This document provides a table of contents for a medical physiology textbook. It lists the chapter and section titles for the introduction, including a chapter on general and cellular physiology that contains 14 tables and 14 figures providing anatomical, physiological, and biochemical information to introduce basic medical concepts.
This document provides a table of contents for a medical physiology textbook. It lists the chapter and section titles for the introduction, including a chapter on general and cellular physiology that contains 14 tables and 14 figures providing anatomical, physiological, and biochemical information to introduce basic medical concepts.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Descargue como PDF, TXT o lea en línea desde Scribd
This document provides a table of contents for a medical physiology textbook. It lists the chapter and section titles for the introduction, including a chapter on general and cellular physiology that contains 14 tables and 14 figures providing anatomical, physiological, and biochemical information to introduce basic medical concepts.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formatos disponibles
Descargue como PDF, TXT o lea en línea desde Scribd
Cover Front Matter Section I. Introduction 1. The General & Cellular Basis of Medical Physiology INTRODUCTION TABLES Table 1-1. Total body water (as percentage of body weight) in relation to age and sex. Table 1-2. Concentration of some ions inside and outside mammalian spinal motor neurons. Table 1-3. Some of the enzymes found in lysosomes and the cell components that are their substrates. Table 1-4. Molecular motors. Table 1-5. Size of hydrated ions and other substances of biological interest. Table 1-6. Principal mechanisms by which chemical messengers in the ECF bring about changes in cell function. Table 1-7. Principal protein kinases. Table 1-8. Some of the ligands for receptors coupled to G proteins. Table 1-9. Diseases caused by loss or gain of function mutations of heterotrimeric G protein-coupled receptors and G proteins. FIGURES Figure 1-1 Figure 1-2 Figure 1-3 Figure 1-4 Figure 1-5 Figure 1-6 Figure 1-7 Figure 1-8 Figure 1-9 Figure 1-10 Figure 1-11 Figure 1-12 Figure 1-13 Figure 1-14