2.10.10 Temperature Regulation Flashcards

1
Q

The skin is our largest what?

A

Sense organ

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2
Q

It contains many different receptors that enable us to detect what?

A

Various external stimuli, including touch, pressure, pain, heat and cold

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3
Q

Structures within the skin also play an important role in what?

A

Regulating body temperature (an example of homeostasis)

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4
Q

Human skin contains structures involved in processes that can increase or reduce what?

A

Heat loss to the surroundings

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5
Q

Heat exchange (both during warming and cooling) occurs where?

A

At the body’s surface as this is where the blood comes into closest proximity to the environment

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6
Q

One way to increase heat loss is to what?

A

Supply the capillaries in the skin with a greater volume of blood, which then loses heat to the environment via radiation

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7
Q

Arterioles (small vessels that connect arteries to capillaries) have muscles in their walls that can what?

A

Relax or contract to allow more or less blood to flow through them

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8
Q

During vasodilation, these muscles relax, causing what?

A

Arterioles near the skin to dilate and allowing more blood to flow through capillaries
This is why pale-skinned people go red when they are hot

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9
Q

Sweat is secreted by what?

A

Sweat glands

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10
Q

This cools the skin by evaporation which uses What?

A

Heat energy from the body to convert liquid water into water vapour

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11
Q

The hair erector muscles in the skin relax, causing hairs to what?

A

Lie flat

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12
Q

This stops them from forming an insulating layer by trapping air and what?

A

Allows air to circulate over skin and heat to leave by radiation

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13
Q

One way to decrease heat loss is to supply the capillaries in the skin with a smaller volume of blood, minimising what?

A

The loss of heat to the environment via radiation

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14
Q

During vasoconstriction, the muscles in the arteriole walls contract, causing what?

A

The arterioles near the skin to constrict and allowing less blood to flow through capillaries

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15
Q

Vasoconstriction is not, strictly speaking, a ‘warming’ mechanism as it does not raise the temperature of the blood but instead does what?

A

Reduces heat loss from the blood as it flows through the skin

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16
Q

Shivering is a reflex action in response to what?

A

A decrease in core body temperature

17
Q

Muscles contract in what manner?

A

Rapid and regular manner

18
Q

The metabolic reactions required to power this shivering generate sufficient heat to what?

A

Warm the blood and raise the core body temperature

19
Q

The hair erector muscles in the skin contract, causing what?

A

Hairs to stand on end

20
Q

This forms an insulating layer over the skin’s surface by what?

A

Trapping air between the hairs and stops heat from being lost by radiation

21
Q

The core body temperature of humans is kept close to what?

A

37°C

22
Q

A change in core body temperature of more than what, can be fatal?

A

2°C

23
Q

he human body must be able to make a what, to any rise or fall in body temperature?

A

Coordinated response

24
Q

Temperature receptors (also known as thermoreceptors) in the skin and hypothalamus (a part of the brain) can detect minute changes in what?

A

Body temperature

25
Q

The brain then coordinates what, depending on what is required?

A

cooling or heating response,