Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

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Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside
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Transcript of Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Page 1: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Chapter 6

Barriers of the Body

Interfaces with the outside

Page 2: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Barriers of the Body

• Skin, Lungs, and Digestive System

• The controlled exchange of molecules and heat

• Warm blooded animals are very expensive

• Rapidly turning over cells

• Damage repair

Page 3: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

The Skin

• The surface barrier of the Body– Skin cells– Replacement skin cells– A few hairs– Sweat glands– Nerves (information: touch, temperature,

and pain)

Page 4: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Heat, what is it?

Heat Capacity

Heat Transfer

Page 5: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Control of Body Temperature

Information in to the brain

>Surface sensors: “I feel hot or cold”

>Temperature of blood circulating to the brain

Page 6: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Why is Heat Important?

• 106° F: Fried Brains

• 86 ° F: Dysfunctional Brain unable to warm its self

• Rate of reactions is a function of temperature

• Reactions are energy transfer among molecules

• To much heat destroys large molecules

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Page 9: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Heat Exchange• Three Processes

– Radiation

– Conduction

– Evaporation

Page 10: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Radiation

Put something in between and it is blocked

Page 11: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Conduction

• Moves heat around the body and to the surface of the body

• Molecules of water bumping into each other

• Sweat is water containing heat that can be “thrown away”

Page 12: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Evaporation and Convection

Colder, DRY Air

Warmer, Moist Air

Evaporation

Warmer, Moist Air

Evaporation

Colder, DRY Air

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Page 14: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Temperature Regulation

Page 15: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Drunk

Page 16: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Lungs

• Gas exchange

• Composition of Air– 78% Nitrogen (N2)

– 21% Oxygen (O2)

– .04% Carbon Dioxide (CO2)

– Traces of other gasses

Page 17: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Breathing

Page 18: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Bronchial Tree

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Hemoglobin

>Binds O2

>The concentration of O2 controls the ability of Hb to bind O2

Only free O2 plays in the concentration game

Only free CO2 plays in the concentration game

Molecules flow from a high concentration to a low concentration

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SinksA sink is a way to remove O2 and CO2 from the concentration game

Oxygen sink

2O2 + Hb HbO4

Carbon Dioxide Sink

CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ + HCO3-

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Lungs: Gas exchange

Blood

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Tissues: Gas exchangeWater around cells Blood in capillary

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Control of Respiration

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Other Factors

• Stress: Open airways, increase depth of breathing, increase blood flow

• pH: drug or condition that changes blood H+ concentration

• Drugs: Any drug that depresses brain function

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Digestion

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Digestive System

>What we put inProtein, fat, carbohydrate,

vitamins, minerals, water

>Three processesMovement

Breaking up big molecules

Absorption into blood

Page 27: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Mouth

Why your mother told you not to talk and eat at the same time

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Stomach• More water plus H+ Cl-

• Digestive enzymes that are “ turned on” by H+

• H+ destabilizes bonds

in protein between amino acids

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Small Intestine

• Put in OH- to neutralize H+

• H+ + OH- H2O

• “Turns off” protein digestive enzymes

• Fat digestion: bile salts make oil and water mix

• Absorption into blood

Page 30: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Absorption

Sifting the stream for molecules and other nutrients

Nutrient filled blood goes to the liver (Hepatic Portal Vein)

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Large Intestine

• Additional digestine by bacteria

• Water recovery

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Control of Digestive System

• If you eat and when you eat

• What you eat

• Movement

• Release of secretions

• Distribution of Blood

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Problems with Digestion

• Excessive stomach acid– Mild: heartburn – Severe: ulcers

Drugs

Antacids: H+ + OH- H2O , disturbs blood pH, acid rebound

Tagamet, Pepcid etc: Antihistamine that blocks production of HCl

Page 34: Chapter 6 Barriers of the Body Interfaces with the outside.

Other Problems with Digestion

• Malabsorption (small intestine) eg celiacs disease an autoimmune disease

• People do not spend enough time on digestion and absorption

• Many drugs cause acid production: coffee, tea, coke, alcohol, heart medicine

• Antibiotics can kill the “good” bacteria in the large intestine