Feedback Control - Temperature & Other Vital Signs Flashcards

1
Q

Commonly assessed vital signs (7)

A

Pulse
BP
Respiratory rate
O2 Saturation
Temperature
Consciousness
Capillary refill time

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2
Q

Core Body Temp

A

Core Body & Outer shell
Homeostatically maintained at about 37.8 C

Normal - narrow range
Normothermia
Increased Body Temp
Overheating
Decreasing Body temp

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3
Q

Sites for Monitoring Body Temp

A

Indirect estimate
- Ear drum
Direct estimate
- Rectal or oesophageal

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4
Q

Normal Body Temp

A

Varies during day
May be altered by activity, exercise, emotions, etc
Menstrual cycle

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5
Q

Heat Gain

A

Internal Environment –> Metabolic Heat Gain
External Environment –> Radiation, Convection and Conduction

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6
Q

Heat Loss

A

External environment - Radiation, Convection and Conduction, Evaporation

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7
Q

Internal heat gain - Metabolic Heat

A

Oxidation of metabolic fuel
Basal Metabolic Rate - increased hormones
Muscle activity
Shivering

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8
Q

Radiation

A

Emission of heat energy
Human body emits and absorbs radiant heat
Half of Body’s heat loss through radiation

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9
Q

Conduction

A

Transfer of heat between objects in contact
Heat moves from warmer to cooler
Depends on temperature gradient and thermal conductivity
Small percentage

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10
Q

Convection

A

Transfer of heat energy by air currents that help carry heat away from body
Combines with conduction
Air next to skin warmed by conduction
Warmed air rises whilst cooler air falls
Forced air movement

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11
Q

Evaporation

A

Energy is required to convert water in the skin surface and lining of respiratory airways into vapour
Passive evaporative heat loss occurs continuously = water molecules continuously passively diffuse from surface of skin and lining of respiratory airways
Sweating is an active evaporative heat loss (sympathetic NS)
Humidity

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12
Q

Negative Feedback Control

A

Central/Peripheral Thermoreceptors –> Control centre in Hypothalamus –> Skeletal Muscle, Skin Arterioles, Sweat glands, behavioural adaptation

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13
Q

Hypothalamus

A

Posterior centre –> COLD
Anterior centre –> Warmth

Connections with limbic system and cerebral cortex

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14
Q

Posterior Hypothalamic Centre - COLD

A

Effectors
- Skin –> Vasoconstriction
- Skeletal Muscle –> Increased Muscle Tone, Shivering, Increased voluntary movement
Other behavioural adaptations - postural changes, warm clothing

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15
Q

Anterior Hypothalamic Centre - WARMTH

A

Effectors
- Skin Arterioles –> Vasodilatation
- Sweat glands
- Skeletal muscles –> Decreased muscle tone, decreased voluntary movement
Other behavioural adaptations –> Cool clothing

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16
Q

Fever

A

Set point raised
Chemical released from macrophages - endogenous pyrogen
Pyrogen stimiulate release of prostaglandins in hypothalamus
Prostaglands act on hypothalamic-thermos-regulatory centre to reset thermostat at higher temp
Hypothalamus initiate mechanisms to heat body cold response to raise body temp to new set point –> FEVER
Restoration - pyrogen release reduced or prostaglandin reduced
Cool the body mechanisms