CB 1080 Human Anatomy
This course aims to describe the anatomical and functional details of the musculoskeletal, endocrine, nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, urinary, and male and female reproductive systems.
This course aims to describe the anatomical and functional details of the musculoskeletal, endocrine, nervous, cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, urinary, and male and female reproductive systems.
This course aims to provide students with the foundations to carry out a systematic, critical review of scientific literature. They wil apply the main methodological tools to the preparation and development of research projects for the purpose of acquiring skills and attitudes that will enable them to work as researchers in the different fields of nutrition.
This course aims to explain the structure and function of genetic material, the principles of Mendelian inheritance and multifactorial inheritance, and the impact of recent advances in the interaction between genetics and nutrition.
The aim of this course is to describe the anatomical and functional systems that make up the human body: the integumentary system, the skeletal system, the muscular system, the nervous system, the endocrine system, the lymph system, the respiratory system, the digestive system, and the urinary system, as well as their interaction with one another.
The aim of this course is for students to: (1) Become acquainted with the macroscopic and and functional morpphology of the oral cavity and describe the interactions between form, structure, and function of the stomatognathic system. (2) Acquire practical abilities in the modeling and reconstruction of dental pieces.
This course aims to explain how the structural , functional, and molecular elements of the immune system respond to internal and external attacks.
The aim of this course is for students to apply the methods and techniques used in medical microbiology for the isolation and identification of the main infectious agents pathogenic to man from clinical specimens and carry out research applied to real-life environments.
This course aims for students to review the classification, morphology, and metabolism of medically important bacteria, fungi, and parasites; analyze their antigenic structure, the factors determining their pathogenicity and virulence, as well as the most important means for their etiologic diagnosis.
The aim of this course is for students to develop the abilities and skills to identify the cell structure of the tissues that make up the systems of the human body.
This course aims to describe normal microscopic structure of the tissues that make up the organs of the apparatus and systems of the human body and their application to medicine.