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Introduction to Homeostasis

Article ID: 96
Last updated: 15 Dec, 2023

The property of a system, whether living or non-living, to maintain its internal environment is known as Homeostasis. This is achieved by the use of  sensors conected to feedback loops, which are also linked to control mechanisms. The overall process is to maintain a constant condition.

Examples in living things include

 

Regulation of

(i) amounts of water and minerals in the body. This occurs in the kidneys. 

(ii) body temperature. This is mainly achieved by the skin.

(iii) blood glucose level. This is achieved by the liver and the insulin provided by the pancreas.

Removal of  Metabolic Waste

Excretion is also a homeostasis process.  This is achieved by  organs such as the kidneys and lungs.

Types of Feedback

There exist two main types of feedback to which a system responds:

Negative feedback occurs when a system responds so that the direction of change is reversed. This process has a tendency to keep things constant,  to keep things and  it  allows the maintenance of homeostasis. Fo example, when the body temperature changes, sensors in the skin  (receptors) and the hypothalamus both detect a change. This detection has the response of triggering a command message from the brain. The effect of this command is to initiate the correct response so that the temperature returns to its previous level.

Positive feedback occurs when things start to go wrong, or become unstable. Homeostasis is not achieved by positive feedback.  A positive feedback  amplifies a change. The overall dynamics of this system is to result in the state of the system to move further and further from a required condition needed in Homeostasi

Further reading:

Interbody

Homeostasis, excretion and the kidneys

Homeostasis and Temperature Regulation (BBC Bitesize)


 

Article ID: 96
Last updated: 15 Dec, 2023
Revision: 5
Views: 226
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