Homeostatic Mechanisms Flashcards
What does skin temperature rise and fall with?
The environmental temperature. (as an aside not rectal thermometers are more accurate and read typically .6C warmer or 1.0F warmer than oral)
Core temperatures vary with? What effect does the variable have on the temperature (ie. raises it or lowers it?)
Time of day - lowest between 3am and 6am with the highest between 3pm and 6pm
Stage of menstrual cycle - increasing 1C during the post-ovulatory phase (progesterone)
Level of activity - increasing with exercise and emotional states
Age - being higher in active children and lower in aged adults.
Maintenance of a stable body temperature involves ______ feedback control with a ______ gain
Negative. Very high gain (~25-30). For example the core body temperature of humans changes 1C for every 25-30C change in environmental temperature.
A body immersed in water exchanges most heat by?
Convection
Which heat removal mechanism (ie. radiation, conduction, convection, evaporation) dissipates the most heat?
Evaporation by sweating normally dissipates nearly all of the heat produced during exercise.
Most body heat is generated how and where?
By cellular metabolism in the deep organs (liver, brain, heart, active skeletal muscle)
The rate of heat loss is determines largely by?
1 how rapidly heat is carried from the core to the skin and (2) transferred from the skin to the surroundings. (mostly by convection through the blood.
What is passive or unregulated heat transfer?
In the steady state, the rate of heat production by the body core must be matched by the flow of heat from the core to the skin, and from skin to environment. *Note various homeostatic controls-systems not directly involved in temperature regulation can also affect heat flow.
The skin is a highly effective controlled heat radiator system, how does it work?
At relatively low environmental temperatures the arterioles and arteriovenous anastomosis that supply blood to the venous plexus of the skin are constricted. As the environmental temperature increases, vasodilation suserves heat conductance through the skin. The Sympathetic nervous system controls this.
What happens during acclimatization to hot weather?
There is a change in sweat glands allowing a change from 1L/hr in sweat to up to 2-3L/hr loss in sweat. Aldosterone secretion from the adrenal cortex also leads to a decrease in loss of NaCl in sweat.
How are sweat glands innervated?
By an acetylcholine-secreting sympathetic nerve.
Where do free nerve endings that function as thermal sensors located? How do they respond to changes in local temperature?
The skin and in the hypothalamus. They alter their frequency of firing of action potentials. They anticipate changes in core temp.
Does the skin have anatomically distinct receptors for warmth and cold?
Yes. There are 10-fold as many cold receptors in many parts of the skin. The skin receptors work with the distinct deep body receptors which are sensitive primarily to cold in the body core to prevent hypothermia. They project to a control center in the hypothalamus.
When do the cold and the warmth receptors fire with the same frequency?
When the skin temperature is at 37C
There are both heat and cold-sensitive neurons in the hypothalamus which has proportionately more neurons?
There are more heat-sensitive neurons.