Menù principale
B016801 - HUMAN MORPHOLOGY II
Main information
Teaching Language
Course Content
Suggested readings
Learning Objectives
Prerequisites
Teaching Methods
Further information
Type of Assessment
Course program
Academic Year 2018-19
Course year
First year - Second Semester
Belonging Department
Experimantal and Clinical Medicine
Course Type
Single education field course
Scientific Area
BIO/16 - HUMAN ANATOMY
Credits
6
Teaching Hours
48
Teaching Term
04/03/2019 ⇒ 30/04/2020
Attendance required
No
Type of Evaluation
Final Grade
Course Content
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Course program
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Lectureship
Teaching Language
Italian
Course Content
The course requires the basic knowledge of macroscopic morphology, relations, and rudiments of microscopic organization concerning the organs of the systems: locomotor, tegumentary, circulatory, digestive, respiratory, urinary, male and female genital, endocrine, central and peripheral nervous.
Suggested readings (Search our library's catalogue)
Anatomia Umana . Martini-Timmons-Tallitsch. EdiSES
Principi di Anatomia e Fisiologia . Tortora e Derrickson. Casa Editrice Ambrosiana
Anatomia del Gray, fondamenti - EDRA
Atlante di Anatomia Umana. F. Netter. CIBA-GEIGY
Atlante Fotografico del Corpo Umano. Gerard J Tortora. Casa Editrice Ambrosiana
Principi di Anatomia e Fisiologia . Tortora e Derrickson. Casa Editrice Ambrosiana
Anatomia del Gray, fondamenti - EDRA
Atlante di Anatomia Umana. F. Netter. CIBA-GEIGY
Atlante Fotografico del Corpo Umano. Gerard J Tortora. Casa Editrice Ambrosiana
Learning Objectives
The student will accomplish the following competencies upon successful completion of the course in Human Morphology II:
1. The student will develop a functional knowledge of the basic nomenclature and conventions used to study human anatomy, review the fundamentals of cell biology and selected tissues of the body.
2. The student will be able to display knowledge of the relative positions and functions of the major body organs as well as their general anatomical locations for the body systems covered in Human Anatomy.
8. The student will be able to identify the anatomy of all the topics mentioned in the program.
1. The student will develop a functional knowledge of the basic nomenclature and conventions used to study human anatomy, review the fundamentals of cell biology and selected tissues of the body.
2. The student will be able to display knowledge of the relative positions and functions of the major body organs as well as their general anatomical locations for the body systems covered in Human Anatomy.
8. The student will be able to identify the anatomy of all the topics mentioned in the program.
Prerequisites
....
Teaching Methods
Lectures with extensive use of images, such as to facilitate the acquisition of fundamental anatomical basis through the stimulation of visual memory.
Further information
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Type of Assessment
Multiple choice quiz and possibly oral exam.
Course program
Course contents
The Integumentary System,
The Skeletal System: The Axial Skeleton and skull
The Skeletal System: The Appendicular Skeleton
Joints
The Muscular System
The Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves
The Brain and Cranial Nerves
The Autonomic Nervous System
Sensory, Motor, and Integrative Systems
The Special Senses
The Endocrine System
The male and female Genital systems
The Cardiovascular System: The Blood
The Cardiovascular System: The Heart
The Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels and Hemodynamics
The Lymphatic System and Immunity
The Respiratory System
The Digestive System
The Urinary System
The Integumentary System,
The Skeletal System: The Axial Skeleton and skull
The Skeletal System: The Appendicular Skeleton
Joints
The Muscular System
The Spinal Cord and Spinal Nerves
The Brain and Cranial Nerves
The Autonomic Nervous System
Sensory, Motor, and Integrative Systems
The Special Senses
The Endocrine System
The male and female Genital systems
The Cardiovascular System: The Blood
The Cardiovascular System: The Heart
The Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels and Hemodynamics
The Lymphatic System and Immunity
The Respiratory System
The Digestive System
The Urinary System