INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL ANATOMY MEANINS HISTORY SUBDIVISIONS Dr
INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL ANATOMY MEANINS HISTORY SUBDIVISIONS Dr. Mah Jabeen Muneera Assistant Professor Department of Anatomy KEMU
BACKGROUND Study of structure or form of biological organisms Oldest basic medical science Derived from Greek word Ana-----up Tome----cutting Dissecare, Latin word with similar meaning
Pre Scientific Era Egypt Greece Roman Middle ages Contribution of Islam Renaissance Pre modern Modern
Pre Scientific
10, 000 BC Purposeful boring& trephination of Human skull
Egypt 3, 000 BC Egyptian papyruses Mummification & embalming Human viscera stored Heart left as such (seat of soul)
Greece Anatomy 1 st found acceptance as science Alcmaeon n n Studied by dissecting animals Discovered Optic Nerve Pharyngotympanic tube Brain –intelligence Concept about SLEEP
Hippocrates 460 -377 BC Father of western medicine Anatomy as foundation of medicine Studied wounds, bones skull
Aristotle 384 -322 BC n world’s greatest “NATURAL SCIENTIST” n First used term “ANATOME” n Studies based upon animal dissection mainly n Foundation of “Comparative Anatomy” n Established EMBRYOLOGY on scientific course n
Alexandrian Era Herophilus & Erasistratus n n Dissected human body purposefully in a med school in Alexandria Cadavers, criminals dissected even vivisection
Decline & Roman invasion Egypt became part of Rome Culturally Roman environment HUMAN DISSECTION WAS FORBIDDEN
Contribution of Islam • Greek knowledge lost to west Europe • Retained by Islamic world • Translated Greek text to Arabic • Hussain Ibn_e_Ishaq (Baghdad) • Abd_ul_Latif Baghdadi • Ibn_e_Nafees • Improvement in description of bones
Claudius Galen Knowledge was mainly based upon treating wounds & animal study Later turned out to be incorrect Precisely described Results of damage of spinal cord at different levels
Leonardo de Vinci
Vesalius Student of Anatomy Found discrepancies Himself performed Dissection Wrote 1 st modern book
“Vesalius’s De Human Corpora Fabrica”
17 th century Willium Hunter Knowledge of Anatomy is the only SOLID FOUNDATION of medicine & general Surgery Harvey Presented theories about blood circulation Entirely new concepts
Morcello Malpighi(1661) Used MICROSCOPE Saw blood circulating in capillaries through flesh
Anton Van(18 th cent) Continued microscopic work Felin dujordin(19 th cent) protoplasm Robert Hook
18 th, 19 th Centuries Anatomists published many Atlases, that introduced new standards of depicting human body Shortage of cadavers, led to illegal means of obtaining human bodies In Britain Anatomy Act was passed in 1832 It made legal provision of unclaimed & donated bodies, to medical schools Similar legislations in other countries later
20 th cent Discovery of DNA
21 st cent Human genome decoding project All recent advances
Subdivisions Gross Anatomy Topographical Surface Systemic
Microscopic Anatomy Histology Embryology Developmental Anatomy
Comparative Anatomy Clinical Anatomy
Techniques to represent Anatomical knowledge Cave pictures, models , papyruses
Wood cut (14 th Century) Copper Plate Engraving (16 th century)
Hand colouring Lithography (18 th cent)
Photography (19 th century) X-ray Imaging
Digital imaging (recent advances)
ANATOMICAL NOMENCLATURE Before 1895, almost 30, 000 anatomical terms were in use In 1895, The German Anatomical Society held a meeting at Basle and prepared an approved list of 5, 000 Anatomical terms, published a book for guidance, Basle Nomina Anatomica Regular meetings are held to revise At present 5 th edition is available
LIFE SPAN OF MAN PRE NATAL: n n n CONCEPTUS (fertilization-1 st week) EMBRYO (2 nd-8 th week) FETUS (3 rd-birth) POST NATAL: n n Neonate (28 days) Infancy (1 st year) Childhood n n n Early(2 nd-6 th year) Middle(7 th-9 th/10 th years) Late (pre pubertal) Adolescence: 6 yrs following puberty Adult n n Prime & transition (20 -60 yrs) Old age & Senescence (60 -death)
ASSIGNMENT ORIGIN OF LIFE
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