Review the major source concepts from Weeks 1-6, including cell biology, infection, blood, circulation, respiration, renal regulation, and body defences.
Interpret core revision items that often appear in nursing bioscience questions, including blood tests, chain of infection, acid-base balance, and immunity.
Connect systems across weeks, such as circulation plus respiration for oxygen delivery and kidneys plus lungs for pH regulation.
Identify which high-yield topics need re-study before moving into the second half of the course.
Use the review quiz and knowledge check to test both factual recall and clinically relevant understanding.
How To Use This Revision Page
This week is not just a generic study break. It is a guided revision page mapped back to the actual Week 1-6 source topics. Use the sections below to revisit the main lecture ideas before you move on to new systems.
Work through the review in this order if you are unsure where to start:
Weeks 1-2: cells, signaling, microbes, Gram differences, and chain of infection
Weeks 5-6: respiratory mechanics, gas exchange, wound healing, immunity, isolation, and antibody classes
Then use the quiz and game to see which areas you still miss under pressure
Revision priorities this week are the topics that were easy to miss when the course moved quickly: blood test meaning, lymphatic return, arterial pH control, Gram-positive versus Gram-negative bacteria, foetal circulation changes at birth, kidney hormones, wound-healing stages, granuloma formation, and immunoglobulin classes.
Source-Mapped Revision Focus
Week 7 should function as a structured consolidation of the taught material from Weeks 1-6 rather than a purely generic study-skills page. The source material emphasises several linked knowledge clusters that should be revised together.
Weeks 1-2 foundations: Homeostasis depends on receptors, control centres, and effectors. Cell structure, cell communication, and signal regulation explain how tissues respond to change. Microbiology then applies those basics to bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, biofilms, and infection control.
Weeks 3-4 blood, circulation, and kidneys: Blood composition, vessel structure, lymphatic drainage, and acid-base balance support later cardiovascular and renal content. Students should be able to interpret haemoglobin, haematocrit, platelet, and white-cell changes, explain pulmonary versus systemic circulation, describe cardiac conduction, and connect renal regulation of pH, osmolality, volume, erythropoietin, and renin to homeostasis.
Weeks 5-6 respiration and defence: Respiratory anatomy, ventilation, Boyle's law, dead space, and gas exchange support oxygen delivery and carbon-dioxide removal. The body's defences then extend this by covering epithelial barriers, skin, chemical defences, innate and adaptive immunity, wound healing, isolating persistent pathogens, and antibody classes.
High-yield integration: Blood pressure reflects fluid volume, vessel resistance, and cardiac output. Oxygen delivery depends on lungs, haemoglobin, and circulation. Blood pH is jointly regulated by respiratory carbon-dioxide removal and renal hydrogen-ion and bicarbonate handling. Infection and inflammation alter multiple systems at once.
Revise: negative versus positive feedback, receptors-control centres-effectors, prokaryotic versus eukaryotic cells, mitosis versus meiosis, and why cell signaling matters in physiology.
Check yourself: can you explain how glucose, temperature, or circadian rhythm are regulated using a feedback-loop model?
Week 2: Microbes, Infection, and Control
Source focus: microbes and infections, bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, infections and disease processes, infection control strategies.
Revise: chain of infection, Gram-positive versus Gram-negative differences, bacterial shape, viral reproduction, fungal and parasitic examples, endospores, and how sterilisation, disinfection, antisepsis, and antimicrobials differ.
Check yourself: can you identify a portal of entry and explain how to break one specific link in the infection chain?
Revise: RBCs, WBCs, platelets, haemoglobin, haematocrit, anastomoses, end arteries, lymphatic return, and normal arterial pH range 7.35-7.45.
Check yourself: can you recognise when low haemoglobin and haematocrit point toward anaemia and when lymphatic failure contributes to oedema?
Week 4: Heart, Foetal Circulation, and Renal Regulation
Source focus: blood as delivery system, heart as pump, what kidneys do.
Revise: pulmonary versus systemic circulation, SA node and AV node, ECG purpose, foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus in foetal circulation, GFR, renin, erythropoietin, and kidney control of pH, blood volume, and osmolality.
Check yourself: can you explain why the kidneys matter for both blood pressure and oxygen-carrying capacity?
Week 5: Respiration and Oxygen Transport
Source focus: respiratory anatomy, breathing and respiration, gas exchange and transport.
Revise: upper versus lower respiratory tract, Boyle's law, anatomical dead space, mucociliary escalator, surfactant, external versus internal respiration, hypoxia, hypercapnia, and oxygen transport by haemoglobin.
Check yourself: can you connect breathing mechanics to alveolar gas exchange and then to tissue oxygen delivery?
Week 6: Body Defences, Healing, and Antibodies
Source focus: membranes and compartments, skin and tissue remodelling, chemical defence, immune defence, isolating, antibody barrier.
Revise: epithelial barriers, acid mantle, lysozyme, innate versus adaptive immunity, wound-healing stages, granuloma formation, vaccination, active versus passive immunity, and immunoglobulin classes including IgG and IgM.
Check yourself: can you explain how the body walls off persistent pathogens and how antibodies help neutralise or tag antigens?
High-Yield Review Themes
Blood tests: know what low haemoglobin, low haematocrit, abnormal white-cell counts, and platelets suggest clinically.
Lymphatics and oedema: remember that lymphatics return interstitial fluid and proteins to circulation and filter pathogens.
Acid-base balance: normal arterial pH is tightly regulated by buffers, lungs, and kidneys working together.
Gram differences and infection chain: understand bacterial cell-wall differences and how infection control breaks transmission.
Foetal circulation and kidneys: revise foramen ovale, ductus arteriosus, GFR, renin, erythropoietin, and kidney roles in pressure and pH.
Healing and immune protection: review inflammation, tissue repair, granulomas, antibody classes, and vaccination-based immunity.
🎥 Video Lectures
No videos for flexible learning week
Key Terms
Chain of Infection
Six links that allow infection to spread: infectious agent, reservoir, portal of exit, transmission, portal of entry, and susceptible host.
Gram-Positive vs Gram-Negative
Gram-positive bacteria have thick peptidoglycan and stain purple; Gram-negative bacteria have a thin layer plus an outer membrane and stain pink.
Hemoglobin and Hematocrit
Hemoglobin reflects oxygen-carrying protein in RBCs; hematocrit is the packed-cell percentage of blood volume. Both help assess anemia and hydration status.
Lymphatic Return
The lymphatic system returns interstitial fluid, proteins, and absorbed fats to the circulation and helps filter pathogens through lymph nodes.
Acid-Base Balance
Arterial blood pH is normally maintained between 7.35 and 7.45 by chemical buffers, ventilation, and kidney regulation.
Foetal Circulation
Before birth, the foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus divert blood away from the lungs; these shunts normally close after birth.
Wound Healing
Healing proceeds through inflammation, proliferation or organization, and maturation or remodeling as tissue strength returns.
Immunoglobulin Classes
Antibodies include IgG, IgA, IgM, IgE, and IgD. IgG is the most abundant in serum, while IgM is prominent in agglutination and early responses.
Interactive Activity: Knowledge Check
Test your knowledge from Weeks 1-6 with a source-mapped review quiz that now includes blood tests, lymphatics, acid-base balance, foetal circulation, renal regulation, wound healing, isolation, and antibody classes.
Take this review test to assess your understanding of Weeks 1-6 material. The questions now sample foundational source topics including chain of infection, Gram differences, blood interpretation, lymphatics, acid-base balance, foetal circulation, kidney hormones, and immunity.