PCB 3711   PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS

 

SYLLABUS   FALL 2002

 

Instructor: Dr. Leon A. Cuervo

Office; OE 243     Hours: 1:30 - 4:30

e-mail: cuervol@fiu.edu

Tel: 305-348-2298

This course, as its name implies, will present a detailed discussion of the mechanisms that underlie physiological functions from the point of view of their physical bases. In order to implement this approach, the various mechanisms are grouped according to their common physical nature rather than according to the organ or system in which they operate. By using general principles as a basis to study apparently diverse phenomena, the instructor intends to facilitate the acquisition of a deeper understanding of the mechanisms, as well as to illustrate the unity of science and the interdependence of its branches.

Frequently students receive from introductory courses the false impression that a superficial explanation is acceptable, but it is not. In fact, these explanations are frequently incorrect and always deficient. It is true that we never reach a complete understanding of anything, but always the attitude should be to improve it as much as possible. That is what makes us scientists. The first step in correcting an incomplete or erroneous understanding is to become aware of the deficiency. This course intends to strengthen your background in important areas and to question your understanding of physiological principles, as deeply as appropriate, to unmask weaknesses and to correct them. Along the way, you will acquire a broad vision of physiological processes by constructing a scaffold of interconnecting pieces of knowledge.

Your background in physics and mathematics will be used and improved, and you will be surprised to find out how important those to branches of science are to physiology and other areas of biology. The reason is simple: understanding a part of the real world is to create in our minds mental models of that reality. The more better the model, the more accurate the understanding. Physics and mathematics allow us to construct pretty good models.

There is no textbook. I will make available to you as we go along, mostly through the internet, the material you need regarding physical models we use, but the use of a physiology book will be very helpful. Class attendance is very important because class notes are important and because my explanations should clarify what the written material contains. Also, I will do problems in class.

You will get homework assignments (mostly problems) and they will be worth 30% of the final grade. The questions in these assignments are designed to stimulate your thinking and to allow you to assess the depth of your understanding of the subject. I encourage you to meet in small groups to discuss these questions. Discussions between peers is frequently an effective way to identify misunderstandings and to correct them. There is a condition to this: at the time of writing your answers each of you should do it individually and including a full justification of your answer. The other 70% of the final grade corresponds to two tests. The questions in the tests will include problems and all kinds of questions (multiple choice to short essays). The first test will take place before the last day for dropping the course on a date that I will announce with sufficient time, and the second test will be whenever it is assigned by the administration.

Course Content

1. Material Transport

Energetics: thermodynamic functions. Free energy and chemical potential in chemical reaction and in transport. Energetics of passive and active transports. Osmotic pressure an water transport. Epithelial transport. General law of viscous flow: the concepts of gradient and friction. Bulk flow of liquids and gases,  laminar and turbulent flows. Applications of the general law of viscous flow. Blood circulation.. Characteristics of blood. The heart as a pump: pressure and volume output. Regulation of cardiac pumping. Characteristics of blood vessels. Physics of blood flow. Regulation of blood flow. Analysis of diffusion as a viscous flow, the concentration gradient .diffusion across the plasma membrane. Voltage gradient and the diffusion of ions.

2. Electrical properties of the plasma membrane. The origin of the membrane potential. The generation of electrical signals: voltage-gated, ligand-gated and mechanically gated channels. The synapse. Generation and propagation of action potentials in nerve and muscle cells. Cardiac action potentials. Excitation-contraction coupling in skeletal muscle and in the heart. Volume conductors: EEG, EMG, and ECG. Propagation of the depolarization in the heart and the shape of the electrocardiographic waves.

 

DOCUMENTS ON THE WEB PAGE

Concepts in Energetics

Introduction to Mass Transport

Viscous Flow

Blood Flow

Diffusion

Membrane potential

Charging the Membrane Capacitance

 

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