homeostasis and feedback

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Homeostasis and Feedback

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Homeostasis and Feedback. Homeostasis: Maintaining Limits. Homeostasis is the maintenance of relatively stable conditions Ensures the body’s internal environment remains steady despite changes both inside and outside the body. Examples of Maintaining Homeostasis. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Homeostasis and Feedback

Homeostasis and Feedback

Page 2: Homeostasis and Feedback

Homeostasis: Maintaining Limits

Homeostasis is the maintenance of relatively stable conditions Ensures the body’s internal environment

remains steady despite changes both inside and outside the body

Page 3: Homeostasis and Feedback

Examples of Maintaining Homeostasis

Keeping body temperature around 37oC Maintaining blood glucose level Keeping oxygen concentration steady

Page 4: Homeostasis and Feedback

Dynamic Equilibrium

Homeostasis can fluctuate over a narrow range the is compatible with life.

If certain levels fall outside this range for a prolonged period of time death may result

Page 5: Homeostasis and Feedback

Control of Homeostasis: Feedback Systems

Every body structure contains homeostatic devices that work to keep the internal environment within normal limits

2 body systems control most homeostatic devices (part of the life process called regulation) Endocrine Nervous

Page 6: Homeostasis and Feedback

Nervous Control of Homeostasis

The nervous system detects changes from the normal state and sends out nerve impulses to organs to counteract the change

Page 7: Homeostasis and Feedback

Endocrine Control of Homeostasis

Corrects changes by secreting chemicals called hormones into the blood

Hormones affect specific body cells where they cause responses that restore homeostasis

Page 8: Homeostasis and Feedback

Feedback System

AKA feedback loop Cycle of events in which the status of a

body condition is continually monitored, evaluated, changed, remonitored, re-evaluated and so on…

Page 9: Homeostasis and Feedback

Each condition in the body that is monitored in such a way is called a controlled condition

Any disruption that causes a change in a controlled condition is called a stimulus

Page 10: Homeostasis and Feedback

Components of a Feedback System

Receptor – monitors change Control Center – sets a range of

acceptable values, evaluates input from the receptor and sends output to an effector

Effector – a body structure that receives output from the control center and produces a response or effect that changes the controlled condition.

Page 11: Homeostasis and Feedback

Negative Feedback Systems

Reverses the change in a controlled condition EX – BP, BGL, HR, Temp

Page 12: Homeostasis and Feedback

Positive Feedback System

The effector produces a response that enhances or reinforces the initial change in the controlled condition. EX – Childbirth, Ovulation, Blood Clotting

Happens in stimuli that are do not happen very often

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Homeostasis and Disease

If 1 or more components of the body lose their ability to contribute to homeostasis, the normal balance among all the body’s processes may be disturbed.

This may result in a disease, disorder or even death

Page 15: Homeostasis and Feedback

Disorder

Any disturbance of the structure or function of the body

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Disease

A more specific term for an illness that is characterized by a specific set of signs and symptoms

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Symptoms

Subjective changes in body function that are not apparent to an observer Ex – nausea or headache

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Signs

Objective changes that a clinician can observe and measure Ex – bleeding, swelling, fever, rash

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Infectious disease

Pathogens invade a host and cause a disease

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Local Disease

Affects one part or region of the body

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Systemic Disease

Affects several body parts or the whole body

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Pathology

The science that deals with the nature, causes and development of abnormal conditions that occur from the disease process

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Epidemiology

The science that deals with the why, when and where diseases occur and how they are transmitted in a human community

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Pharmacology

The science that deals with the effects and uses of drugs in the treatment of disease

Page 25: Homeostasis and Feedback

Diagnosis

The identification of a disease or disorder based on a scientific evaluation of a patient’s signs and symptoms, medical history, physical examination and sometimes lab tests

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Aging and Homeostasis

Aging is a normal process characterized by a progressive decline in the body’s ability to restore homeostasis.

Produces observable changes in structure and function and increases vulnerability to stress and disease