Title: homeostasis
1homeostasis
2Physiology
- In the distant past, humans thought that good
health was somehow associated with a "balance"
among the multiple life-giving forces ("humours")
in the body - Today we know that living tissue is composed of
trillions of small cells, all are packaged to
permit movement of certain substances, but not
others, across the cell membrane. - also we know that cells are in contact with the
interstitial fluid. - The interstitial fluid is in a state of flux,
with chemicals, gases, and water moving it in two
directions between the cell interiors and the
blood.
3Fluid compartments of the body
4- most of the common physiological variables found
in normal, healthy organisms are maintained at
relatively steady states. - i.e. blood pressure, body temperature, blood
oxygen, and sodium. - This is true despite external conditions that are
not constant.
5Homeostasis defined
- homeostasis is simply defined as a state of
reasonably stable balance between the
physiological variables - NO variable is constant over time.
- Blood glucose can have dramatic swings.
- Homeostasis is in DYNAMIC balance, not static.
- It is relatively stable, if disturbed mechanisms
can restore it to normal values.
6What does it mean to be relatively constant?
- It depends on what is being monitored.
- Arterial oxygen must be tightly controlled
- Blood glucose can vary wildly
- A person can be in homeostasis for one variable
but not for another. - You could be in sodium homeostasis but have
abnormally high levels of CO2. - This is a life threatening condition.
- Just one variable out of homeostasis can have
life-threatening consequences.
7Physiology vs. Pathophysiology
- If all your major organ systems are in
homeostasis, then you are in good health. - diseases take one or more systems out of
homeostasis. - PhysiologyWhen homeostasis is maintained
- Pathophysiology homeostasis is not maintained.
8How do you know if a variable is in homeostasis?
- You have to observe a person over time to find
out what is normal. - Not usually possible because you only go to a
doctor when you are sick (out of homeostasis). - Usually, doctors rely on normal values for large
populations of people. - Body temperature
- Normal values are useful, but not if a person has
been exercising. - There are rhythms to a persons body temperature.
9Many variables are cyclical
- Examples
- Body temperature,
- sleep/wake,
- levels of certain hormones
- If you took one measurement, they may be normal,
but might not detect when they are abnormally
high or low. - Measure over 24 hour period to get a better
picture of homeostasis.
10Characteristics of homeostatic control systems
- cells, tissue and organ activity must be
integrated so that changes in the ECF initiate a
reaction to correct the change. - Homeostasis, then, denotes the relatively stable
conditions of the internal environment - These conditions result from compensating
regulatory responses controlled by homeostatic
control systems.
11Regulation of body temperature
- Man w/ body temp. of 370 C is in room at 200 C
- He is losing heat to the environment
- Chemical reactions in his cells are releasing
heat at a rate to loss - Body is in a steady state but state is maintained
by input of energy - Steady state is not equilibrium
- Steady state temperature is the set-point
12Lower room temp to 50 C
- This increases loss of heat from skin and body
temp starts to fall - What responses will occur?
- Blood vessels to skin constrict
- Person curls to reduce skin surface area
- Shivering occurs producing large amounts of heat
13Negative Feedback
- Defined
- an increase or decrease in the variable being
regulated brings about responses that tend to
move the variable in the direction opposite
("negative" to) the direction of the original
change - It can occur at the organ, cellular, or molecular
level
14negative feedback example
15Negative feedback in an enzyme pathway
- When energy is needed by a cell,
- glucose is converted into ATP.
- The ATP that accumulates in the cell inhibits the
activity of some of the enzymes involved in the
conversion of glucose to ATP - As ATP levels increase within a cell, production
of ATP is slowed down
16Not all feedback is negative
- Positive feedback is less common but does occur
- In nerve cells, when a stimulus is received,
pore-like channels open letting Na in - In childbirth
- The babys head presses against the uterus
stimulating the release of oxytocin - Oxytocin causes uterine contractions, pushing the
babys head against the uterine wall releasing
more oxytocin.
17Feedforward regulation
- While your body can respond to changes in
external temperatures AFTER the bodys internal
temperature changes, it can also respond to
changes BEFORE your body temp. starts to fall. - Nerve cells in the skin detect changes and send
information to the brain. - Often this response is a result of LEARNING
18Parts of homeostatic control systems- Reflexes
- reflex is a specific involuntary,unlearned
"built in" response to a particular stimulus - The stimulus is a detectable change in the
internal or external environment. - Detected by a nerve receptor
- The stimulus causes the receptor to send a signal
to the integrating center (afferent)
Reflex Arc
19Reflex part 2
- Integrating center receives signals from many
receptors - Receptors may be for different kinds of stimuli
- Output from center (efferent) goes to effector to
alter its activity
20Reflex for minimizing decrease in body temperature
21Reflexes are not just part of the nervous system
- We usually think of reflexes are part of the
nervous system (hand on a hot stove), but now we
include many other systems as part of reflexes. - Hormone-secreting glands serve as integrating
centers - Chemical messengers travel through the blood.
22Intercellular chemical messengers
- reflexes and other responses depend on the
ability of cells to communicate w/ each other. - Most often occurs with chemical messengers.
- Hormones- allow hormone secreting cell to
communicate with target cells. - Blood delivers the hormone to the cell.
- Neurotransmitters- allow nerve cells to
communicate with each other - One nerve cell can alter the activity of another
cell. - Neurotransmitters released into the area around
effector cells can alter their activity. - Paracrine agents- chemical messengers in local
responses
23Categories of chemical messengers
24Paracrine/autocrine agents
- Paracrine agents are made by cells (given a
stimulus) and released into the ECF. - Agents diffuse to neighboring cells which are
their target cells. - Autocrine agents are made by a cell, released and
the target cell is the one that released it. (?)
25Why do you care about these agents?
- We are finding many different paracrine/autocrine
agents that have many diverse effects. - They are not just proteins.
- Secreted by many cell types in many kinds of
tissues - So many that they can be organized into families
- i.e. Growth factor family has 50 distinct
molecules that can cause cells to
divide/differentiate.
26Processes related to homeostasis
- Some seemingly unrelated processes have
implications for homeostasis - Adaptation and acclimatization
- Biological rhythms
- Apoptosis
27Adaptation/ acclimatization
- Adaptation is a characteristic that favors
survival in specific environments. - Your ability to respond to a specific
environmental stress isnt fixed, but it can be
enhanced by prolonged exposure to the stress. - Acclimatization A specific type of adaptation-
the improved functioning of an existing
homeostatic system.
28Acclimatization is reversible (usually)
- If daily exposure to the stress is eliminated,
then acclimatization is reversible - Some acclimatizations that happen early in life
may become permanent. - Natives of the Andes Mountains
- Low oxygen levels cause increased chest sizes,
wide nostrils, broad dental arches
29Biological rhythms
- Many body functions are rhythmic
- Occur in 24 hour (circadian rhythm) cycles
- Sleep/wake, body temp., hormone levels, etc
- Are anticipatory (kind of like feedforward
systems without detectors)
30Rhythms allow responses to occur automatically
- Remember that most homeostatic responses are
corrective, they occur after homeostasis is
perturbed - Rhythms cause responses to occur when a challenge
is likely but before it actually does. - Urinary excretion of potassium is high during the
day and low at night.
31Body rhythms are internally driven
- Environmental factors dont drive the rhythms,
but provide timing cues. - Sleeping experiment (no light cues)
- Sleep/wake cycle is a free-running rhythm
- Sleep/wake cycles can vary between 23-27 hours
but not more or less than that.
32Other environmental cues
- Light/dark cycle is very important, but not the
only one. - External environmental temperature
- Meal timing
- Social cues
- Sleep experiment people are separated, their
cycles are each different. - Put them together and their cycles synchronize
33Jet Lag
- Environmental time cues can phase-shift rhythms.
- Going from LA to Atlanta and staying for a week.
- Circadian rhythm will adjust, but it takes time
- In the meantime, you suffer jet lag
- Sleep disruption, gastrointestinal trouble,
decreased vigilance and attention span, general
malaise
34Neural basis of body rhythms
- In the hypothalamus
- A group of nerve cells (suprachiasmatic nucleus)
- Acts as the pacemaker for rhythms
- Pacemaker receives input from the eyes and other
senses. - Then it sends signals to other parts of the brain
that control other systems, activating some and
inhibiting others. - Not well understood
35Sleep and the Pineal gland
- Pacemaker sends signal to pineal gland
- Gland releases melatonin
- Pineal secretes during darkness, not daylight
- Melatonin influences other organs
- Makes you sleepy
36Apoptosis
- Defined-
- The ability to self-destruct by activation of an
intrinsic program within the cell - Important for
- sculpting a developing organism or
- Eliminating undesirable cells (cancerous)
37Importance of Apoptosis
- Crucial for regulating the number of cells in a
tissue or organ. - Control of cell number is determined by a balance
between cell proliferation (addition of new cells
by mitosis) and cell death (apoptosis) - Neutrophils (cells alive)
38How does it occur?
- Controlled autodigestion of cell organelles.
- Enzymes breakdown the nucleus and then other
organelles - The cell membrane isnt digested.
- The cell sends out chemical signals that recruit
phagocytic cells (cells that eat other cells). - This is different than what happens when a cell
is injured (necrosis)
39How is it kept off?
- Virtually all cells have the apoptosis enzymes.
- Why arent they turned on?
- A large number of molecules called survivor
signals keep the cell from activating the
enzymes. - So most cells are programmed to commit suicide
UNLESS they receive a signal to stay alive. - Prostate gland cells will die if testosterone is
not present
40What about cancer? Degenerative diseases?
- Cancer cells undergo uncontrolled cell
proliferation. - So the apoptosis enzymes are always turned off.
- In degenerative diseases (osteoporosis)
- The rate of cell death is higher than that of
cell proliferation. - Drugs that reduce rate of apoptosis
41Balance in the homeostasis of chemicals
- Most homeostatic systems control the balance of
specific chemicals.
423 states of total body balance
- Negative balance
- Loss exceeds gain, total amount of substance in
body is decreasing. - Positive balance
- Gain exceeds loss
- Stable balance
- Gain equals loss
43Water, sodium balance
- Water
- Stable balance is upset with excessive sweating.
- Restored by?
- Sodium (Na)
- Kidneys excrete Na into urine in approx.
amounts of ingested daily. - If intake were to increase dramatically, kidneys
will excrete more in urine, but only so much can
be excreted. - If the increase is continued, it can have effects
on other systems - A small change in blood sodium has been linked to
hypertension.
44A quick summary
- Homeostasis is a complex, dynamic process.
- It regulates the adaptive responses of the body
to changes in external and internal environments.
- homeostatic systems require a sensor to detect
changes and a means to produce a response. - Responses can include muscle activity, synthesis
of chemical messengers (hormones) and behavioral
changes. - All responses require energy.
- You get energy to respond from the food you eat.