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Biology 412 (Undergraduate credit) or 5412 (Graduate credit)
Instructor: Dr. Stan A. Baldwin
Text:
Human
Physiology: from Cells to Systems by Lauralee Sherwood.
Textbook of Medical Physiology by Guyton & Hall
5 semester
hours credit. 4 hours lecture/3 hours lab per week.
Offered every spring.
We cover following basic areas of Physiology in this course:
Cell
membrane potential, which involves membrane capacitance, movement of charged
particle
across the membrane, and the factors involved in determining the resting membrane
potential.
Action
potentials, which involves ion movement across the cell membrane, voltage
sensitive ion
channels and ligand sensitive channels.
Osmotic pressure and the maintenance of osmotic homeostasis in the body.
Renal
Physiology, which covers the kidneys' role in maintaining water balance,
electroloyte balance,
and pH control of body fluid.
Neurophysiology,
which covers some basic Neuroanatomy, various types of neurotransmitters,
action potentials, and nervous system regulation of the body's major organ systems.
Muscle
physiology, which covers the cell biology of muscle function as well as
muscle membrane
action potentials.
Cardiovascular
physiology, which involves the electrical properties of the heart muscle,
dynamics
of heart contraction, EKG's, fluid mechanics of blood flow through the vascular
system and nervous
system control of cardiovascular function.
Pulmonary
function. We study the nature of gas movement in the lungs and how
that controls
body wide metabolism and pH control of body fluid.
Exams
(all exams comprehensive)
Exam I (Osmotic pressure, Pulmonary)
Exam 2 (Renal)
Exam 3 (Neurophysiology, Muscle physiology)
Exam 4 (Cardiovascular)
Solutions to Circulation Problems