Functional Organization of the Human Body and Control of the “Internal Environment”
Cells as the
Living Units of the Body: The basic living unit of the body
is the cell. Each organ is an aggregate of many different cells held together
by intracellular supporting structures. Each type of cell is specially adapted
to perform one or a few particular functions. For instance, the red blood
cells, numbering 25 trillion in each human being, transport oxygen from the
lungs to the tissues. Although the red cells are the most abundant of any
single type of cell in the body, there are about 75 trillion additional cells
of other types that perform functions different from those of the red cell. The
entire body, then, contains about 100 trillion cells. Although the many cells
of the body often differ markedly from one another, all of them have certain
basic characteristics that are alike. For instance, in all cells, oxygen reacts
with carbohydrate, fat, and protein to release the energy required for cell
function. Further, the general chemical mechanisms for changing nutrients into
energy are basically the same in all cells, and all cells deliver end products
of their chemical reactions into the surrounding fluids. Almost all cells also
have the ability to reproduce additional cells of their own kind. Fortunately,
when cells of a particular type are destroyed from one cause or another, the
remaining cells of this type usually generate new cells until the supply is
replenished.
Extracellular
Fluid—The “Internal Environment” About 60 per
cent of the adult human body is fluid, mainly a water solution of ions and
other substances. Although most of this fluid is inside the cells and is called
intracellular fluid, about one third is in the spaces outside the cells and is
called extracellular fluid. This extracellular fluid is in constant motion
throughout the body. It is transported rapidly in the circulating blood and
then mixed between the blood and the tissue fluids by diffusion through the
capillary walls. In the extracellular fluid are the ions and nutrients needed
by the cells to maintain cell life. Thus, all cells live in essentially the
same environment—the extracellular fluid. For this reason, the extracellular
fluid is also called the internal environment of the body, or the milieu
intérieur, a term introduced more than 100 years ago by the great 19th-century
French physiologist Claude Bernard. Cells are capable of living, growing, and
performing their special functions as long as the proper concentrations of
oxygen, glucose, different ions, amino acids, fatty substances, and other
constituents are available in this internal environment.
Differences
Between Extracellular and Intracellular Fluids. The extracellular fluid contains
large amounts of sodium, chloride, and bicarbonate ions plus nutrients for the
cells, such as oxygen, glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids. It also contains
carbon dioxide that is being transported from the cells to the lungs to be
excreted, plus other cellular waste products that are being transported to the
kidneys for excretion. The intracellular fluid differs significantly from the
extracellular fluid; specifically, it contains large amounts of potassium,
magnesium, and phosphate ions instead of the sodium and chloride ions found in
the extracellular fluid. Special mechanisms for transporting ions through the
cell membranes maintain the ion concentration differences between the
extracellular and intracellular fluids.
Extracellular
fluid is transported through all parts of the body in two stages. The first
stage is movement of blood through the body in the blood vessels, and the
second is movement of fluid between the blood capillaries and the intercellular
spaces between the tissue cells. All the blood in the circulation traverses the
entire circulatory circuit an average of once each minute when the body is at
rest and as many as six times each minute when a person is extremely active. As
blood passes through the blood capillaries, continual exchange of extracellular
fluid also occurs between the plasma portion of the blood and the Right heart
pump Left heart pump Gut Lungs Kidneys Regulation Excretion of electrolytes
Venous end Arterial end Capillaries Nutrition and excretion the
gastrointestinal tract. Here different dissolved nutrients, including
carbohydrates, fatty acids, and amino acids, are absorbed from the ingested
food into the extracellular fluid of the blood.
Liver and Other
Organs: That Perform Primarily Metabolic Functions. Not all substances
absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract can be used in their absorbed form by
the cells. The liver changes the chemical compositions of many of these
substances to more usable forms, and other tissues of the body—fat cells,
gastrointestinal mucosa, kidneys, and endocrine glands—help modify the absorbed
substances or store them until they are needed.
Musculoskeletal
System: Sometimes the question is asked, How does the musculoskeletal
system fit into the homeostatic functions of the body? The answer is obvious
and simple: Were it not for the muscles, the body could not move to the
appropriate place at the appropriate time to obtain the foods required for
nutrition. The musculoskeletal system also provides motility for protection
against adverse surroundings, without which the entire body, along with its
homeostatic mechanisms, could be destroyed instantaneously.
Removal of
Metabolic End Products Removal of Carbon Dioxide by the Lungs: At
the same time that blood picks up oxygen in the lungs, carbon dioxide is
released from the blood into the lung alveoli; the respiratory movement of air
into and out of the lungs carries the carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. Carbon
dioxide is the most abundant of all the end products of metabolism. Kidneys.
Passage of the blood through the kidneys removes from the plasma most of the
other substances besides carbon dioxide that are not needed by the cells. These
substances include different end products of cellular metabolism, such as urea
and uric acid; they also include excesses of ions and water from the food that
might have accumulated in the extracellular fluid. The kidneys perform their
function by first filtering large quantities of plasma through the glomeruli into
the tubules and then reabsorbing into the blood those substances needed by the
body, such as glucose, amino acids, appropriate amounts of water, and many of
the ions. Most of the other substances that are not needed by the body,
especially the metabolic end products such as urea, are reabsorbed poorly and
pass through the renal tubules into the urine.
Regulation of
Body Functions Nervous System: The nervous
system is composed of three major parts: the sensory input portion, the central
nervous system (or integrative portion), and the motor output portion. Sensory
receptors detect the state of the body or the state of the surroundings. For
instance, receptors in the skin apprise one whenever an object touches the skin
at any point. The eyes are sensory organs that give one a visual image of the
surrounding area. The ears also are sensory organs. The central nervous system
is composed of the brain and spinal cord. The brain can store information,
generate thoughts, create ambition, and determine reactions that the body
performs in response to the sensations. Appropriate signals are then
transmitted through the motor output portion of the nervous system to carry out
one’s desires. A large segment of the nervous system is called the autonomic
system. It operates at a subconscious level and controls many functions of the
internal organs, including the level of pumping activity by the heart,
movements of the gastrointestinal tract, and secretion by many of the body’s
glands.
Hormonal System
of Regulation: Located in the body are eight major endocrine glands that secrete
chemical substances called hormones. Hormones are transported in the
extracellular fluid to all parts of the body to help regulate cellular
function. For instance, thyroid hormone increases the rates of most chemical
reactions in all cells, thus helping to set the tempo of bodily activity.
Insulin controls glucose metabolism; adrenocortical hormones control sodium
ion, potassium ion, and protein metabolism; and parathyroid hormone controls
bone calcium and phosphate. Thus, the hormones are a system of regulation that
complements the nervous system. The nervous system regulates mainly muscular
and secretory activities of the body, whereas the hormonal system regulates
many metabolic functions.
Reproduction
Sometimes reproduction is not considered a homeostatic function. It does,
however, help maintain homeostasis by generating new beings to take the place
of those that are dying. This may sound like a permissive usage of the term
homeostasis, but it illustrates that, in the final analysis, essentially all
body structures are organized such that they help maintain the automaticity and
continuity of life.
Control Systems
of the Body The human body has thousands of control systems in it. The most intricate
of these are the genetic control systems that operate in all cells to help
control intracellular function as well as extracellular function.
Many other
control systems operate within the organs to control functions of the
individual parts of the organs; others operate throughout the entire body to
control the interrelations between the organs. For instance, the respiratory
system, operating in association with the nervous system, regulates the concentration
of carbon dioxide in the extracellular fluid. The liver and pancreas regulate
the concentration of glucose in the extracellular fluid, and the kidneys
regulate concentrations of hydrogen, sodium, potassium, phosphate, and other
ions in the extracellular fluid.
Examples of
Control Mechanisms Regulation of Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide Concentrations in
the Extracellular Fluid: Because oxygen is one of the major
substances required for chemical reactions in the cells, it is fortunate that
the body has a special control mechanism to maintain an almost exact and
constant oxygen concentration in the extracellular fluid. This mechanism
depends principally on the chemical characteristics of hemoglobin, which is
present in all red blood cells. Hemoglobin combines with oxygen as the blood
passes through the lungs. Then, as the blood passes through the tissue
capillaries, hemoglobin, because of its own strong chemical affinity for
oxygen, does not release oxygen into the tissue fluid if too much oxygen is
already there. But if the oxygen concentration in the tissue fluid is too low,
sufficient oxygen is released to re-establish an adequate concentration. Thus,
regulation of oxygen concentration in the tissues is vested principally in the
chemical characteristics of hemoglobin itself. This regulation is called the
oxygen-buffering function of hemoglobin. Carbon dioxide concentration in the
extracellular fluid is regulated in a much different way. Carbon dioxide is a
major end product of the oxidative reactions in cells. If all the carbon
dioxide formed in the cells continued to accumulate in the tissue fluids, the
mass action of the carbon dioxide itself would soon halt all energy-giving
reactions of the cells. Fortunately, a higher than normal carbon dioxide
concentration in the blood excites the respiratory center, causing a person to
breathe rapidly and deeply. This increases expiration of carbon dioxide and,
therefore, removes excess carbon dioxide from the blood and tissue fluids. This
process continues until the concentration returns to normal.
Regulation of Arterial
Blood Pressure: Several systems contribute to the regulation of arterial blood
pressure. One of these, the baroreceptor system, is a simple and excellent
example of a rapidly acting control mechanism. In the walls of the bifurcation
region of the carotid arteries in the neck, and also in the arch of the aorta
in the thorax, are many nerve receptors called baroreceptors, which are
stimulated by stretch of the arterial wall. When the arterial pressure rises
too high, the baroreceptors send barrages of nerve impulses to the medulla of
the brain. Here these impulses inhibit the vasomotor center, which in turn
decreases the number of impulses transmitted from the vasomotor center through
the sympathetic nervous system to the heart and blood vessels. Lack of these
impulses causes diminished pumping activity by the heart and also dilation of
the peripheral blood vessels, allowing increased blood flow through the
vessels. Both of these effects decrease the arterial pressure back toward
normal. Conversely, a decrease in arterial pressure below normal relaxes the
stretch receptors, allowing the vasomotor center to become more active than
usual, thereby causing vasoconstriction and increased heart pumping, and
raising arterial pressure back toward normal.
Normal Ranges
and Physical Characteristics of Important Extracellular Fluid Constituents
Most important
are the limits beyond which abnormalities can cause death. For example, an
increase in the body temperature of only 11°F (7°C) above normal can lead to a
vicious cycle of increasing cellular metabolism that destroys the cells. Note
also the narrow range for acid-base balance in the body, with a normal pH value
of 7.4 and lethal values only about 0.5 on either side of normal. Another
important factor is the potassium ion concentration, because whenever it
decreases to less than one third normal, a person is likely to be paralyzed as
a result of the nerves’ inability to carry signals. Alternatively, if the
potassium ion concentration increases to two or more times normal, the heart
muscle is likely to be severely depressed. Also, when the calcium ion
concentration falls below about one half of normal, a person is likely to
experience tetanic contraction of muscles throughout the body because of the
spontaneous generation of excess nerve impulses in the peripheral nerves. When
the glucose concentration falls below one half of normal, a person frequently
develops extreme mental irritability and sometimes even convulsions. These
examples should give one an appreciation for the extreme value and even the
necessity of the vast numbers of control systems that keep the body operating
in health; in the absence of any one of these controls, serious body
malfunction or death can result.
Characteristics
of Control Systems The aforementioned examples of homeostatic control
mechanisms are only a few of the many thousands in the body, all of which have
certain characteristics in common. These characteristics are explained in this
section.
Negative
Feedback Nature of Most Control Systems: Most control
systems of the body act by negative feedback, which can best be explained by
reviewing some of the homeostatic control systems mentioned previously. In the
regulation of carbon dioxide concentration, a high concentration of carbon dioxide
in the extracellular fluid increases pulmonary ventilation. This, in turn,
decreases the extracellular fluid carbon dioxide concentration because the
lungs expire greater amounts of carbon dioxide from the body. In other words,
the high concentration of carbon dioxide initiates events that decrease the
concentration toward normal, which is negative to the initiating stimulus.
Conversely, if the carbon dioxide concentration falls too low, this causes
feedback to increase the concentration. This response also is negative to the
initiating stimulus. In the arterial pressure–regulating mechanisms, a high
pressure causes a series of reactions that promote a lowered pressure, or a low
pressure causes a series of reactions that promote an elevated pressure. In
both instances, these effects are negative with respect to the initiating
stimulus. Therefore, in general, if some factor becomes excessive or deficient,
a control system initiates negative feedback, which consists of a series of
changes that return the factor toward a certain mean value, thus maintaining
homeostasis.
“Gain” of a
Control System: The degree of effectiveness with which a control system maintains
constant conditions is determined by the gain of the negative feedback. For
instance, let us assume that a large volume of blood is transfused into a
person whose baroreceptor pressure control system is not functioning, and the
arterial pressure rises from the normal level of 100 mm Hg up to 175 mm Hg.
Then, let us assume that the same volume of blood is injected into the same
person when the baroreceptor system is functioning, and this time the pressure
increases only 25 mm Hg. Thus, the feedback control system has caused a
“correction” of –50 mm Hg—that is, from 175 mm Hg to 125 mm Hg. There remains
an increase in pressure of +25 mm Hg, called the “error,” which means that the
control system is not 100 per cent effective in preventing change. The gain of
the system is then calculated by the following formula:
Correction
Gain=
----------------
Error
Thus, in the
baroreceptor system example, the correction is –50 mm Hg and the error
persisting is +25 mm Hg. Therefore, the gain of the person’s baroreceptor
system for control of arterial pressure is –50 divided by +25, or –2. That is,
a disturbance that increases or decreases the arterial pressure does so only
one third as much as would occur if this control system were not present. The
gains of some other physiologic control systems are much greater than that of
the baroreceptor system. For instance, the gain of the system controlling internal
body temperature when a person is exposed to moderately cold weather is about
–33. Therefore, one can see that the temperature control system is much more
effective than the baroreceptor pressure control system.
Positive
Feedback Can Sometimes Cause Vicious Cycles and Death One might ask the
question, why do essentially all control systems of the body operate by
negative feedback rather than positive feedback? If one considers the nature of
positive feedback, one immediately sees that positive feedback does not lead to
stability but to instability and often death. . If the person is suddenly bled
2 liters, the amount of blood in the body is decreased to such a low level that
not enough blood is available for the heart to pump effectively. As a result, the
arterial pressure falls, and the flow of blood to the heart muscle through the
coronary vessels diminishes. This result in weakening of the heart, further
diminished pumping, a further decrease in coronary blood flow, and still more
weakness of the heart; the cycle repeats itself again and again until death
occurs. Note that each cycle in the feedback results in further weakening of
the heart. In other words, the initiating stimulus causes more of the same,
which is positive feedback.
Positive
Feedback Can Sometimes Be Useful. In some instances, the body uses positive
feedback to its advantage. Blood clotting is an example of a valuable use of
positive feedback. When a blood vessel is ruptured and a clot begins to form,
multiple enzymes called clotting factors are activated within the clot itself.
Some of these enzymes act on other un-activated enzymes of the immediately
adjacent blood, thus causing more blood clotting. This process continues until
the hole in the vessel is plugged and bleeding no longer occurs. On occasion,
this mechanism can get out of hand and cause the formation of unwanted clots.
In fact, this is what initiates most acute heart attacks, which are caused by a
clot beginning on the inside surface of an atherosclerotic plaque in a coronary
artery and then growing until the artery is blocked. Childbirth is another
instance in which positive feedback plays a valuable role. When uterine
contractions become strong enough for the baby’s head to begin pushing through
the cervix, stretch of the cervix sends signals through the uterine muscle back
to the body of the uterus, causing even more powerful contractions. Thus, the
uterine contractions stretch the cervix, and the cervical stretch causes
stronger contractions. When this process becomes powerful enough, the baby is
born. If it is not powerful enough, the contractions usually die out, and a few
days pass before they begin again. Another important use of positive feedback
is for the generation of nerve signals. That is, when the membrane of a nerve
fiber is stimulated, this causes slight leakage of sodium ions through sodium
channels in the nerve membrane to the fiber’s interior. The sodium ions
entering the fiber then change the membrane potential, which in turn causes
more opening of channels, more change of potential, still more opening of
channels, and so forth. Thus, a slight leak becomes an explosion of sodium
entering the interior of the nerve fiber, which creates the nerve action
potential. This action potential in turn causes electrical current to flow
along both the outside and the inside of the fiber and initiates additional
action potentials. This process continues again and again until the nerve
signal goes all the way to the end of the fiber. In each case in which positive
feedback is useful, the positive feedback itself is part of an overall negative
feedback process. For example, in the case of blood clotting, the positive
feedback clotting process is a negative feedback process for maintenance of
normal blood volume. Also, the positive feedback that causes nerve signals
allows the nerves to participate in thousands of negative feedback nervous
control systems.
Summary—Automaticity
of the Body The purpose of this chapter has been to point out, first, the
overall organization of the body and, second, the means by which the different
parts of the body operate in harmony. To summarize, the body is actually a
social order of about 100 trillion cells organized into different functional
structures, some of which are called organs. Each functional structure
contributes its share to the maintenance of homeostatic conditions in the
extracellular fluid, which is called the internal environment. As long as
normal conditions are maintained in this internal environment, the cells of the
body continue to live and function properly. Each cell benefits from
homeostasis, and in turn, each cell contributes its share toward the
maintenance of homeostasis. This reciprocal interplay provides continuous
automatically of the body until one or more functional systems lose their
ability to contribute their share of function .When this happens, all the cells
of the body suffer. Extreme dysfunction leads to death; moderate dysfunction
leads to sickness.




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