Homeostasis
Body Organization and Tissue Types
Fluid Compartments
Mass Balance and Regulation
Integrated Physiology
100

Define homeostasis in one sentence.

The process of keeping internal conditions stable for cell survival.

100

What is an organ system?

A group of organs that work together to perform a specific function.

100

Name the two main fluid compartments in the human body.

Intracellular fluid and extracellular fluid (interstitial + plasma).

100

In simple terms, what does “mass balance” mean?

What goes in must come out to keep things balanced.

100

Why is water balance important for homeostasis?

Because water is the medium for all cellular reactions and solute transport.

200

What is the main purpose of homeostasis?

To maintain a stable internal environment despite external changes.

200

Give one function for each of the four major tissue types.

- Muscle: movement

- Nervous: communication

- Connective: support

- Epithelial: protection

200

What percentage of body weight is made up of water?

About 60%.

200

What happens if input exceeds output in mass balance?

The body accumulates excess substances, disrupting homeostasis.

200

Which part of the brain acts as a control center for many homeostatic processes?

The hypothalamus.

300

What are the three parts of a homeostatic control system?

Sensor (receptor), integrating center (control center), and effector.

300

Name the four main tissue types.

Muscle, nervous, connective, and epithelial tissue.

300

What maintains the difference in sodium and potassium concentrations across the cell membrane?

The sodium-potassium pump (Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase).

300

Give two examples of substances regulated through mass balance.

Sodium and water (others include glucose and CO₂).

300

Give an example of a physiological system that uses feedback control.

The endocrine system (e.g., insulin and glucagon regulating blood glucose).

400

What would happen if homeostasis failed in the human body?

Internal instability would occur, leading to diseases or organ failure.

400

Describe the hierarchy of biological organization in the human body.

Cells → Tissues → Organs → Organ Systems → Organism.

400

Compare the ion composition of intracellular and extracellular fluids.

ICF: high in K⁺ and phosphate; ECF: high in Na⁺ and Cl⁻.

400

Which organ is primarily responsible for maintaining mass balance?

The kidneys.

400

Why is the sodium-potassium pump essential for both homeostasis and cell function?

It maintains ionic gradients and electrical balance required for nerve and muscle activity.

500

Explain how negative feedback maintains homeostasis and give one example.

Negative feedback detects changes and reverses them to restore balance. Example: body temperature regulation through sweating.

500

How does cellular differentiation contribute to the body’s structure and function?

It allows cells to specialize and form tissues with specific roles.

500

Explain how osmotic gradients control water movement between compartments.

Water moves toward areas with higher solute concentration to balance osmotic pressure.

500

Define the principle of mass balance and explain its physiological significance.

Input must equal output to maintain stable internal concentrations of substances.

500

How do fluid compartments, homeostasis, and mass balance work together to maintain life?

They interact to keep body conditions stable: fluids carry solutes, homeostasis regulates variables, and mass balance maintains total amounts.

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