B12 - Homeostasis in Action Flashcards
What is ADH?
Anti-Diuretic Hormone that helps control the water balance of the body and affects then amount of urine produced by the kidney
What is dialysis?
The process of cleansing the blood through a dialysis machine when the kidneys fail
What is selective reabsorbtion?
The process in the kidney where the materials needed in the body such as glucose, some mineral ions, and water are reabsorbed back into the blood from the filtrate
What is the thermoregulatory centre?
The area in the hypothalamus of the brain which contains receptors that are sensitive to the temperature of the blood
What is vasoconstriciton?
The constriction or narrowing of the blood vessels
What is vasodilation?
The dilation or opening up of the blood vessels
What temperature does your body need to be kept at and why?
37*C, this is the temperature in your body where enzymes work most effectively
Explain how your body can detect changes in internal and external temperatures:
Control of your core body temperature relies on the thermoregulatory centre in the hypothalamus of the brain. This centre contains receptors that are sensitive to temperature changes in the blood flowing through the brain itself. Extra information comes from the temperature receptors on the skin, these send impulses to the thermoregulatory centre, giving information about skin temperature
What temperature differences can temperature receptors detect?
0.5*C
Explain how to body cools down.
When your core temperature begins to rise, impulses are sent from the thermoregulatory centre to the body, so more energy is transferred to the surroundings to cool down:
- The blood vessels that supply your skin capillaries dilate.
- You produce more sweat
Explain how vasodilation cools your body down:
The blood vessels that supply your skin capillaries dilate. This is called vasodilation and it lets more blood flow through the capillaries. This causes more energy to be transferred by radiation from your skin to the surroundings, cooling your body down
Explain how producing more sweat cools your body down:
You produce more sweat from the sweat glands in your skin. This extra sweat cools your body down as water evaporates from your skin, transferring energy to the environment. In humid weather when the sweat does not evaporate, it is much harder to keep cool.
Explain how the body keeps warm:
If you get very cold, the rate of enzyme controlled reactions slows. This can cause you to not carry out enough respiration and your cells may begin to die. If your core body temperature falls too low, impulses are sent from your thermoregulatory centre to the body to prevent you cooling down, reducing energy transfer to the environment:
- Vasoconstriction
- You produce less sweat
- You begin to shiver
- hairs pulled erect
Explain how vasoconstriction keeps your body warm:
The blood vessels that supply your skin capillaries constrict to reduce the flow of blood moving through the capillaries. This is called vasoconstriction and it reduces the energy transfer by radiation through the surface of the skin
Explain how less sweat production keeps your body warm:
Sweat production is reduced or stops. Less water from sweat evaporates so less energy is transferred to the environment
Explain how shivering keeps your body warm:
Your skeletal muscles contract and relax rapidly, causing you to shiver. These muscle contractions need lots of respiration, an exothermic process. The energy transferred from these exothermic reactions raises your body temperature until shivering stops