homeostasis and control of temperature/fever Flashcards

1
Q

what is the definition of homeostasis

A

any self regulating process by which biological systems maintain stability while adjusting to changing external conditions

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2
Q

which does the anterior hypothalamus respond to: increasing or decreasing environmental temp.

A

responds to increasing environmental temperatures

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3
Q

what does the posterior hypothalamus respond to: increasing or decreasing environmental temperature?

A

responds to decreasing environmental temperatures

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4
Q

how are decreases in the external temp. sensed by the body

A

via skin thermoreceptors which send information to the anterior hypothalamus which informs the posterior hypothalamus that the body needs to generate heat

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5
Q

what changes does the posterior hypothalamus initiate in the body

A

stimulates thyroid hormones - thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) which work together to increase heat production.. T3 forms more atp
- the sympathetic nervous system is also activated
-signals skeletal muscles to contract - shivering

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6
Q

what is the effect of having hypothyroidism on temperature tolerance

A

means you have low levels of thyroid hormones so more susceptible to cold weather

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7
Q

what is the effect of having hyperthyroidism on temperature tolerance

A

means you have high levels of thyroid hormones so more susceptible to warm weather

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8
Q

what is the role of the sympathetic nervous system to increase body temperature - what chemical does it cause the release of

A

increases catecholamine production
causes vasoconstriction

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9
Q

what happens when external temperature is too high, how is it detected and what part of the brain is this info sent to

A

skin thermoreceptors send signals to the anterior hypothalamus

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10
Q

what changes does the anterior hypothalamus carry out in the body when external temperature is too high?

A

-stimulates sympathetic cholinergic fibres

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11
Q

what is the physiological effect when sympathetic cholinergic fibres are stimulated

A

stimulate thermoregulatory sweat glands leading to increased sweating which evaporates from skin - heat losing mechanism as liquid-> gas

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12
Q

does the anterior hypothalamus increase or decrease the activity of the sympathetic nervous system + why

A

decreases, vasodilation - blood from body core travels to surface of skin where heat is lost by radiation/conduction/convection

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13
Q

what are symptoms of heat exhaustion

A

dizziness
rapid heartbeat
fainting

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14
Q

what are symptoms of heat stroke

A

confusion
seizures
coma

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15
Q

what is malignant hyperthermia

A

when heat dissipating mechanisms are unable to keep up with the increased heat production

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16
Q

what is the role of prostaglandins and which interleukin stimulates their production

A

increase the set point temperature
IL-1 in the anterior hypothalamus
then normal heat increasing mechanisms occur to increase temperature

17
Q

mechanism of action of aspirin

A

blocks prostaglandin production therefore stops the symptoms of fever

18
Q

what is the role of the preoptic anterior hypothalamus in temperature control

A

provides an integration centre for sensory temperature inputs. both deep-body and peripheral inputs give a holistic picture of the body’s thermal state

19
Q

how does the body carry out deep body thermoception

A

via thermosensitive neurons found in the CNS

20
Q

cold sensitive neurons receive skin temp. information via which type of fibres

A

thin myelinated A delta fibres

21
Q

warmth sensitive sensors, located deeper in the dermis, through what type of fibres do they receive signals

A

via unmyelinated C fibres

22
Q

what do proactive responses mean in thermoeffectors

A

behavioural and recruited before the skin temp changes

23
Q

what do corrective, late responses mean in relation to thermoeffectors

A

can be physiological or behavioural and they are recruited after the skin temp changes

24
Q

what are examples of catecholamines

A

epinephrine
norepinephrine

25
Q

what cell is affected by catecholamines, and what do they do in relation to temp. change

A

bind to ß receptors on brown adipose cells (good fat cells) - burn calories and generate heat

26
Q

what is the role of TRPM8 in temperature detection

A

Thermosensitive ion channel TRPM8 plays a critical role in the transduction of moderately cold stimuli that give rise to cool sensations - peripheral sensing

27
Q

what happens during anapyrexia

A

-decrease in body temp. due to a decrease in the set point.

-occurs in trauma, hypoxia, shock, heatstroke, intoxications, anaesthesia, starvation

-threshold for cold thermogenesis decreases by a few degreesv