Temperature control and hormones- Module 5 Flashcards
what does vasodilation result in, why is this bad under cold conditions
-results in more blood nearer to the skin surface (due to increase in blood ammount, not the change in loacation)
-will lose more heat
-organs will not be able to maintain function
where is aldosterone produced and what is its role
-in adrenal cortex
role:
-water reabsorption
-control of blood pressure
-ion concentration in blood/ reabsorption in kidneys
why is it important that a patient had not eaten for at least 8 hours before a test measuring a ‘fasting blood glucose’ concentration
time is needed to restore normal glucose concentration for insulin to act (fully)
why is standard deviation better than range for measuring the dispersion of data
-less affected by the anomaly/outlier
-takes into account every value in the data
-outliers can be calculated and rejected
describe two aspects of the experimental design that scientists would need to consider in order to produce a valid comparison of the the patients
-one who had received stem cell therapy to treat diabetes
-one who hadn’t
-measure blood glucose by using same method
-measure blood glucose the same number of times
-medical history= age + gender
-using correct stats tests to compare
basic description of how a beta cell secretes insulin in response to blood glucose concentration once glucose is in cell
1)Glucose transporter moves glucose into Beta cell
2)Glucose is metabolised to make ATP by mitochondria
3)ATP binds to KATP channel -> closes -> stops K+ leaving cell
4)membrane depolarises to -30mV
5)Voltage gated Ca2+ channel opens -> Ca2+ influx
6)ca2+ causes secretory vesicles containing insulin to move to and fuse with plasma membrane, releasing insulin via exocytosis
Fter initial release of insulin from beta cell, insulin secretion continues even when there is no further glucose intake
explain and suggest why the cell continues to secrete insulin
-as long as blood glucose concentrations remain high
-ATP is still present and so K+ channels remain closed
-exocytosis is still being triggered by calcium ions
describe how glucagon is involved in the regulation of blood glucose concentration (correctly functioning)
-released by alpha cells in islets of Langerhans
-promotes conversion of glycogen into glucose / glycogenolysis in liver/muscle
-ref to gluconeogenesis
-ref to conversion of triglycerides into fatty acids
-negative feedback reduces secretion of glucagon
-Glucagon reduces insulin reduction