Homeostasis and Feedback PowerPoint
Download
Report
Transcript Homeostasis and Feedback PowerPoint
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
Keeping body temperature around 37oC
Maintaining blood glucose level
Keeping oxygen concentration steady
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
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
Nervous Control of Homeostasis
The nervous system detects changes from
the normal state and sends out nerve
impulses to organs to counteract the
change
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
Feedback System
AKA feedback loop
Cycle of events in which the status of a
body condition is continually monitored,
evaluated, changed, remonitored, reevaluated and so on…
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
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.
Negative Feedback Systems
Reverses the change in a controlled
condition
EX – BP, BGL, HR, Temp
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
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
Disorder
Any disturbance of the structure or
function of the body
Disease
A more specific term for an illness that is
characterized by a specific set of signs
and symptoms
Symptoms
Subjective changes in body function that
are not apparent to an observer
Ex – nausea or headache
Signs
Objective changes that a clinician can
observe and measure
Ex – bleeding, swelling, fever, rash
Infectious disease
Pathogens invade a host and cause a
disease
Local Disease
Affects one part or region of the body
Systemic Disease
Affects several body parts or the whole
body
Pathology
The science that deals with the nature,
causes and development of abnormal
conditions that occur from the disease
process
Epidemiology
The science that deals with the why, when
and where diseases occur and how they
are transmitted in a human community
Pharmacology
The science that deals with the effects and
uses of drugs in the treatment of disease
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
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