dunphy Gateway Community College
Chelsea Edward Cleveland Community College
Lori Garrett Parkland College
Melissa Glenn SUNY Broome
Donna Harman Lubbock Christian University
Clare Hays Metropolitan State University of Denver
Jana Herron Chattanooga State Community College
Austin Hicks University of Alabama
Roxann Isch-Clifton SWOSU at Sayre
Pamela Jackson Piedmont Technical College
Paula Johnson New River Community and Technical College
Jacqueline Jordan Clayton State University
Karen Kelly Milligan College
Shadi Kilani Houston Community College
Nathaniel M. King Palm Beach State College
Jeff Kingsbury Arizona State University
Brian H. Kipp Grand Valley State University
Shelley Kirkpatrick Saint Francis University
Theresa Kong William Rainey Harper College
Mary Katherine Lockwood University of New Hampshire
Kerrie McDaniel Western Kentucky University
Melinda Melton McNeese State University
Melanie Meyer Community College of Vermont
Kathy Monroe Blue Ridge Community and Technical College
David Moore Harrisburg Area Community College
Mina Moussavi University of Central Missouri
Ellen Ott-Reeves Blinn College Bryan
Andrew Petto UW Milwaukee
James Roush WKCTC
Stephen R. Peterson Delgado Community College
Richard Pirkle Tennessee Tech University
Jackie Reynolds Richland College
Crista Royal Toccoa Falls College
Frantz Sainvil Broward College
Colin Scanes UWM
Carl Shuster Madison College
Scott Simerlein Purdue University North Central
Gehan Soliman FTCC
Sherry Stewart Navarro College
Leticia Vega Barry University
Cuc Vu St. Catherine University
Stephanie Wallace Texas Christian University
Katy Wallis State College of Florida
Janice Webster Ivy Tech Community College
John Whitlock Mount Aloysius College
Harvey Wiener Manchester Community College
Sonya J. Williams Oklahoma City Community College
Cindy Wingert Cedarville University
Theopholieus Worrell Delgado Community College
Robin Wright Houston Community College
Xiaobo Yu Kean University (Union, NJ)
David Zimmer Trocaire College
Jeff Zuiderveen Columbus State University
Board of Advisors Cheryl Christensen Palm Beach State College
Lisa Conley Milwaukee Area Tech
Thomas Kalluvila Bryant and Stratton College
AJ Petto University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Jason Pienaar University of Alabama Tuscaloosa
Frantz Sainvil Broward College Central
Colin Scanes University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Carl Shuster Madison College
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Saladin’s text is written using plain language for A&P students who may be taking this course early in their curricula. Students say the enlightening analogies, clinical applications, historical notes, biographical vignettes, and evolutionary insights make the book not merely informative, but a pleasure to read.
INNOVATIVE CHAPTER SEQUENCING Some chapters and topics are presented in a sequence that is more instructive than the conventional order.
Early Presentation of Heredity
Fundamental principles of heredity are presented in the last few pages of chapter 4 rather than at the back of the book to better integrate molecular and Mendelian genetics. This organization also prepares students to learn about such genetic traits and conditions as cystic fibrosis, color blindness, blood types, hemophilia, cancer genes, and sickle-cell disease by first teaching them about dominant and recessive alleles, genotype and phenotype, and sex linkage.
Muscle Anatomy and Physiology Follow Skeleton and Joints
The functional morphology of the skeleton, joints, and muscles is treated in three consecutive chapters, 8 through 10, so when students learn muscle attachments, these come only two chapters after the names of the relevant bone features. When they learn muscle actions, it is in the first chapter after learning the terms for the joint movements. This order brings another advantage: the physiology of muscle and nerve cells is treated in two consecutive chapters (11 and 12), which are thus closely integrated in their treatment of synapses, neurotransmitters, and membrane electrophysiology.
Urinary System Presented Close to Circulatory and Respiratory Systems
Most textbooks place this system near the end of the book because of its anatomical and developmental relationships with the reproductive system. However, its physiological ties to the circulatory and respiratory systems are much more important. Except for a necessary digression on lymphatics and immunity, the circulatory system is followed almost immediately with the respiratory and urinary systems, which regulate blood composition and whose functional mechanisms rely on recently covered principles of blood flow and capillary exchange.
THE STORY OF FORM AND FUNCTION
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THE STORY OF FORM AND FUNCTION
viii
LEARNING TOOLS Engaging Chapter Layouts • Chapters are structured around the way students learn. • Frequent subheadings and expected learning outcomes help
students plan their study time and review strategies.
Deeper Insights highlight areas of interest and career relevance for students.
Chapter Outlines provide quick previews of the content.
Each numbered section begins with Expected Learning Outcomes to help focus the reader’s attention on the larger concepts and make the course outcome-driven. This also assists instructors in structuring their courses around expected learning outcomes.
Each chapter begins with Brushing Up to emphasize the interrelatedness of concepts, and serves as an aid for instructors when teaching chapters out of order.
Tiered Assessments Based on Key Learning Outcomes • Chapters are divided into easily manageable
chunks, which help students budget study time effectively.
• Section-ending questions allow students to check their understanding before moving on.
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ix
Questions in figure legends and Apply What You Know items prompt students to think more deeply about the implications and applications of what they have learned. This helps students practice higher order thinking skills throughout the chapter.
The end-of-chapter Study Guide offers several methods for assessment that are useful to both students and instructors.
Assess Your Learning Outcomes provides students a study outline for review, and addresses the needs of instructors whose colleges require outcome-oriented syllabi and assessment of student achievement of the expected learning outcomes.
End-of-chapter questions build on all levels of Bloom’s taxonomy in sections to
1. assess learning outcomes 2. test simple recall and analytical thought 3. build medical vocabulary 4. apply the basic knowledge to new clinical
problems and other situations
What's Wrong with These Statements questions further address Bloom’s taxonomy by asking the student to explain why the false statements are untrue.
Testing Your Comprehension questions address Bloom’s Taxonomy in going beyond recall to application of ideas.
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THE STORY OF FORM AND FUNCTION
x
Vivid Illustrations
Rich textures and shading and bold, bright colors bring structures to life.
Muscle Tables
Muscle tables organize information and integrate stunning visuals to help students learn. They also serve as a great student reference for study.
The visual appeal of nature is immense- ly important in motivating one to study it. We certainly see this at work in human anatomy—in the countless stu- dents who describe themselves as visual learners, in the many laypeople who find anatomy atlases so intriguing, and in the enormous popularity of Body Worlds and similar exhibitions of human anatomy.
—Ken Saladin
ARTWORK THAT INSPIRES LEARNING The incredible art program in this textbook sets the standard in A&P. The stunning portfolio of art and photos was created with the aid of art focus groups, and with feedback from hundreds of accuracy reviews.
Conducive to Learning • Easy-to-understand process figures • Tools for students to easily orient themselves
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Orientation Tools
Saladin art integrates tools to help students quickly orient themselves within a figure and make connections between ideas.
CSF is secreted by choroid plexus in each lateral ventricle.
Arachnoid villus
Choroid plexus
Third ventricle
Cerebral aqueduct
Lateral aperture
Fourth ventricle
Median aperture
Central canal of spinal cord
Subarachnoid space of spinal cord
Subarachnoid space Dura mater
Arachnoid mater
Superior sagittal sinus
CSF flows through interventricular foramina into third ventricle.
Choroid plexus in third ventricle adds more CSF.
CSF flows down cerebral aqueduct to fourth ventricle.
Choroid plexus in fourth ventricle adds more CSF.
CSF flows out two lateral apertures and one median aperture.
CSF fills subarachnoid space and bathes external surfaces of brain and spinal cord.
At arachnoid villi, CSF is reabsorbed into venous blood of dural venous sinuses.
1
3
4
56
7
7
8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
2
Process Figures
Saladin breaks complicated physiological processes into numbered steps for a manageable introduction to difficult concepts.
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xii
New Scientific Content Saladin’s Anatomy & Physiology, eighth edition, has about 85 updates in scientific content, keeping abreast of new literature and new interpretations of old assumptions, including: • New guidelines on cholesterol and trans fats (chapter 2) • New skin-grafting method (chapter 6) • New coverage of the genetics and evolution of lactose intolerance (chapter 25) • New federal guidelines for recommended dietary intakes (chapter 26) • Updates on papillomavirus, genital warts, and cervical cancer (chapter 27)
For a complete list, please visit www.mcgrawhillconnect.com.
New Photographs This edition contains many new photographs, including: • Figure 1.10: new brain scans • Figure 7.20: osteoporosis with kyphosis • Figure 19.22: coronary artery disease • Figure 20.1: vascular cast of thyroid gland capillary beds • Figure 29.7: embryonic and fetal developmental stages
For a complete list, please visit www.mcgrawhillconnect.com.
New Pedagogy • In each chapter Study Guide, where students were previously prompted to distinguish between five true and five false
statements, they are now prompted to analyze the fallacies of 10 false statements. • This edition deletes 21 increasingly obsolete eponymous terms that are no longer recommended by the
Terminologia Anatomica or Gray’s Anatomy (such as Skene glands, Howship lacunae, Auerbach plexus, Hassall corpuscles, and organ of Corti) and replaces them with the standard English terms for easier student comprehension and retention.
• The explanation of units of chemical concentration is moved from chapter 2 to appendix C.
Enhanced Concepts Saladin’s Anatomy & Physiology, eighth edition, also updates and enhances about 25 more major physiological concepts in response to user feedback, including: • Chapter 3: leak and gated channels • Chapter 4: functions of intron DNA, small regulatory RNAs, and cell-cycle regulators • Chapter 11: the lactate threshold • Chapter 12: the vasomotor role of astrocytes, serial and parallel processing in neural circuits, long-term depression
and forgetting • Chapter 14: the role of orexins in the sleep–wake cycle, Bell palsy • Chapter 16: tactile functions of lingual papillae, function of oblique muscles of the eye • Chapter 17: stimuli inducing secretion of individual hormones, photoperiod and pineal gland function • Chapter 18: ABO blood types in hemolytic disease of the newborn, lymphocyte selection in the thymus • Chapter 20: sympathetic effects on coronary arteries • Chapter 21: precipitation versus agglutination in antibody action • Chapter 25: membrane transport of dietary triglycerides, blood circulation of the colon • Chapter 26: fuller coverage of hepatitis, fuller coverage of core versus shell body temperature • Chapter 27: structure and function of the male prepuce
WHAT’S NEW IN THE EIGHTH EDITION?
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• Chapter 28: history of mastectomy approaches, leptin and adiposity in relation to menarche, endometriosis • Chapter 29: telomere repair and cancer
Enhanced Artwork This edition contains many pieces of enhanced artwork, including: • Figure 3.15: mechanism of osmosis • Figure 3.28: structure of the cell nucleus • Figure 11.6: organization and size principle of motor units • Figure 14.13: functions of the five cerebral lobes • Figure 15.2: somatic versus autonomic outflow pathways • Figure 19.7: cross-sectional shapes and relationships of heart ventricles • Figure 20.4: schematic of blood distribution in rest and exercise • Figure 25.18: positive feedback control of gastric secretion • Figure 25.31: pathways of nutrient digestion and assimilation • Figure 26.12: environmental temperatures versus core and shell body temperatures
For a complete list, please visit www.mcgrawhillconnect.com.
Enhanced Data-Driven Revision Thousands of students have interacted with this textbook via McGraw-Hill Education’s adaptive reading experience, SmartBook®. Data about these interactions are collected over time and visually displayed in a heat map. Heat maps direct the author’s attention to areas where students are struggling. The author then evaluates the questions and associated text content to determine if revisions are needed to more clearly ask the question or clarify explanations. Heat maps can also confirm areas that the text is successful in aiding students’ comprehension. This edition was revised using heat map data to clarify explanations, and to enhance the SmartBook® experience for all students.
New Digital Enhancements Faculty now have the ability to assign select LearnSmart® questions in Connect®. The question bank in Connect® has select probes from SmartBook® available for you to assign on assignments or quizzes as you see fit.
The 8th edition provides SmartBook® sub-section assignability. SmartBook® assignments now go beyond section level to give instructors a more granular level of content.
Four new Concept Overview Interactive animations give exploration and engagement on key concepts: Innate Immunity; Adap- tive Immunity; Blood Pressure; Endocrine System, in addition to the existing Glomerular Filtration and Its Regulation; Tubular Reab- sorption and Tubular Secretion; Neuron Physiology; Passive and Active Processes of Membrane Transport; Skeletal Muscle Contraction; Changes Associated with a Cardiac Cycle; and The Movement of Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide. This brings the total Concept Overview Interactive animations to 11. They can be used in class, as a study tool, and are assignable in modules with associ- ated questions. The animations were recently converted to html for mobile compatibility.
Anatomy and Physiology REVEALED® 3.2 cadaver dissection simulator is available with Connect® Anatomy & Physiology. Now in html for mobile compatibility, with customizable anatomical structure list, version 3.2 offers 50 new animations, and 7 added physi- ology interactives.
Enhanced focus on encouraging critical thinking. Connect® question banks now have 30% or more questions at Bloom’s level 3 (apply) or higher.
SmartBook® includes additional Learning Resources – McGraw-Hill Education, using student usage data, determined the most difficult concepts for students. Additional study tools (tutorial videos, narrated slides, interactive activities) are now available for those difficult concepts in SmartBook®, just when the student needs it!
Assignable Connect® orientation videos available in the question bank can be assigned to help students get acquainted with Connect® and best practices for use.
Assignable APR, Ph.I.L.S, diagnostic prep exams, model questions and more! Course-wide A&P content gives a much larger pool of assignable content so instructors can easily tailor the course to their needs.
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Required=Results
McGraw-Hill Connect® Learn Without Limits Connect is a teaching and learning platform that is proven to deliver better results for students and instructors.
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©Getty Images/iStockphoto
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SmartBook®
Proven to help students improve grades and study more efficiently, SmartBook contains the same content within the print book, but actively tailors that content to the needs of the individual. SmartBook’s adaptive technology provides precise, personalized instruction on what the student should do next, guiding the student to master and remember key concepts, targeting gaps in knowledge and offering customized feedback, and driving the student toward comprehension and retention of the subject matter. Available on tablets, SmartBook puts learning at the student’s fingertips—anywhere, anytime.
Adaptive
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50% of the country’s students are not ready for A&P
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About the Authors iv
PART ONE ORGANIZATION OF THE BODY
CHAPTER 1 MAJOR THEMES OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY 1 1.1 The Scope of Anatomy and
Physiology 2 1.2 The Origins of Biomedical
Science 3 1.3 Scientific Method 6 1.4 Human Origins and
Adaptations 9 1.5 Human Structure 11 1.6 Human Function 13 1.7 The Language of Medicine 19 1.8 Review of Major Themes 21 STUDY GUIDE 24
ATLAS A GENERAL ORIENTATION TO HUMAN ANATOMY 27 A.1 General Anatomical
Terminology 28 A.2 Major Body Regions 29 A.3 Body Cavities and
Membranes 32 A.4 Organ Systems 35 STUDY GUIDE 38
CHAPTER 2 THE CHEMISTRY OF LIFE 41 2.1 Atoms, Ions, and Molecules 42 2.2 Water and Mixtures 49 2.3 Energy and Chemical
Reactions 53 2.4 Organic Compounds 56 STUDY GUIDE 72
CHAPTER 3 CELLULAR FORM AND FUNCTION 75 3.1 Concepts of Cellular Structure 76 3.2 The Cell Surface 80 3.3 Membrane Transport 88 3.4 The Cell Interior 98 STUDY GUIDE 108
CHAPTER 4 GENETICS AND CELLULAR FUNCTION 111 4.1 DNA and RNA—The Nucleic
Acids 112 4.2 Genes and Their Action 117 4.3 DNA Replication and the Cell
Cycle 126
4.4 Chromosomes and Heredity 130 STUDY GUIDE 136
CHAPTER 5 HISTOLOGY 139 5.1 The Study of Tissues 140 5.2 Epithelial Tissue 143 5.3 Connective Tissue 149 5.4 Nervous and Muscular
Tissues—Excitable Tissues 158 5.5 Cell Junctions, Glands, and
Membranes 160 5.6 Tissue Growth, Development,
Repair, and Degeneration 167 STUDY GUIDE 172
PART TWO SUPPORT AND MOVEMENT
CHAPTER 6 THE INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM 175 6.1 The Skin and Subcutaneous
Tissue 176 6.2 Hair and Nails 184 6.3 Cutaneous Glands 189
6.4 Skin Disorders 192 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 197 STUDY GUIDE 198
CHAPTER 7 BONE TISSUE 201 7.1 Tissues and Organs of the
Skeletal System 202 7.2 Histology of Osseous Tissue 204 7.3 Bone Development 208 7.4 Physiology of Osseous Tissue 215 7.5 Bone Disorders 220 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 224 STUDY GUIDE 225
CHAPTER 8 THE SKELETAL SYSTEM 228 8.1 Overview of the Skeleton 229 8.2 The Skull 231 8.3 The Vertebral Column and
Thoracic Cage 245 8.4 The Pectoral Girdle and Upper
Limb 254 8.5 The Pelvic Girdle and
Lower Limb 258 STUDY GUIDE 270
CHAPTER 9 JOINTS 273 9.1 Joints and Their Classification 274 9.2 Synovial Joints 278 9.3 Anatomy of Selected
Diarthroses 292 STUDY GUIDE 304
CHAPTER 10 THE MUSCULAR SYSTEM 307 10.1 Structural and Functional
Organization of Muscles 308 10.2 Muscles of the Head and
Neck 317 10.3 Muscles of the Trunk 328 10.4 Muscles Acting on the Shoulder
and Upper Limb 338
CONTENTS
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10.5 Muscles Acting on the Hip and Lower Limb 354
STUDY GUIDE 370
ATLAS B REGIONAL AND SURFACE ANATOMY 373 B.1 Regional Anatomy 374 B.2 The Importance of Surface
Anatomy 374 B.3 Learning Strategy 374
CHAPTER 11 MUSCULAR TISSUE 395 11.1 Types and Characteristics of
Muscular Tissue 396 11.2 Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal
Muscle 397 11.3 The Nerve–Muscle
Relationship 402 11.4 Behavior of Skeletal Muscle
Fibers 405 11.5 Behavior of Whole Muscles 412 11.6 Muscle Metabolism 415 11.7 Cardiac and Smooth Muscle 420 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 427 STUDY GUIDE 428
PART THREE INTERNAL COORDINATION AND CONTROL
CHAPTER 12 NERVOUS TISSUE 431 12.1 Overview of the Nervous
System 432 12.2 Properties of Neurons 433 12.3 Supportive Cells (Neuroglia) 438 12.4 Electrophysiology of Neurons 443 12.5 Synapses 451 12.6 Neural Integration 457 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 467 STUDY GUIDE 468
CHAPTER 13 THE SPINAL CORD, SPINAL NERVES, AND SOMATIC REFLEXES 471 13.1 The Spinal Cord 472
13.2 The Spinal Nerves 480 13.3 Somatic Reflexes 493 STUDY GUIDE 501
CHAPTER 14 THE BRAIN AND CRANIAL NERVES 504 14.1 Overview of the Brain 505 14.2 Meninges, Ventricles,
Cerebrospinal Fluid, and Blood Supply 509
14.3 The Hindbrain and Midbrain 514 14.4 The Forebrain 521 14.5 Integrative Functions of the
Brain 527 14.6 The Cranial Nerves 538 STUDY GUIDE 551
CHAPTER 15 THE AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM AND VISCERAL REFLEXES 554 15.1 General Properties of the
Autonomic Nervous System 555 15.2 Anatomy of the Autonomic
Nervous System 558 15.3 Autonomic Effects on Target
Organs 565 15.4 Central Control of Autonomic
Function 569 STUDY GUIDE 572
CHAPTER 16 SENSE ORGANS 575 16.1 Properties and Types of
Sensory Receptors 576 16.2 The General Senses 578 16.3 The Chemical Senses 584 16.4 Hearing and Equilibrium 589 16.5 Vision 603 STUDY GUIDE 622
CHAPTER 17 THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM 626 17.1 Overview of the Endocrine
System 627 17.2 The Hypothalamus and Pituitary
Gland 630 17.3 Other Endocrine Glands 637
17.4 Hormones and Their Actions 647 17.5 Stress and Adaptation 656 17.6 Eicosanoids and Other Signaling
Molecules 657 17.7 Endocrine Disorders 659 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 665 STUDY GUIDE 666
PART FOUR CIRCULATION AND DEFENSE
CHAPTER 18 THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM: BLOOD 669 18.1 Introduction 670 18.2 Erythrocytes 675 18.3 Blood Types 682 18.4 Leukocytes 687 18.5 Platelets and Hemostasis—The
Control of Bleeding 693 STUDY GUIDE 702
CHAPTER 19 THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM: HEART 705 19.1 Overview of the Cardiovascular
System 706 19.2 Gross Anatomy of the Heart 708 19.3 Cardiac Muscle and the Cardiac
Conduction System 717 19.4 Electrical and Contractile Activity
of the Heart 719 19.5 Blood Flow, Heart Sounds, and
the Cardiac Cycle 725 19.6 Cardiac Output 731 STUDY GUIDE 738
CHAPTER 20 THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM: BLOOD VESSELS AND CIRCULATION 741 20.1 General Anatomy of the Blood
Vessels 742 20.2 Blood Pressure, Resistance, and
Flow 750 20.3 Capillary Exchange 756 20.4 Venous Return and Circulatory
Shock 760
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20.5 Special Circulatory Routes 763 20.6 Anatomy of the Pulmonary
Circuit 764 20.7 Systemic Vessels of the Axial
Region 765 20.8 Systemic Vessels of the
Appendicular Region 784 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 795 STUDY GUIDE 796
CHAPTER 21 THE LYMPHATIC AND IMMUNE SYSTEMS 800 21.1 The Lymphatic System 801 21.2 Innate Immunity 814 21.3 Adaptive Immunity—General
Aspects 822 21.4 Cellular Immunity 827 21.5 Humoral Immunity 830 21.6 Immune System Disorders 835 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 841 STUDY GUIDE 842
PART FIVE INTAKE AND OUTPUT
CHAPTER 22 THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM 845 22.1 Anatomy of the Respiratory
System 846 22.2 Pulmonary Ventilation 857 22.3 Gas Exchange and Transport 868 22.4 Respiratory Disorders 878 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 882 STUDY GUIDE 883
CHAPTER 23 THE URINARY SYSTEM 886 23.1 Functions of the Urinary
System 887 23.2 Anatomy of the Kidney 889 23.3 Urine Formation I: Glomerular
Filtration 895 23.4 Urine Formation II: Tubular
Reabsorption and Secretion 901 23.5 Urine Formation III: Water
Conservation 905 23.6 Urine and Renal Function
Tests 908
23.7 Urine Storage and Elimination 911 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 917 STUDY GUIDE 918
CHAPTER 24 FLUID, ELECTROLYTE, AND ACID–BASE BALANCE 921 24.1 Fluid Balance 922 24.2 Electrolyte Balance 928 24.3 Acid–Base Balance 933 STUDY GUIDE 941
CHAPTER 25 THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM 944 25.1 General Anatomy and Digestive
Processes 945 25.2 The Mouth Through
Esophagus 949 25.3 The Stomach 956 25.4 The Liver, Gallbladder, and
Pancreas 965 25.5 The Small Intestine 971 25.6 Chemical Digestion and
Absorption 974 25.7 The Large Intestine 981 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 987 STUDY GUIDE 988
CHAPTER 26 NUTRITION AND METABOLISM 991 26.1 Nutrition 992 26.2 Carbohydrate Metabolism 1003 26.3 Lipid and Protein Metabolism 1010 26.4 Metabolic States and
Metabolic Rate 1012 26.5 Body Heat and
Thermoregulation 1016 STUDY GUIDE 1021
PART SIX REPRODUCTION AND THE LIFE CYCLE
CHAPTER 27 THE MALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM 1025 27.1 Sexual Reproduction and
Development 1026
27.2 Male Reproductive Anatomy 1031
27.3 Puberty, Hormonal Control, and Climacteric 1039
27.4 Sperm and Semen 1041 27.5 Male Sexual Response 1046 STUDY GUIDE 1052
CHAPTER 28 THE FEMALE REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM 1055 28.1 Reproductive Anatomy 1056 28.2 Puberty and Menopause 1066 28.3 Oogenesis and the
Sexual Cycle 1068 28.4 Female Sexual Response 1076 28.5 Pregnancy and
Childbirth 1077 28.6 Lactation 1084 CONNECTIVE ISSUES 1089 STUDY GUIDE 1090
CHAPTER 29 HUMAN DEVELOPMENT AND AGING 1093 29.1 Fertilization and the
Preembryonic Stage 1094 29.2 The Embryonic and Fetal
Stages 1100 29.3 The Neonate 1109 29.4 Aging and Senescence 1114 STUDY GUIDE 1123
APPENDIX A: PERIODIC TABLE OF THE ELEMENTS A-1
APPENDIX B: ANSWER KEYS A-2
APPENDIX C: SYMBOLS, WEIGHTS, AND MEASURES A-15
APPENDIX D: BIOMEDICAL ABBREVIATIONS A-18
APPENDIX E: THE GENETIC CODE A-19
APPENDIX F: LEXICON OF BIOMEDICAL WORD ELEMENTS A-20
APPENDIX G: EIGHTH EDITION CHANGES IN TERMINOLOGY A-24
GLOSSARY G-1
INDEX I-1
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LETTER TO STUDENTS
When I was a young boy, I became interested in what I then called “nature study” for two reasons. One was the sheer beauty of nature. I reveled in children’s books with abundant, colorful drawings and photographs of animals, plants, minerals, and gems. It was this esthetic appreciation of nature that made me want to learn more about it and made me hap- pily surprised to discover I could make a career of it. At a slightly later age, another thing that drew me still deeper into biology was to discover writers who had a way with words—who could capti- vate my imagination and curiosity with their elegant prose. Once I was old enough to hold part-time jobs, I began buying zoology and anatomy books that mesmerized me with their gracefulness of writing and fascinating art and photography. I wanted to write and draw like that myself, and I began teaching myself by learning from “the masters.” I spent many late nights in my room peering into my microscope and jars of pond water, typing page after page of manuscript, and trying pen and ink as an art medium. My “first book” was a 318-page paper on some little pond animals called hydras, with 53 India ink illustrations that I wrote for my tenth- grade biology class when I was 16 (see page v). Fast-forward about 30 years, to when I became a textbook writer, and I found myself bringing that same enjoyment of writing and illustrating to the first edition of this book you are now hold- ing. Why? Not only for its intrinsic creative satisfaction, but because I’m guessing that you’re like I was—you can appreciate a book that does more than simply give you the information you need. You appreciate, I trust, a writer who makes it enjoyable for you through his scientific, storytelling prose and his concept of the way things should be illustrated to spark interest and facilitate understanding. I know from my own students, however, that you need more than captivating illustrations and enjoyable reading. Let’s face it— A&P is a complex subject and it may seem a formidable task to acquire even a basic knowledge of the human body. It was difficult even for me to learn (and the learning never ends). So in addition to simply writing this book, I’ve given a lot of thought to its
pedagogy—the art of teaching. I’ve designed my chapters to make them easier for you to study and to give you abundant opportunity to check whether you’ve understood what you read—to test your- self (as I advise my own students) before the instructor tests you. Each chapter is broken down into short, digestible bits with a set of Expected Learning Outcomes at the beginning of each sec- tion, and self-testing questions (Before You Go On) just a few pages later. Even if you have just 30 minutes to read during a lunch break or a bus ride, you can easily read or review one of these brief sections. There are also numerous self-testing questions in a Study Guide at the end of each chapter, in some of the figure legends, and the occasional Apply What You Know questions dispersed throughout each chapter. The questions cover a broad range of cognitive skills, from simple recall of a term to your ability to evaluate, analyze, and apply what you’ve learned to new clinical situations or other problems. In this era of digital publishing, how- ever, learning aids go far beyond what I write into the book itself. SmartBook®, available on smartphones and tablets, includes all of the book’s contents plus adaptive technology that can give you personalized instruction, target the unique gaps in your knowledge, and guide you in comprehension and retention of the subject matter. I hope you enjoy your study of this book, but I know there are always ways to make it even better. Indeed, what quality you may find in this edition owes a great deal to feedback I’ve received from students all over the world. If you find any typos or other errors, if you have any suggestions for improvement, if I can clarify a con- cept for you, or even if you just want to comment on something you really like about the book, I hope you’ll feel free to write to me. I correspond quite a lot with students and would enjoy hearing from you.
Ken Saladin Georgia College Milledgeville, GA 31061 (USA) ksaladin2@windstream.net
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A colorized MRI scan of the human body © Simon Fraser/Getty Images
C H
A P
T E
R
Module 1: Body Orientation
PART ONE: ORGANIZATION OF THE BODY
1 MAJOR THEMES OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY
CHAPTER OUTLINE
1.1 The Scope of Anatomy and Physiology
• Anatomy—The Study of Form • Physiology—The Study of Function
1.2 The Origins of Biomedical Science
• The Greek and Roman Legacy • The Birth of Modern Medicine • Living in a Revolution
1.3 Scientific Method
• The Inductive Method • The Hypothetico–Deductive Method • Experimental Design • Peer Review • Facts, Laws, and Theories
1.4 Human Origins and Adaptations
• Evolution, Selection, and Adaptation • Our Basic Primate Adaptations • Walking Upright
1.5 Human Structure
• The Hierarchy of Complexity • Anatomical Variation
1.6 Human Function
• Characteristics of Life • Physiological Variation • Homeostasis and Negative Feedback • Positive Feedback and Rapid Change • Gradients and Flow
1.7 The Language of Medicine
• The History of Anatomical Terminology • Analyzing Medical Terms • Plural, Adjectival, and Possessive Forms • Pronunciation • The Importance of Precision
1.8 Review of Major Themes
Study Guide
DEEPER INSIGHTS
1.1 Evolutionary Medicine: Vestiges of Human Evolution
1.2 Clinical Application: Situs Inversus and Other Unusual Anatomy
1.3 Medical History: Men in the Oven
1.4 Medical History: Obscure Word Origins
1.5 Clinical Application: Medical Imaging
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2 PART ONE Organization of the Body
No branch of science hits as close to home as the science of our own bodies. We’re grateful for the dependability of our hearts; we’re awed by the capabilities of muscles and joints dis- played by Olympic athletes; and we ponder with philosophers the ancient mysteries of mind and emotion. We want to know how our body works, and when it malfunctions, we want to know what’s happening and what we can do about it. Even the most ancient writings of civilization include medical documents that attest to humanity’s timeless drive to know itself. You are em- barking on a subject that is as old as civilization, yet one that grows by thousands of scientific publications every week.