homeostasis principles Flashcards

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1
Q

define homeostasis

A

Homeostasis is the ability to control the internal environment

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2
Q

why is homeostasis important

A

This allows the cells to experience constant conditions and function optimally

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3
Q

Explain the importance of homeostasis with particular reference to temperature and blood pH

A

Enzymes and proteins are sensitive to fluctuations in pH and temperature,

They reduce in activity or are denatured in not optimal conditions

Maintaining a constant pH and temperature mean reactions take place at a suitable rate.

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4
Q

what is the role of tissue fluid in homeostasis

A

Cells are surrounded by tissue fluid which is regulated to maintain an environment that fluctuates around an optimum point for factors such as water potential, temperature and pH.

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5
Q

Give and describe the stages to a control mechanism

A

Optimum point: point at which the system works best.

Monitored by…
Receptor: detects deviation from optimum (ie stimulus).

Coordinator: coordinates information from receptors and sends information to…

Effector: muscle or gland that brings about changes to return system to optimum point.

Return to normality creates a …
Feedback mechanism: by which a receptor responds to a stimulus created by the change to the system brought about by the receptor

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6
Q

give the 2 ways control mechanisms are coordinated

A

positive feedback
negative feedback

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7
Q

define positive feedback

A

Positive feedback - deviation from optimum causes changes that result in further deviation from optimum. Small stimulus leads to large response

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8
Q

define negative feedback

A

Negative feedback - the change produced by the control system leads to a change that turns the system off and reduces deviation from the optimum

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9
Q

Define negative feedback

A

Negative feedback occurs when the stimulus turns off the corrective measures and returns system to optimum level (avoiding overshoots)

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10
Q

Explain how negative feedback helps to control homeostatic processes

A

Negative feedback has two separate mechanisms to regulate deviation from the optimum
(one in each direction). Receptor detects deviation from optimum ,
information from receptors is coordinated and instruction given to an effector to bring about a response to return to optimum,

negative feedback mechanism detects this change and brings about appropriate response

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11
Q

Explain how negative feedback mechanisms give a greater degree of control

A

The separate mechanisms to regulate deviation in either direction allow greater control because they are positive actions in both directions (rather than just allowing something to naturally return to normal)

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12
Q

Distinguish between negative feedback and positive feedback

A

Negative feedback causes corrective measures to be switched off when optimum has been restored whereas in positive feedback the corrective mechanism remains turned on and further deviation from optimum occurs.

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