Homeostasis Flashcards

1
Q

Define homeostasis

A

Maintenance of a steady state/internal environment

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2
Q

What responds to the challenge produced in a change of body status?

A

Physiology responds to maintain homeostasis

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3
Q

What are the 5 components of a feedback system?

A

Regulated factor (set point, operating range, error signal)

Detector/sensor (afferent path)

Comparator/control centre – determines set point of variable, compares and maintains variable at set point
Intrinsic: local – cell or tissue autoregulates
Extrinsic: endocrine system, nervous system

Effector – returns variable to set point (efferent path)

Response

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4
Q

Describe the negative feedback loop

What is the error signal?

A
  1. controlled variable - if low you get negative feedback to a sensor then to a comparator or control centre which increases the aspect being regulated
  2. Setpoint
  3. Comparator/ control centre
  4. Effector

Error signal - value of the controlled variable minus the set point

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5
Q

What physical entities can be controlled?

What circulating chemical substances can be regulated?

A

Blood pressure
Core temperature

Concentrations of:
Ions e.g. Na+, Ca2+
Nutrients e.g. blood glucose concentration
Hormones

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6
Q

What does the body do when we are cold/ hot?

A

shivering, vasoconstriction and increased metabolism (increased)

vasodilatation, sweating (increases)

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7
Q

Describe the flow diagram of the regulation of body temperature

A
  1. Core body temperature is being regulated
  2. It is being sensed by the Hypothalamic temperature receptors or cutaneous temperature receptors
  3. This links to the hypothalamus which has its set point - core body temperature
  4. We then get heat loss/ sweating/ vasodilation

or

Heat gain - shivering, vasoconstriction and metabolism

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8
Q

Define pyrogen

A

Pyrogens (bacterial or viral infections) change the set point to a higher level resulting in fever

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9
Q

What are the benefits of a higher temperature?

A

Benefits of a higher temperature:
inhibits bacterial growth
speeds up metabolic reactions
Increases delivery of white blood cells to infection sites

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10
Q

How is temperature increased?

A

Blood flow shifted to core to conserve heat
Increased muscle activity (shivering)
Chills stop when high temp reached

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11
Q

Describe the flow diagram of the regulation of blood pressure

A
  1. Blood pressure is regulated by baroreceptors.
  2. It is sensed by the medulla via negative feedback
  3. Changes heart activity and peripheral resistance
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12
Q

How do we respond to an increased blood pressure?

A

We get an increased parasympathetic input leading to a decreased cardiac output

or decreased sympathetic input leading to a decrease in TPR

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13
Q

What does hypertension cause?

A

Resetting the baroreceptors

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14
Q

What is activated in response to a decrease in blood volume and BP?

A

the baroreceptor reflex to increase cardiac output and total peripheral resistance

stimulation of vasopressin (ADH) secretion to increase blood volume

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15
Q

What does the secretion of CRH from the anterior pituitary gland cause?

A

CRH (corticotropin-releasing hormone) stimulates ACTH secretion

ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone) stimulates cortisol secretion

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16
Q

Describe the flow diagram of the regulation of cortisol

A
  1. Hypothalamus - sensor and comparator releases CRH
  2. CRH acts on the anterior pituitary gland which releases ACTH
  3. This acts on the adrenal cortex releasing cortisol
  4. If too much we have negative feedback to the hypothalamus
17
Q

What can stress cause in terms of cortisol?

A

Raises the set point of cortisol - you awake more

18
Q

How is oxytocin involved in the positive feedback mechanism?

A

In labour oxytocin stimulates contraction of uterine muscles
Cervix dilates and activate stretch receptors
Action potentials signal to hypothalamus
Stimulates further release of oxytocin