Homeostasis 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is homeostasis?

A

The tendency towards a reletively stable equilbrium between interdependent elements

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2
Q

What are our bodies composed of and how are they organised?

A

Cells—Tissues—Organs—Systems—Organism

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3
Q

What is a tissue?

A

Groups of cells that show the same characteristics or specialisations

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4
Q

What is an organ?

A

Collection of tissues, usually of several different types, that collaborate to perform a specific function

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5
Q

What is the basic equation of life?

A

Nutrients + O2 → Energy (ATP) + CO2 + waste

All living cells require energy to survive

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6
Q

In terms of homeostasis, what happens once energy demand increases?

A

The supply of substrates required to produce that energy must also increase to maintain homeostasis and prevent a disturbence to the system

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7
Q

Why is maintaining constancy of the internal environment important?

A

All fundamental physiological processes require a constrant internal environment

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8
Q

How does homeostasis require the integation of organ systems?

A

Sensory and musculoskeletal supply nutrients

Respiration supplies 02

Alimentary breaks down food

Cardiovascular carries O2 and nutrients to cells and removes waste

Renal systems disposes of waste

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9
Q

What systems coordinate the integration of organs?

A

Nervous and endocrine

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10
Q

At what levels is regulation required to maintain homeostasis?

A

Cell

Tissue

System

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11
Q

What is physiology?

A

Our bodies constantly monitoring their internal state and responding to any disruptions in order to maintain homeostasis

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12
Q

What does failure to maintain homeostasis result in?

A

Illness, disease or pathology

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13
Q

Our bodies are not very tolerable of substantial changes in our internal environment such as?

A

Temperature

pH

Concentration of hormones

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14
Q

Does our body have a range around optimum level that it can tolerate?

A

Yes

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15
Q

How is a constant level maintained?

A

Input must match the output

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16
Q

What are common everyday challneges to homeostasis?

A

External temperature

Diet

Exercise

17
Q

What does a chart that shows homeostasis regulation look like?

A

At extremes homeostasis becomes less effective

18
Q

What type of control system regulates tissue and organ systems?

A

Negative feedback control systems

19
Q

What is the process of a negative feedback control system?

A
  1. Change is sensed by receptor
  2. Feeds information to integration centre and compares to reference level
  3. Any difference generates a signal that is fed to an effector molecule
  4. Response is produces that corrects original change
20
Q

Is the size of the generated signal proportionate to the size of the difference from normal in a negative feedback control system?

A

Yes

21
Q

What is the aim of a negative feedback control system?

A

Return the internal environment to optimal conditions

22
Q

What are characteristics of a negative feedback system?

A

Oscillate around a set point

Restores regulated variable after its initial displacement, cannot prevent it from happening

23
Q

What is a feed forward system?

A

A more sphisticated form of negative feedback that can prevent change from happening in the first place

24
Q

What are characteristics of a feed forward system?

A

Additional receptors allow system to anticipate change and activate a response sooner

To an extent can predict and prevent change

25
Q

What is positive feedback?

A

Leads to even greater disturbance

26
Q

What is negative feedback?

A

Aims to restore conditions to optimum

27
Q

Positive feedback is rare in physiology, but where does it occur?

A

Nerve action potential

Ovulation and sexual behaviour

28
Q

What is the aim of medicine?

A

To restore homeostasis control when it is disturbed by illness or disease