2. WHAT HAPPENS IF THERE IS A CHANGE IN OUR
ENVIRONMENT?
Depending upon the
degree of change:
Discomfort
Disease/sickness
Damage/injury
Death
So any significant change
in the environment is
harmful for an organism.
3. LIFE ORIGINATED AS UNICELLULAR ORGANISMS
IN PRIMITIVE SEA
The primitive sea was the
environment for the primitive
unicellular organisms.
They obtained nutrition from it
and discharged wastes in it.
The vastness of the sea kept its
composition almost constant.
4. UNICELLULAR ORGANISMS EVOLVED INTO
MUTLICELLULAR ORGANISMS
Some cells in multicellular
organisms were away from
the primitive sea.
As cells could not reach the
sea, the sea was brought
within in the form of
extracellular fluid.
5. 60% OF HUMAN BODY IS WATER!
40% is intracellular fluid (ICF)
i.e. fluid inside the cells.
20% is extracellular fluid
(ECF) i.e. fluid outside the
cells. Further divided into:
Interstitial Fluid (ISF)- 15%
Plasma- 5%
6. ECF: THE INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT OF
THE BODY
All the cells in the body live in
the same environment, the ECF.
So, the ECF is also k/a ‘internal
environment’ of the body or
‘milieu intérieur’
They get nutrition from it &
discharge their waste products
in it.
7. milieu intérieur A TERM COINED BY
Claude Bernard
French physiologist.
Father of physiology.
“La fixit du milieu intkrieur est
fa condition de fa vie fibre.”
(the constancy of the
internal environment is
necessary for free life).
1813-1878
8. Walter B. Canon NAMED THE FIXITY DESCRIBED BY
Bernard AS ‘Homeostasis’
American physiologist.
Coined the term ‘homeostasis’.
Described homeostasis as- ‘an
evolutionary development of a
metabolic wisdom that provides
for internal constancy’.
1871-1945
9. HOMEOSTASIS
‘maintenance of nearly
constant conditions in the
internal environment’.
‘the various physiologic
arrangements which serve
to restore the normal state,
once it has been disturbed’
are known as Homeostatic
Mechanisms.
10. WHAT NEEDS TO BE MAINTAINED CONSTANT IN
INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT?
1. Concentration of oxygen
and carbon dioxide.
2. pH of the internal
environment.
3. Concentration of
nutrients and waste
products.
4. Concentration of salt
and other electrolytes.
5. Volume and pressure of
extracellular fluid.
11. HOMEOSTASIS: AS DESCRIBED BY CANON
perturbation in the organism’s steady state may arise from
changes within the organism as well as changes from without.
homeostasis is not the responsibility of a single system but that
all the organ systems of the body operate cooperatively to effect
internal constancy.
each cell benefits from homeostasis, and in turn, each cell
contributes its share toward the maintenance of homeostasis.
the more “advanced” the evolutionary stage of a particular group
or organisms, the more subtle and complex the homeostatic
apparatus.
12. ALL ORGANS AND ORGAN SYSTEMS OF THE BODY HELP
IN MAINTENANCE OF HOMEOSTASIS
Cardiovascular system.
Respiratory system.
Nervous system.
Endocrine system.
Gastrointestinal system.
Excretory system.
Skeletal system.
Integumentry system.
Reproductive system.
13. CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
Transports oxygen,
carbon dioxide,
nutrients and
hormones to and from
the body cells.
Helps regulate pH and
temperature.
Provides protection
against diseases.
18. EXCRETORY SYSTEM
Helps eliminate the
waste products from
the body.
Maintains the blood
pH, volume, pressure,
osmolarity, electrolyte
composition etc.
Produces hormones.
19. SKELETAL SYSTEM
Bones provide support,
protection, the
production of blood
cells.
Muscles produce body
movements and produce
heat to maintain the
body temperature.
20. INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM
Contributes to
homeostasis by
protecting the body
and helping regulate
the body temperature.
It also allows you to
sense pleasurable,
painful and other
stimuli in your
external environment.
21. REPRODUCTIVE SYSTEM
Sometimes reproduction
is not considered a
homeostatic function.
Helps maintain
homeostasis by
generating new beings to
take the place of those
that are dying and thus
help in maintaining the
continuity of life.
22. HOW HOMEOSTATIC CONTROL MECHANISMS
WORK?
Homeostatic control
mechanisms work
through ‘Feedback
Mechanisms’.
Status of a body
condition is
continually monitored,
evaluated, changed, re-
monitored &
reevaluated.
23. FEEDBACK MECHANISM
A feedback mechanism is a cycle in which the
output of a system “feeds back” to either modify or
reinforce the action taken by the system.
A feedback mechanism may operate at:
Tissue level
Organ level
Organ system level
Body level, integrating with other organ systems.
Feedback mechanism can be:
Negative feedback (more common)
Positive feedback
24. A FEEDBACK SYSTEM CONSISTS OF THREE
COMPONENTS
1. SENSOR (RECEPTOR):
detects specific changes
(stimuli) in the environment.
2. INTEGRATOR: act to direct
impulses to the place where
a response can be made.
3. EFFECTOR: performs the
appropriate response.
29. POSITIVE FEEDBACK
Strengthens or reinforces a change.
Makes abnormal values more abnormal.
Produces ‘Vicious Cycle’.
But in body a mild degree of positive feedback can be
overcome by the negative feedback control
mechanisms of the body, and the vicious cycle fails to
develop.
34. EFFECTIVENESS OF A FEEDBACK CONTROL
THE PRINCIPLE OF GAIN
GAIN = Correction/Error
Higher the gain, more efficient is the system
Normal BP = 100 mm Hg
Some disturbance causes an ↑ BP = 175 mm Hg
Baroreceptor mechanism brings BP down to 125 mm Hg
So correction done by baroreceptor mechanism = - 50 mm Hg
But still error = 25 mm Hg
So, Gain = - 50/25 = - 2