Human Body Systems (RRB)

Digestive, respiratory, circulatory, nervous, skeletal.

Human Body Systems (RRB) — Core

Digestive, respiratory, circulatory, nervous, skeletal.

Human body — organ systems overview
Notes

The human body is organized into 11 major organ systems, each with specific roles.

  1. Integumentary system: skin, hair, nails. Protects, regulates temperature, vitamin D synthesis.
  2. Skeletal system: 206 bones in adults (270 at birth). Support, protection, blood cell production (in marrow), mineral storage.
  3. Muscular system: ~600 muscles. Three types:
    • Skeletal (voluntary, striated).
    • Smooth (involuntary, in walls of organs).
    • Cardiac (heart only).
  4. Nervous system: brain, spinal cord, nerves. Receives signals, processes, responds.
  5. Endocrine system: hormone-producing glands (pituitary, thyroid, adrenals, pancreas, gonads).
  6. Circulatory system: heart + blood + vessels. Transports O₂, CO₂, nutrients, hormones.
  7. Respiratory system: nose, trachea, lungs. Gas exchange.
  8. Digestive system: mouth to anus. Breaks down food, absorbs nutrients.
  9. Urinary / Excretory system: kidneys, bladder, ureters, urethra. Removes nitrogenous waste.
  10. Reproductive system: ovaries/uterus in females; testes in males.
  11. Lymphatic / Immune system: lymph nodes, spleen, thymus. Fights infection.

Bones — interesting facts:

  • Femur (thigh bone): longest. ~25% of body height.
  • Stapes (in ear): smallest, ~3 mm.
  • Skull: 22 bones (cranium 8 + face 14).
  • Spine: 33 vertebrae (cervical 7, thoracic 12, lumbar 5, sacrum 5, coccyx 4).
  • Hand has 27 bones; foot has 26.

Heart:

  • Size of a fist; weight ~300 g.
  • Located slightly left of centre in the chest.
  • Pumps ~5 L of blood per minute at rest.
  • Has its own electrical pacemaker — SA node (sinoatrial).
  • Blood pressure: normal ~120/80 mmHg (systolic/diastolic).

Blood:

  • Plasma (55%) + cells (45%).
  • RBC (red blood cells / erythrocytes): contain haemoglobin; no nucleus in mature form; ~5 million/mm³.
  • WBC (white blood cells / leucocytes): fight infection; ~7000/mm³.
  • Platelets: aid clotting; ~250,000/mm³.

Blood groups (ABO + Rh):

  • A, B, AB, O.
  • AB is universal recipient; O is universal donor.
  • Rh+ or Rh− based on Rh antigen.
Human body — quick-fire facts and systems
Worked example

Brain (~1.4 kg in adult):

  • Cerebrum: largest part; controls thinking, memory, sensory perception, voluntary movement. Divided into left and right hemispheres.
  • Cerebellum: balance, posture, fine motor coordination.
  • Medulla oblongata: controls involuntary actions — heartbeat, breathing, swallowing.
  • Hypothalamus: regulates hunger, thirst, body temperature.
  • Brain uses ~20% of body's energy at rest.

Eye:

  • Cornea + lens form image on retina (inverted, smaller).
  • Iris controls aperture (pupil).
  • Retina has rods (B&W vision, dim light) and cones (colour, bright light).
  • Three cone types: red, green, blue.

Ear (hearing + balance):

  • Outer ear (pinna + canal) collects sound.
  • Middle ear: 3 tiny bones (malleus, incus, stapes) amplify vibrations.
  • Inner ear: cochlea converts to nerve signals; semicircular canals provide balance.

Teeth (adults: 32):

  • 8 incisors (cutting), 4 canines (tearing), 8 premolars (grinding), 12 molars (grinding).
  • 4 wisdom teeth (last molars) may not erupt.
  • Children have 20 milk teeth.

Skin:

  • Largest organ; ~16% of body weight.
  • Two layers: epidermis (outer) + dermis (inner).
  • Sweat glands cool body; sebaceous glands produce oil.
  • Vitamin D synthesized when UV from sun hits skin.

Reproduction:

  • Sperm produced in testes; ova in ovaries.
  • Fertilization in fallopian tube.
  • Pregnancy: 40 weeks (280 days from last menstrual period).
  • Sex determination: father's Y chromosome → male; X → female.

Immune system:

  • Antibodies neutralize antigens.
  • Vaccination introduces weakened antigen → body makes antibodies for future protection.
  • B cells (antibodies), T cells (cellular immunity).
  • White blood cell types: neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils.

Common conditions:

  • Anaemia: low haemoglobin → fatigue, paleness. Eat iron-rich foods.
  • Diabetes: high blood sugar; insulin deficiency or resistance.
  • Hypertension: high blood pressure; risk of stroke and heart attack.
  • Goitre: thyroid enlargement; often from iodine deficiency.

Universal facts:

  • Resting heart rate: 60–100 bpm.
  • Resting respiration rate: 12–18 breaths/min.
  • Normal body temperature: 36.5–37.5°C (97.7–99.5°F).
  • Total length of blood vessels in body: ~100,000 km (could circle Earth 2.5 times).