PU535 Public Health Biology Unit 1 Biological Perspective in Public Health Flashcards
What is homeostasis?
How is homeostasis maintained?
The body’s internal equilibrium.
Through negative and positive feedback loops.
When does disease or illness develop?
Typically, when homeostasis is disrupted.
Injury, malnutrition, or invasion by pathogens can all disrupt homeostasis. Cells do check for imbalances and have ways to adapt but sometimes dividing cells fail to detect unwanted changed and results in mutations that may cause disease.
What is the study that relates to the changes that occur in normal anatomy and physiology as a result of illness or disease?
Pathophysiology
What are the factors considered in pathophysiology? (3)
Etiology - the study of the cause of disease
Pathophysiology - the study of the changes to normal anatomy and physiology
Clinical manifestations - the signs and symptoms of the disease or illness, along with diagnostics and treatments available
Make the models with their correct terms (See attached; list below)
A - Hyperplasia
B - Severe dysplasia
C - Atrophy
D - Mild Dysplasia
E - Metastasis
F - Hypertrophy
G - Metaplasia
C1, F2, A3, D4, B5, G6, and E7
What refers to the reversible reduction or shrinkage in cell size? It can happen when cells are no longer used, are malnourished, have insufficient blood supply, lack of innervation or sufficient hormonal stimulation.
Atrophy.
For example, thymic involution or the atrophy of the thymus gland, is a hallmark indicator of the aging process and shrinks at a rate of 1% beginning in the ages of 35-45 and very small in older adults. Its location is over the heart and it produces thymosin which is important hormone for T-cells
secretion in immune function.
-trophy refers to size usually.
What describes an increase in cell size rather than increase in the number of cells?
Hypertrophy.
What is an increase in the number of cells caused by increased workload, hormonal stimulation or decreased tissue?
Hyperplasia
-plasia refers to formation or growth.
What describes abnormal growth or development of tissues or cells, leading to a change in size, shape, and appearance that is sometimes reversible but often precedes neoplastic (cancerous) changes?
Mild dysplasia.
What is severe dysplasia (carcinoma in situ)?
It describes a group of abnormal cells that are found only in the place where they first formed (primary location) and have not spread to other parts of the body.
Carcinoma in situ is often considered to be the earliest form of cancer development.
What is the replacement of one adult cell with another adult cell that can better endure some changes or stress? It is usually a response to chronic inflammation or irritation.
Metaplasia
What do you call it when cancer cells break away from the site where they first formed (known as the primary tumor) and spread to other areas of the body, usually via the blood or lymphatic system, forming a new tumor (called a metastatic tumor) in other organs or tissues in other parts of the body?
Metastasis (invasive carcinoma)
The new, metastatic tumor is the same type of cancer as the primary tumor.
For example, if breast cancer spreads to the lung, the cancer cells in the lung are usually identifiable as breast cancer cells, not lung cancer cells. This is useful when diagnosing cancers and determining if a tumor is a primary or secondary neoplasm.
T/F - There are four types of homeostatic feedback mechanisms.
False. There are two which are negative and positive feedback control.
What is the difference between positive and negative feedback mechanisms in the body?
Positive feedback occurs when stimulus triggers an enhanced response exaggerating the original event.
Negative feedback mechanisms restore homeostasis by detecting and correcting changes to the normal homeostatic conditions in the body.
There are fewer examples of positive feedback mechanisms than there are of negative feedback mechanisms.
What are some examples of positive and negative feedback mechanisms that strive for homeostasis within the body?
Positive feedbacks - platelet formation in the blood coagulation cascade (haemostasias) and oxytocin release during labor contractions in childbirth.
Negative feedbacks - secretion of insulin from the pancreas to reduce high blood sugar levels back to normal, control of body temperature by thermoreceptors in the hypothalamus (thermoregulation), and control of blood pressure and respiration rate.
T/F - Disease can develop when homeostasis cannot be sustained.
True.
It is important to differentiate between illness and disease. An individual may live a reasonably normal life and not be considered ill, despite having a disease.
For example, an asthmatic person can live a normal life and not usually be considered ill because the body has adapted to the disease. However, disease may make them more susceptible to certain illnesses such as respiratory infections or pneumonia.