110 likes | 460 Views
Homeostasis and Disease. HAP Susan Chabot Lemon Bay High School 2015-2016. Maintenance of Life. HOMEOSTASIS Keeping a constant internal environment. Feedback Mechanism 1. Receptors gather info Special senses (external) Internal sensors (temp., blood pressure, water levels, etc )
E N D
Homeostasis and Disease HAP Susan Chabot Lemon Bay High School 2015-2016
Maintenance of Life HOMEOSTASIS • Keeping a constant internal environment. Feedback Mechanism • 1. Receptors gather info • Special senses (external) • Internal sensors (temp., blood pressure, water levels, etc) • 2. Control Center decides what to do • Brain and spinal cord • 3. Effectors create a response • Muscles and/or glands
Example of a Feedback Mechanism Body Temperature control Normal body temperature is 98.6* F or 37* C. • When temperature is too hot or too cold, the body responds to bring it within a normal range.
Feedback Mechanisms Negative Feedback Positive Feedback Enhances the original stimuli USUALLY associated with disease or pain If its HIGH, it goes HIGHER. If its LOW, it goes LOWER • Reverses the original stimuli • MOST normal body processes • If its HIGH, it becomes LOW • If its LOW, it becomes HIGH
Homeostasis and Disease • Disease is defined as a failure to maintain homeostatic conditions. • ANY deviation from normal limits can lead to disease. • When adaptation fails in one system, it can impact other systems. • Homeostatic systems must adapt to: • Gradual changes • Sudden, rapid changes • Disease may result from: • Pathogens • Inherited genetic mutations • Loss of regulatory control (cancer) • Degenerative changes • Trauma, toxins, or environmental hazards • Nutritional factors
Diagnosing Disease • Symptom: patient’s perception of a change in body function. • Difficult to measure • Dependent on patient description/opinion • Ex: nausea, fatigue, pain • Pain: indication of tissue damage • Pain classification: chart page 6 • Sign: physical manifestation of disease • Can be measured • Can be observed by health provider • Ex: lumps, color changes
Steps in Diagnosis • Medical History: Summary of past medical issues • Chief complaint • History of present illness • Review of all body systems • Physical Exam • Inspection: sight • Palpation: touch • Percussion: tapping • Auscultation: listen • Diagnostic Procedures • MRI, CT, radiography, EKG, EEG • Laboratory testing on fluids and tissues
Purpose of Diagnosis • S: Subjective • O: Objective • A: Assessment • P: Plan