Basic Chemistry Part I

This module focuses on Basic Chemistry Part I within Intro to Anatomy and Physiology. The module builds practical familiarity with Basic Chemistry Part I through lesson-based explanation, examples, and review. Learners move through Basic Chemistry. 2404 02 1 Basic Chemistry PartI StudentNotes introduces core concepts and practical skills in Intro to Anatomy and Physiology.

Why this module matters

It helps learners connect Basic Chemistry Part I to the broader course path in Intro to Anatomy and Physiology. Learners build working familiarity with the concepts, workflow, and checkpoints that support this module. The lessons stay grounded in concrete examples and explanations tied to this module's core topics. Learners can check understanding through 10 quiz questions tied to this module.

What this module covers

  • Basic Chemistry
  • In physiology, salts are not “extra” chemistry—they are central to function.
  • By the end, you should be able to classify substances, describe solution behavior, and reason through common clinical chemistry findings with confidence.
  • Identify the levels of structural organization in the human body and explain how they relate to each other.
  • Describe the principle of homeostasis and analyze how the body maintains internal balance in response to stimuli.
  • Module-specific knowledge checks and review prompts.

Topical takeaways

  • In physiology, salts are not “extra” chemistry—they are central to function.
  • By the end, you should be able to classify substances, describe solution behavior, and reason through common clinical chemistry findings with confidence.
  • Organic molecules : glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, and steroid hormones are built from carbon-based chemistry central to metabolism.

Lesson arc

  1. Basic Chemistry (6 min)

    In physiology, salts are not “extra” chemistry—they are central to function.

    • In physiology, salts are not “extra” chemistry—they are central to function.
    • By the end, you should be able to classify substances, describe solution behavior, and reason through common clinical chemistry findings with confidence.
    • Organic molecules : glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, and steroid hormones are built from carbon-based chemistry central to metabolism.

Key concepts

  • Basic Chemistry

Practice and assessment

Learners reinforce this module through 10 quiz questions, with practice centered on In physiology, salts are not “extra” chemistry—they are central to function.

Continue to the full course

Intro to Anatomy and Physiology is the parent course for this module. Use the full course page for pricing, certificate details, and the full curriculum.

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