Ch. 2. Physiological chemistry and processes Flashcards
(119 cards)
Control mechanisms
Nearly all are controlled by negative feedback mechanisms Some use positive feedback mechanism - control of uterine contractions during childbirth and blood clotting
Movement of substances within body fluids
In liquids or gases, molecules distribute from an area of high concentration to one of low (if there is no barrier) until the molecules are evenly spread throughout (equilibrium is reached). No energy is required (passive)
two main fluid compartments of the body
Most body water is intracellular (70%), the remaining 30% is extracellular (mostly in the interstitial fluid bathing the tissues, with the remainder found in plasma)
Diffusion
Movement of molecules from area of high concentration to area of low concentration and occurs mostly in gases, liquids, and solutions
Nucleic acids
largest molecules in the body, built from nucleotides, include deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA)
Homeostasis
fairy constant state, tightly controlled internal environment (unchanging)
Strong acids and bases
dissociate more extensively than weak acids. Same goes for bases.
Catabolic reaction
involve breakdown of substrate into smaller products (digestion)
The pH scale
Scale from 0 to 14, with 7 as midpoint (neutral)
Enzyme action
If conditions are unsuitable, enzyme action is reduced or stopped (temperature, pH)
pH most body fluids
Most of bodily fluids (except gastric juices) are close to neutral
Rings around nucleus
electrons orbit them, they represent different energy levels of atom’s electron
Body’s reactions release energy
breakdown of sugars in presence of O2
When atoms are joined together…
they form a chemical bond, generally one of two types: covalent or ionic
Enzymes in mitochondria …
capture the released energy, using it to make ATP from adenosine diphosphate (ADP)
Cation
with positive charge Na+
Osmotic pressure
Force with which osmosis occurs
Element
contains only one atom (carbon, hydrogen) There are 92 elements
Steroids
including important hormones produced by gonads (ovaries and testes) and adrenal glands.
Peptide bond
when two amino acids join up to form a bond, the reaction expels a molecule of water
Plasma (osmosis) hypertonic
The other way, plasma water concentration falls so plasma becomes more concentrated then intracellular fluid within red blood cells (plasma becomes hypertonic), water passively moves by osmosis from blood cells into plasma and blood cells shrink
Electrons
negatively charged, super small
interstitial fluid or tissue fluid
Cells are bathed in fluid called interstitial fluid or tissue fluid – they absorb oxygen and nutrients from the surrounding interstitial fluid, which absorbed these from the circulation blood (opposite happens for excretion)
Carbohydrates
Sugars and starches Contain carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen, usually in ratio 1:1:2

