Essay Topic Hub

Physiology
Essays

594+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

594 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Physiology is the branch of biology concerned with how living organisms and their component parts function. It sits at the core of life science education and appears across courses in biology, medicine, nursing, kinesiology, and health sciences. What makes it academically compelling is the way it bridges structure and process — understanding not just what the body is made of, but how its cells, tissues, and systems carry out essential operations. Topics like blood circulation, metabolic response, respiratory mechanics including Boyle's, Dalton's, and Henry's laws, and conditions such as Spina Bifida illustrate how form and function are inseparable at every scale of biological organization.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on anatomical and functional description, examining specific structures like the thyroid gland in terms of both form and physiological role. Others adopt a case-based or applied angle, exploring how exercise triggers metabolic responses or how physical conditions affect the body's regulatory systems. Analytical papers engage with broader theories, such as arguments around warm-blooded dinosaurs, applying physiological reasoning to evaluate evidence. This range reflects how physiology connects foundational science to real-world health and disease contexts.

A strong physiology essay starts with a clearly bounded thesis — choosing one system, process, or condition rather than attempting to survey the entire field. Evidence drawn from established biological mechanisms, such as how cells release hormones or how blood responds to physical stress, tends to carry the most weight. The common pitfall to avoid is substituting general descriptive statements for functional explanation; always connect what a structure is to what it actively does and why that matters.

Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Human behavior and relationships
"Love and marriage/Love and Marriage/They go together like a horse and carriage." Within the refrain of the old Frank Sinatra song lies all of the contradictions between the different paradigmatic approaches to the…
Paper Undergraduate
Leptin Is a Protein Whose
Leptin is a protein whose expressions have significant implications in the current trends towards weight loss. Leptin is a relatively small molecule. It is a hormone, which like all hormomes is part of the ductless…
Research Paper Doctorate
Divorce Among the Gulls
This section, "Pictures at a Scientific Exhibition" is about young college students in the 1960s. They have to conduct laboratory experiments on rats, and other small animals and they have to kill the animals cruelly to…
Paper Undergraduate
Sex differences in pathophysiology of heart disease
Heart disease is the nation's number one killer of both men and women. However, it can present warning signs that are so dissimilar in women than in men that heart disease in women may be misdiagnosed or missed…
Paper Undergraduate
Heart Identify the Basic Anatomy
Identify the basic anatomy and physiology of the heart- the human heart is actually a muscular organ that serves to pump blood through the body (circulation). It is divided into four main chambers -- the two upper are…
Essay Doctorate
Overwintering Turtles and the Implications for Humans
Oxygen is necessary for animal life, a truism that is so ingrained in experience and knowledge that few people stop to consider that many animals can go for significantly long periods of time without taking in oxygen. The freshwater turtle is a wonderful example of this adaptive physiology; it overwinters at the bottoms of lakes, and, to do so goes into a state of hibernation that allows it to live at the bottom of the lake without taking in additional oxygen for long periods of time. Scientists believe that two main physiological adaptations enable the turtles to engage in this behavior. First, the turtles' bodies depress their metabolic and cellular processes, which reduces their need for oxygen consumption. However, dealing with the need for oxygen only solves half of the hibernation dilemma; animals also build up lactic acid and this build up can be fatal. Therefore, it is important to understand how . Second, both the turtle's shell and its skeleton function as lactic-acid neutralizes. Between these two processes, turtles can overwinter underwater at just over freezing temperatures, with no oxygen, and extremely high circulating lactate levels for periods of up to four months. This paper investigates those processes and discusses possible applications for humans dealing with anoxia.
Paper Undergraduate
MicroRNAs: expression, regulation, and biological functions
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) belong to a newly-appreciated and diverse class of small, regulatory, 21-25 nucleotide RNAs (Ke and al). They are endogenous, exist across many species from bacteria to mammals, and perform various…
Paper Undergraduate
Clinical Supervision the Subject Supervisor
The ideal or model clinical supervisor is more than just a good one. Studies list several characteristics or traits and models that help shape him. A supervisor was interviewed and is rated according to the criteria set by these models and findings of research. He possesses many of the traits and passes the criteria.
Essay Undergraduate
Birth Bontrol in Ancient Greece and Rome
In this paper, the surgical versus pharmaceutical procedures in the ancient world (greece and Rome)have been discussed. It can rightly be said that the women of the ancient Greece and Rome did have access to birth control methods, which were semi-relaible as compared to the ones that have been devised today. It has also been established that these women were not influenced by political or religious authorities concerning the methods of contraception. Although most of the research pertaining to the methods of birth control is limited to Rome and Greece, but Egypt and Jews are also known for working on the contraceptive technologies.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sleep Deprivation and Firefighter Work Schedules: Health Risks
¶ … human body have revealed new information about the importance of specific functions such as sleeping. Although sleep has always been noted to be an important component of human functioning, research into this…