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Thermoregulation Homeostasis Homeostasis • • • • • organ systems are interdependent share same environment composition effects all inhabitants internal environment must be kept stable maintaining stable internal environmentshomeostasis –dynamic equilibrium Homeostasis • varies around a Set Point –average value for a variable • specific for each individual –determined by genetics • normal ranges for a species –temperature 36.7 – 37.2 • Parts of Homeostatic Regulation Receptor – sensitive to environmental change or stimuli • Control or Integration Center – receives & processes information supplied by receptor – determines set point • Effector – cell or organ which responds to commands of control center HOMEOSTATIC REGULATION • Autoregulation – cells, tissues, organs adjust automatically to environmental changes • Extrinsic Regulation – Nervous System • Fast • Short lasting • Crisis management – Endocrine System • Longer to react • Longer lasting FEEDBACK LOOPS • Negative Feedback – output of system shuts off or reduces intensity of initiating stimulus – most often seen in the body • Positive Feedback – initial stimulus produces a response that exaggerates or enhances its effect – blood clotting & child birth Negative Feedback Temperature Extremes • Humans are subjected to vast changes in environmental temperatures • Enzymes operate over very narrow range of temperatures • Failure to control body temperature can result in physiological changes & damage • body has several mechanisms to maintain body temperature • Thermoregulation Temperature • Core temperature – most important body temperature – temperature of organs in major cavities – rectal temperature gives best estimation • Shell temperature – temperature closer to surface – skin & oral temperatures Mechanisms of Heat Transfer • Radiation • Conduction • Convection • Evaporation Evaporation • water changes from liquid to vapor Thermoregulation Homeostasis • Control Center – preoptic area of hypothalamus • Receptors – in skin • Effectors – eccrine sweat glands & blood vessels Mechanisms for Heat Loss • skin receptors detect increase in temperaturemessage sent to preoptic nucleus heat loss center (also in hypothalamus)stimulated sets off series of events heat loss • inhibition of vasomotor centerperipheral vasodilationwarm blood flows to skin’s surface • as skin temperatures rise, radiation & convection loses increase • sweat glands stimulated increase output evaporative loss increases • respiratory centers stimulateddepth of respiration increases Mechanisms for Heat Gain • skin receptors notice temperature is droppingpreoptic nucleus notificed • heat loss center inhibited • heat gain center activated • sympathetic vasomotor center decreases blood flow to dermis of skin • vasoconstriction reduces heat loss by radiation, convection & conduction • blood returning from limbs is shunted into deep veins • Piloerector muscles are stimulatedhair stands on endtraps air near the skin Heat Gain • if vasoconstriction cannot restore or maintain core temperatureshivering thermogenesis begins – gradual increase in muscle tone – increases energy consumption by skeletal muscle throughout body – increases work load of muscles & elevates O2 & energy consumptionproduces heat which warms deep vessels to which blood has been shunted by sympathetic vasomotor center • can increase rate of heat generation by 400% Heat Gain • Non shivering thermogenesis – long term mechanism for heat production • sympathetic nervous system & thyroid hormone produce an increase in metabolism • Heat gain center stimulates adrenal medulla via sympathetic ANSepinephrine released increases rate of glycogenolysis (break down of glycogen) in liver & skeletal musclemetabolic rate increases • preoptic nucleus regulates production of TRHthyrotropin releasing hormone by the hypothalamus • TRH increases production of thyroxin by thyroid gland • Thyroxin is a key hormone in control of metabolism