Skip navigation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Course Descriptions


REQUIRED INTERDISIPLINARY COURSES

 

ID 709. RESPONSIBLE CONDUCT OF RESEARCH. A course designed to provide an understanding of ethics in scientific research and the basic skills important for both oral and written scientific communication. (2 semester hours)

 

ID 710/BIOCH 742. RESEARCH TOOLS IN MOLECULAR BIOLOGY. A course designed to introduce students to contemporary methods in molecular biology including cloning, mutagenesis, transgenic animals, genomics, proteomics, and gene expression. (2 semester hours)

 

ID 714. PROFESSIONAL SKILLS. A course designed for early to late graduate students and postdoctoral fellows to acquire skills needed to be successful in a scientific work environment, with special emphasis on oral and written communication skills, grantsmanship, career choices, laboratory management, and academic teaching skills (2 semester hours)

 

P.M. 740. STATISTICAL METHODS IN RESEARCH An introduction to basic experimental statistics. Application of statistical techniques such as estimation and confidence limits, tests of significance, correlation and regression, sampling, analysis of variance and covariance to experimental data. Fundamental principles of design. (3 semester hours)

 

REQUIRED PHYSIOLOGY COURSES

 

PHYSIO. 701. MEDICAL PHYSIOLOGY. Study of the functions of the body with special emphasis on the relationships of the different organs to each other. (12 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 702. PHYSIOLOGICAL CONCEPTS. Individual study of important papers and books in various areas of physiology. (2 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 705. SEMINAR. (1 semester hour)

 

PHYSIO. 707. RESEARCH IN PHYSIOLOGY. A course designed to provide hands-on exposure to laboratory research prior to selection of a dissertation project. (2 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 717. CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY. A reading and conference course that emphasizes regulation of cardiac output, body fluid volumes and arterial pressures. (7 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 731. RENAL AND BODY FLUID PHYSIOLOGY. A seminar course that includes critical study of research methods, comparative renal physiology and literature on classical and contemporary principles of renal physiology and pathophysiology. (7 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 744. SIMULATION OF PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS. Introduction to mathematical analysis of physiological phenomena. Topics include ordinary differential equations, numerical methods for solving differential equations, elements of digital computer programming in high-level languages and the use of simulation packages and appropriate demonstrations. (3 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 798. DISSERTATION AND DISSERTATION RESEARCH. (1 semester hour).

 

OTHER PHYSIOLOGY COURSES

 

PHYSIO. 704. MOLECULAR PHYSIOLOGY. A course designed to teach how state of the art approaches in molecular biology can be applied to cardiovascular and renal physiology. This course is structured as a laboratory format with some reading and lecture. (2 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 715. ENDOCRINOLOGY. A course covering the historical, biochemical, and physiological aspects of the endocrine system. (2 semester hours)

 

PHYSIO. 734. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY. This course will integrate clinical and basic sciences and will include brief case presentations and discussion of the molecular and physiological basis of common human diseases. (2 semester hours)

 

NON-DEPARTMENTAL COURSES

 

ANAT. 713. HISTOLOGY AND CELL BIOLOGY. A study of the structure and function of cells, tissues and organs. (6 semester hours)

 

ANAT. 715. NEUROBlOLOGY. A study of the human nervous system. (6 semester hours)

 

BIOCH. 710. BIOCHEMISTRY.Comprehensive course in biochemistry including chemistry of amino acids and proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates and lipids; enzymology; metabolism and metabolic regulation; membrane structure and function; physical biochemistry; cellular energy production; hormonal control mechanisms; differentiation; molecular genetics; and protein synthesis. This course extends over two quarters. (10 semester hours)

 

MICRO. 761. MEDICAL IMMUNOLOGY. This course comprises a section of the larger MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY course (MICRO. 701) and is intended for students with an interest in immunology. (2 semester hours)

 

PHARM. 722 . PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS. Students are introduced to the principles underlying the use of pharmacology agents in practice. Concepts related to drug distribution, drug-receptor interaction and drug metabolism are considered. In addition, the mechanism of action, therapeutic effects, adverse side-effects and common clinical applications of various drugs and drug classes are presented through a combination of lectures and clinical correlations.(12 semester hours)