Sunday, April 4, 2010

The NEED for technology

Evaluate the importance of various technologies, including Canadian contributions, to our understanding of internal body systems (digestive, circulatory or respiratory)

It quite simple, without certain technologies that are present today the health care system would be nonexistent. Many discoveries and knowledgeable information would not be known. How would the image of a cell be known without technology? The structure of the cell is one the fundamental concepts in human biology.


Health technologies form an indispensable component of the services heath systems can offer in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease. Health technologies also alleviate disability and functional deficiency.

The greatest invention of the 1600s, the microscope, changed the way people understood and explained the universe. No one scientist was responsible for the development of the microscope. Instead, the development of the microscope was an ongoing process that involved technological advances in glass making and lens polishing, along with refinements to existing models. The invention of the light microscope allowed for scientists to view the contents of cells, and led to the realization that plants and animals share many common cellular features. Without the light microscope, scientists would not have known the existence of Escherichia coli, which is a colony of small rod-shaped bacteria, that lives in the human intestines. These microbes continuously supplies the human body with important vitamins, and helps break down and food we consume.
The light microscope has further developed into the electron microscope, due to James Hillier and Albert Prebus, graduate students at the University of Toronto. Since then, further developments in the field of microscopy have led to:

The Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) which develops an image that is produced by a beam of electrons passing through a very thin slice of specimen. The image appears on a screen and is a flat, two-dimensional image.

The Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) produces an image by a beam of electrons which scans across the surface of the sample. As secondary electrons are released by the sample, they form an image which is somewhat three dimensional.

The Scanning Tunnelling Microscope (STM) produces an image of a sample by placing a minuscule electrical probe near the surface of the sample. The images produced are used for atomic-level imaging and for manipulating molecules and atoms.

The use of the microscope has led to an understanding the structure of the cell and its functions. It provided the basis for determining how tissues and organs work. It has identified bacteria, viruses, and process that allows for a positive impact on the health care system.

A Canadian researcher, Dr. Gurmit Singh, who works at the Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre (and McMaster University) is studying the way the mitochondria of a tumour's cells differs from those of a normal cell. In healthy cells, any distribution of the mitochondria causes cellular respiration to stop, which leads to the death of the cell. In tumour cells, the abnormal mitochondria allows the cell to continue to live, increasing the size of the tumour. In Dr. Gurmit Singh's studies, he hopes to find a way to activate the normal death signals in tumour cells, allowing the destruction of the tumour.

A microscope is limited to viewing a small sample of any matter. In contrast, a computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan is defined as a procedure in which an X-ray machine takes many pictures of an object from different angles; a computer then reassembles the image to allow viewing of the object in cross section and in 3-D. The CAT scan is so accurate that it can detect abrasions as small as one millimetre. The scanner also distinguishes between gases, liquids, and solid tissues, and is able to identify tumours embedded in the bran or liver. CAT scans are particularly useful as a diagnostic tool for assessing head injuries involving blood clots.


An endoscope is a medical instrument to view the interior of the body. It can be fitted with a light-emitting glass fibre and then positioned inside a patient's body. This medical device is inserted directly into the organ and can consist of the following: a rigid or flexible tube, a light source connected to the tip of the tube, and a lens system, transmitting the image to the viewer. An endoscope was first introduces into a human in 1822, but Willian Beaumort. This device can be used to view: the esophagus, the stomach, stomach ulcers, small intestine, or large intestine (digestive system), the nasal passage or nose (respiratory system).


It quite oblivious to everyone, that the heart is one of the most important components in the human body. But does anyone wonder, is it possible to MAKE a heart? Dr. Michael Sefton, director of the Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering at the University of Toronto, has been studying and experimenting on how it would be possible to create components of the the heart. This breakthrough in medicine would provide an unlimited number of hearts for transplant that would be grown in the laboratory.
PROCESS IN MAKING A HEART:
1) Cells are placed along plastic scaffolding. Typically, biodegradable plastics are used.
2) The scaffolding, seeding with cells, is placed in a bioreactor that provides nutrients and oxygen needed to support cell division. The bioreactor acts as an incubator maintaining constant body temperature.
3) The cells secrete proteins and growth factors that bind them together to form a living tissue on the scaffolding.

The sphygmomanometer is defined as a device used to measure blood pressure (the force of blood on the walls of the arteries). Blood pressure is traditionally measured in millimetres of mercury ( mm Hg ). A sphygmomanometer consists of a cuff with an air bladder that wraps around a human's arm, a small pump is used to inflate the air bladder, thereby closing off blood flow through the brachial artery, one of the major arteries in the arm, and a measuring unit. This device had been invented by Samuel Siegfried Karl Ritter von Basch, in 1881. High blood pressure can be a serious health problem, as it can weaken an artery and eventually result in its rupture. Equally, low blood pressure reduces the capacity to transport blood in the human body. A sphysmomanometer is important in monitoring the circulatory system and can reflect the health of the respiratory system.

In conclusion, health technologies are a major component of the health care system. Without certain technologies, many diseases would not be known, many people would die of unknown causes, and the existence of the universe and human body would still be unknown. Basically, everything would be unknown.

Blogs Commented On:
Amanda Phen


Jarvis Noronha


WORKS CITED LIST:
http://health.howstuffworks.com/question146.htm
http://www.yesmag.ca/how_work/microscope.html
http://www.radiologyinfo.org/en/info.cfm?pg=bodyct
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/153737.php
http://digestive.niddk.nih.gov/ddiseases/pubs/upperendoscopy/

5 Comments:

Blogger Priscilla C. said...

Dear Rosemary,
Firstly, your blog was great and very informative! I really liked how you analyzed each type of technology in detail-it was very insightful.
I definitely agree with you, without the microscope,CAT scan,endoscope,and sphygmomanometer (quite the mouthful) humans would be so much more oblivious about the human body, and would not be able to decipher diseases and cancers as quickly. Technology has modified our every day lives, for the better! I remember having an endoscope in my nose, it was not a pleasant feeling, but it informed me that my nose was healthy, which is fantastic news! Without it, I probably would've worried more- I got frequent nosebleeds.
Thank-you technology!
In addition, thank you Rosemary for helping me understand technologies, brilliant blog.

April 10, 2010 at 7:02 PM

 
Blogger ana kristina abad :) said...

Oh hey Rosemary! ;D
I'd like to take the time to tell you that your blog had so much informtion, very well-written! I really liked how detailed you made everything, and how you separated each development of the microscope with a new paragraph, it made it easy to follow. (: I was also able to educate myself about the many technological developments you mentioned. ( like the endocope!)

I agree with you that the healthcare system wouldn't be as advanced or actually even exsist without the technology or development of these devices. For example, would we really know how cells were made up with out the invention of the microscope? I don't think so. We wouldn't be able to know anything, and we'd be so oblivious to anything and everything pertaining to the body and the internal systems inside.

May 10, 2010 at 8:01 PM

 
Blogger Belinda said...

Hey Rosemary :)

So I really liked your blog because it had so much information. Trust me, I learned ALOT! I liked the fact that you introduced this topic by talking about cells and how they are so important to our internal body. Your blog consists of so much detail that it's quite hard to all take in!

You made me realize how important such a small device such as the microscope is so important. I completely agree with you when you mentioned that the microscope has lead people to understand and learn about the cell and its structure. Something so small can point out bacterias and answer a whole lot of questions.

I've only heard of the endoscope, and not really know what it was. Thanks to your blog, I now know :) Other than the microscope, I love that fact how this other small device can easily help doctors see the inside of a humans body! Organs that you thought can never be seen up close, can now be seen thanks to the endoscope.

Your blog was so good and well written! Keeps up the good work! Once again, good job! :D

May 28, 2010 at 8:56 AM

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey Rosemary, great blog. I found the part about different microscopes quite interesting for I never knew that there were different types of microscopes that could produce different types of images. I knew there were stronger types of microscopes that could see much smaller objects than the average microscope, but not that there were different types of microscopes that could produce different kinds of images. Again, great job with the blog and keep up the good work !

May 30, 2010 at 11:13 PM

 
Blogger gelica said...

Hi Rosemary!
Your blog helped me learn so much about inventions that are realy important to understanding the human body. I can't even imagine what the medical world would be like without microscopes. My mom's anemic, so we're constantly having to check up on her blood pressure with a "sphysmomanometer." I didn't even know that the instrument was called that until I read your blog! Thanks for the information :)

May 31, 2010 at 3:03 AM

 

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