Stephanie Ewals Stephanie Ewals

Your Body’s Amazing Organ Systems: A Simple Functional Medicine Guide

Your Body’s Amazing Organ Systems: A Simple Functional Medicine Guide

Learn how your body’s organ systems work together in functional medicine. Simple guide to better health at Out of the Woods Nutrition.

Hey there, wellness warriors!

We are going to talk about how your body works like a super cool team! Your organs and organ systems are like players on a team, each with a special job to keep you healthy. Today, we’ll explore some of these systems—like your skin, bones, muscles, and nerves—and how food helps them shine. Let’s jump in!

What Are Organ Systems?

Your body has 11 organ systems, like the integumentary (skin), skeletal (bones), muscular (muscles), and nervous (brain and nerves) systems. Each system has organs that work together to do important jobs, like protecting you, helping you move, or keeping you calm. In functional medicine, we use nutrition to keep these systems strong, so you feel your best!

1. Integumentary System: Your Body’s Shield

Your skin is your biggest organ, and it’s part of the integumentary system. It’s like a superhero shield that:

  • Keeps germs out and water in.

  • Helps control your body temperature (sweating cools you down!).

  • Makes vitamin D when you get sunlight (just 10-15 minutes a few times a week!).

The integumentary system has cool parts:

  • Epidermis: The outer skin layer that keeps growing new cells.

  • Dermis: The middle layer with nerves, hair, and sweat glands.

  • Hypodermis: The bottom layer with fat to keep you warm.

  • Hair, Nails, and Glands: Hair keeps you warm, nails protect your fingers, and glands make sweat or oil to keep skin soft.

Eating foods like salmon (for healthy fats) helps your skin stay strong. Learn more about vitamin D from Dr. Axe’s guide.

2. Skeletal System: Your Body’s Framework

Your skeletal system is like the frame of a house, made of bones, cartilage, joints, tendons, and ligaments. It:

  • Gives your body shape and protects organs (like your skull guarding your brain).

  • Makes blood cells and stores minerals like calcium (99% of your body’s calcium is in bones!).

Bones are alive and always changing through bone remodeling. Special cells called osteoclasts break down old bone, and osteoblasts build new bone. Your body keeps calcium levels just right (like a thermostat) with hormones:

  • Parathyroid hormone (from parathyroid glands): Raises calcium by pulling it from bones.

  • Calcitonin (from the thyroid): Lowers calcium by stopping bone breakdown.

Eat calcium-rich foods like kale or almonds to keep bones strong!

3. Muscular System: Your Body’s Movers

Your muscular system helps you move, from running to smiling. It has three types of muscles:

  • Skeletal Muscles: You control these (like lifting a book). They attach to bones with tendons.

  • Smooth Muscles: Work automatically (like in your stomach to digest food).

  • Cardiac Muscle: Only in your heart, beating on its own.

Using muscles makes them stronger (hypertrophy), but not using them makes them weaker (atrophy). Eating protein (like eggs or beans) and moving daily keeps muscles happy.

4. Nervous System: Your Body’s Command Center

Your nervous system is like a super-smart computer, with your brain and spinal cord (central nervous system) and nerves (peripheral nervous system). It:

  • Senses things (like hot or cold).

  • Thinks and decides (like choosing a snack).

  • Sends signals to move or relax.

The autonomic nervous system controls automatic stuff, like your heartbeat. It has two parts:

  • Sympathetic: Gets you ready for action (fight or flight).

  • Parasympathetic: Helps you chill (rest and digest). The vagus nerve is a big player here, calming your heart and digestion.

Stress can keep you in “fight or flight,” so relaxing with deep breathing or yoga helps your nervous system balance.

Why This Matters for Your Health

In functional medicine, we know that weak organs or systems can make you feel tired or sick. Eating nutrient-rich foods supports every system:

  • Vitamin D from sunlight or fish helps your skin and bones.

  • Calcium from greens strengthens your skeleton.

  • Protein from nuts or chicken builds muscles.

  • Magnesium from spinach calms your nerves.

FAQ: Your Questions Answered

How does food help my organ systems?
Nutrients like calcium and protein keep your skin, bones, muscles, and nerves strong.

What’s functional medicine nutrition?
It’s using food to help your body’s systems work their best, so you feel great!

Feel Your Best with Functional Medicine

Ready to power up your organ systems? Book a consultation. Let’s make your body’s team the strongest it can be!

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Stephanie Ewals Stephanie Ewals

Your Body’s Building Blocks: A Simple Functional Medicine Guide

Discover how your body’s chemical, cellular, and tissue levels work in functional medicine. Simple guide for better health at Out of the Woods Nutrition.

Hey there, wellness warriors! I’m [Your Name], a functional medicine nutritionist at Out of the Woods Nutrition, and I’m here to make science fun and easy! Your body is like an amazing Lego castle, built from tiny pieces that work together to keep you healthy. Today, we’re exploring three levels of your body’s structure—chemical, cellular, and tissue—and how they help you feel your best with functional medicine nutrition. Let’s dive in!

What Are Your Body’s Building Blocks?

Your body is made of tiny pieces that fit together like a puzzle. These pieces start with chemicals (like oxygen and water), form cells (the tiny workers), and then group into tissues (like your skin or muscles). In functional medicine, we use food and nutrition to keep these pieces strong, so you can feel awesome every day.

1. Chemical Level: The Tiny Ingredients

Everything in your body starts with chemicals, like the ingredients in a recipe.

These are called elements, and the big four are:

Oxygen (65% of you!): Helps you breathe and powers cells.

Carbon and Hydrogen: Build important stuff like sugars and fats.

Nitrogen: Makes proteins for muscles and more.

Other elements, like calcium (for bones) and zinc (for healing), are super important too, even in tiny amounts. Your body can’t make these elements, so you get them from food—like veggies, nuts, and fruits.

These elements form molecules, like:

Carbohydrates (sugars): Give your cells energy, like fuel for a car.

Fats: Store energy and build cell walls.

Proteins: Build muscles, fight germs, and send messages in your body.

Water: Keeps everything moving and makes up 60-70% of you!

Your body works hard to keep these chemicals balanced. This balance, called homeostasis, is like keeping your room at the perfect temperature. For example, your blood needs to stay slightly alkaline (pH 7.35-7.45), and your body adjusts if it gets too acidic or basic.

2. Cellular Level: Your Body’s Tiny Workers

Chemicals build cells, the tiny workers that do all the jobs in your body.

You have trillions of cells, and each has special parts:

Plasma Membrane: Like a gatekeeper, it decides what goes in and out. It’s made of fats called phospholipids.

Cytoplasm: A jelly-like goo where cell work happens.

Nucleus: The boss, holding DNA (your body’s instruction manual).

Mitochondria: Power plants that make energy (ATP) to keep cells running.

Ribosomes: Tiny machines that build proteins.

Cells are different depending on their job. For example, muscle cells help you move, and nerve cells send messages. In functional medicine, we feed cells the right nutrients to keep them happy and healthy.

3. Tissue Level: Teams of Cells

Cells team up to form tissues, like groups of workers with the same job.

There are four main types:

Epithelial Tissue: Covers surfaces, like your skin or the inside of your stomach. It protects you and sometimes makes stuff like saliva.

Connective Tissue: Holds things together, like bones, blood, or fat. It’s like the glue of your body.

Muscle Tissue: Moves your body, like when you run or your heart beats.

Nervous Tissue: Sends signals, like telling your brain you’re hungry.

Healthy tissues depend on healthy cells, which need good food. That’s why eating veggies and drinking water is so important!

Why This Matters for Your Health

In functional medicine, we know that tired cells or weak tissues can make you feel sluggish or sick. By eating nutrient-rich foods, you give your body the chemicals it needs to build strong cells and tissues. For example:

Eat greens like spinach for magnesium to help cells work.

Drink water to keep cells hydrated.

Choose healthy fats like avocados to build strong cell walls.

Want to learn more?

FAQ: Your Questions Answered

What’s functional medicine nutrition?

I help you understand how to use food to help your body’s cells, tissues, and organs work their best.

How can I keep my cells healthy?

Eat colorful foods, drink water, and avoid junk food. Try my Gut-Healing Smoothie!

Start Feeling Your Best Today

Ready to give your body the nutrients it needs?

book a consultation or read more about functional medicine.

Let’s build a healthier you, one cell at a time!

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Stephanie Ewals Stephanie Ewals

Your Body’s Structure: A Functional Medicine Guide

Learn how your body’s structural organization impacts health with functional medicine. Explore anatomy, physiology, and nutrition at Out of the Woods Nutrition.

Hey there, wellness warriors! I’m [Your Name], a functional medicine nutritionist at Out of the Woods Nutrition, and I’m thrilled to guide you through the incredible blueprint of your body. Understanding your body’s structural organization through functional medicine is key to feeling your best, especially if you’re managing chronic health conditions. Let’s explore anatomy, physiology, and the six levels that make you, well, you!

What Are Anatomy and Physiology?

Anatomy is the study of your body’s structure—think organs, tissues, and even the tiny cells and molecules that form them. It’s like mapping out the parts of a beautifully complex machine, from the macroscopic (your heart) to the microscopic (its cells).

Physiology dives into what those parts do and how they do it. It’s the action behind the structure—how your heart pumps blood or your stomach digests food. In functional medicine, we use anatomy and physiology to understand how your body functions and how to support it with nutrition.

The Six Levels of Structural Organization

Your body is built through six interconnected levels, each relying on the one before. Let’s break them down.

1. Chemical Level: The Raw Materials

The chemical level is where it all begins, with atoms and molecules essential for life. Major elements like oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, and nitrogen form the bulk of your body. Lesser elements, like calcium (for bones) and magnesium (for enzymes), and trace elements, like zinc and iodine, are vital in small amounts.

Atoms combine to form molecules, like water or glucose, which are the building blocks for cells. In functional medicine, we emphasize nutrient-rich foods to provide these chemical elements for optimal health.

2. Cellular Level: Tiny but Mighty

Your body has trillions of cells, each shaped for its role. Red blood cells are flattened spheres for smooth blood flow, while neurons are long and branching for signal transmission. A cell’s structure supports its function, and healthy cells are the foundation of functional nutrition health.

3. Tissue Level: Cells Team Up

Cells group into tissues—layers of similar cells with a shared purpose. Tissues vary based on cell type and connections. For example, gut lining is one cell thick, while skin is multilayered for protection. DNA guides cells to form the right tissues, ensuring they perform their roles.

4. Organ Level: Structure Meets Function

Tissues combine to form organs, like your heart, lungs, or stomach. Each has a distinct shape and function—your heart pumps blood, your lungs breathe, your stomach digests. If an organ’s tissues are damaged, its function suffers, which is why we focus on cellular health in functional medicine.

5. Organ System Level: A Team Effort

Organs with related functions form organ systems. The digestive system, including the stomach, gallbladder, and intestines, breaks down food and absorbs nutrients. If one organ struggles, it impacts the system and beyond—like low oxygen from compromised lungs affecting all cells.

6. Organism Level: The Whole You

Finally, we reach the organism—you! All organ systems work together, communicating via the nervous, immune, and endocrine systems. Your digestive system fuels every process with nutrients, highlighting the interconnectedness at the heart of functional medicine.

Why This Matters for Your Health

Understanding your body’s structural organization through functional medicine shows how everything is connected. Nutrient deficiencies can impair cells, which affects tissues, organs, and systems, leading to symptoms like fatigue or digestive issues. By nourishing your body with the right foods, we can rebuild health from the chemical level up.

How to Support Cellular Health with Nutrition

Here are practical tips to support your body’s structure and function:

  • Eat Nutrient-Dense Foods: Focus on colorful vegetables, lean proteins, and healthy fats to provide chemical building blocks.

  • Stay Hydrated: Water supports cellular function and tissue health.

  • Prioritize Minerals: Foods like leafy greens and nuts provide magnesium and zinc.

  • Reduce Toxins: Limit processed foods to protect cells and tissues.

FAQ: Your Questions Answered

How does functional medicine use anatomy?
We assess how structural issues, like damaged tissues, impact function and address root causes with nutrition.

Can nutrition improve organ health?
Yes! Nutrient-rich diets support cellular health, which strengthens tissues and organs.

Take the Next Step

Ready to support your body’s structural organization with functional medicine?

Join my newsletter for more tips. Let’s get you out of the woods and back to vibrant health!

With love and nourishment,
Stephanie
Out of the Woods Nutrition

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Stephanie Ewals Stephanie Ewals

Green Goddess Salad

In just a few simple steps, you can have a nutritious and photo worthy meal!

You have to try the Green Goddess Salad!

Ingredients:

💚 1/4 cup parsley, leaves, chopped

💚 1/4 cup basil, leaves, chopped

💚 1 scallion, chopped

💚 1 clove garlic, chopped

💚 1 lemon, juiced

💚 1/4 cup olive oil

💚 1/4 cup cashews, raw

💚 1/4 cup water

💚 salt, to taste

💚 pepper, to taste

📝 Directions:

✅ Roughly chop herbs, scallion, and garlic

✅ Juice lemon

✅ Add all ingredients to a blender and process until creamy adding more water as needed to thin to desired consistency.

✅ Season with salt and pepper to taste.

If you're looking for more recipes to change up your meals this summer, sign up for my meal plans under the get help tab.

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