Chapter 1 - Guyton Flashcards
Primary constituents of intracellular fluid.
potassium, magnesium, phosphate
All of the blood in circulation passes through entire circulatory circuit in how long?
1 minute at rest, 6 times a minute when extremely active
How does the baroreceptor system work to control arterial blood pressure?
- baroreceptors (in the walls of the bifurcation region of the carotid arteries + arch of the aorta in the thorax) are stimulated by the stretch of the arterial wall
- send impulses to the medulla to inhibit the vasomotor center
- resulting in diminished pumping activity and dilation of peripheral blood vessels
Most control systems of the body act through which mechanism?
negative feedback
Examples of negative feedback?
- Carbon dioxide regulation - High CO2 in ECF increases pulmonary ventilation > decreased CO2 concentration (i.e. result is negative to initial stimulus)
- Arterial-pressure regulating mechanisms - High pressure > reactions promote reduced pressure)
What is “gain” of a control system?
the degree of effectiveness with which a control system maintains constant conditions (Gain = correction/error)
What is positive feedback and why does it lead to instability?
Initiating stimulus causes more of the same
E.g. Blood loss–>arterial pressure falls–>flows to heart through coronary vessels diminishes–>more weakness of heart–>death
Examples of healthy positive feedback.
Blood clotting, uterine contractions, nerve signals (action potentials)
What is feed-forward control in muscle contraction?
Sensory nerve signals from the moving parts –> brain –> assess whether the movement is performed correctly –> if not, corrects the next movement (adaptive control)
Primary constituents of extracellular fluid
- Sodium, chloride, and bicarbonate ions
- Nutrients - oxygen, glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids
- Carbon dioxide being transported from cells > lungs
- Other cellular waste > kidneys for excretion
What is homeostasis
maintenance of nearly constant conditions in the internal environment
What are the two stages extracellular fluid is transported through the body?
- Movement of blood through the body in the blood vessels.
- Movement of fluid between the blood capillaries and the intercellular spaces between the tissue cells
Where do nutrients originate from (and via which systems) in the ECF
- Respiratory system - oxygen diffuses via molecular motion through the alveolar membrane
- GI Tract - carbohydrates, fatty acids and amino acids absorbed from food
- Liver (adipocytes, GI mucosa, Kidneys, endocrine glands) - help modify absorbed substances and store them
- MSK - mobility to obtain nutrient
Mechanisms for removal of metabolic end products
- Lungs - remove CO2 (most abundant metabolic product)
- Kidney - removes products of cellular metabolism (urea, uric acid, excess water + ions)
- GIT - undigested material + some metabolic waste
- Liver - detoxification of drugs/chemicals (often secreted into bile)
What are two main systems which regulate body function
- Nervous system (sensory input, CNS or integrative portion, motor output)
- Hormone systems (endocrine glands)