Zusammenfassung der Ressource
GCSE AQA Biology 3 Kidneys & Homeostasis
- Homeostasis
- Definition: Maintenance of a
constant internal environment
- 6 things to be controlled:
- Body temp.
Anmerkungen:
- Water content
Anmerkungen:
- Can't get too high or low - too much water could move into/out of cells - damaging them
- Ion content
Anmerkungen:
- Can't get too high or low - too much water could move into/out of cells - damaging them
- Blood sugar level
Anmerkungen:
- Needs to stay within certain limits
- Carbon dioxide
Anmerkungen:
- Product of respiration - must be removed in lungs when breathing out
- Urea
Anmerkungen:
- Waste product made from excess amino acids
- Controlling body temp.
- Enzymes in human
body work best at
37 degrees C
- If too hot/cold -
won't work properly
Anmerkungen:
- In extreme cases - could lead to death
- Thermoregulatory centre in brain -
contains receptors that are
sensitive to temp. of blood in brain
- Also receives impulses
from skin about skin temp.
- When you're too hot...
- Hairs lie flat
- Sweat is produced by sweat glands
- evaporates, removing heat
- Blood vessels supplying skin dilate - more blood flow to surface of skin
(makes it easier for heat to be transferred from blood to environment)
- When you're too cold...
- Hairs stand up - trap
insulating layer of air
- No sweat produced
- Blood vessels near skin
constrict - close off blood supply
- Shiver (muscles contract automatically) - requires
respiration which releases energy to warm body
- Kidney involvement in homeostasis
- Act as filters to clean blood
- Main roles...
- Removal of urea
- Proteins can't be stored so excess amino
acids are converted into carbs and fats
- Process occurs in liver - urea
produced as waste product
- Urea is poisonous - released into bloodstream
by liver, kidneys filter it out. temporarily stored
in bladder before excretion
- Adjustment of ion content
- Ions (e.g. Na) are taken into body
in food & absorbed into blood
- If ion (or water) content is wrong -
could upset balance between them
- Excess ions removed by kidneys
- Some are also lost in sweat
- Adjustment of water content
- Water taken into body
as food/drink & lost in...
- Urine
- Sweat
- Air we breathe out
- Water balance is between...
- Liquids consumed
- Amount sweated out
- Amount excreted
by kidneys in urine
- Sports drinks
Anmerkungen:
- Usually contain water, sugar & ions
- Can help body replace water & ions lost in sweat
& sugar used up by muscles during exercise
- Kidney function
- Nephrons are filtration
units in kidney
- 1) Ultrafiltration
- High pressure built up - squeezes
water, urea, ions & sugar out of
blood, into Bowman's capsule
- Membranes act like filters -
big molecules like proteins
& blood cells stay in blood
- 2) Reabsorption
- As liquid flows along nephron
- useful substances reabsorbed:
- All the sugar (involves active
transport), sufficient ions (active
transport involved) & sufficient water
- 3) Release of wastes
- Remaining substances (including urea) continue out
of nephron, into ureter & down to bladder as urine
- Kidney failure
- If kidneys don't work properly - waste substances
build up & you can't control ion and water level
- People with kidney failure can be kept alive by
having dialysis treatment or kidney transplant
- Dialysis treatment
- Must be done regularly
Anmerkungen:
- To keep concentrations of dissolved substances at normal levels and remove waste substances
- In dialysis machine, person's blood flows alongside
selectively permeable barrier, surrounded by dialysis fluid
Anmerkungen:
- Permeable to ions, waste substances but not big molecules like proteins
- Fluid has same concentration of
ions & glucose as healthy bood
- Only waste substances (urea) &
excess ions & water diffuse across
- Cons: Have to have session 3 times a week
(3-4hrs each), may cause blood clots/infection
- Kidney transplants
- Healthy kidneys transplanted from
people who have died suddenly (& are
on the register)/are still alive (we have 2)
- Donor kidney can be rejected by immune
system (foreign antigens attacked by
antibodies) so precautions are taken:
- Donor with similar
tissue type is chosen
Anmerkungen:
- Tissue type bases on antigens (proteins on surface of cells)
Have to wait a long time
- Patient given
immunosuppressants
Anmerkungen:
- Stop immune system attacking kidney
- Controlling blood glucose
- Insulin & glucagon control blood glucose level
- Eating foods containg carbs
puts glucose into blood from gut
- Normal metabolism of
cells removes glucose
- Exercise removes
much more
- Changes in blood glucose are monitored/controlled
by pancreas, using insulin & glucagon...
- When blood glucose level is too high:
- 1) Insulin secreted by pancreas
- 2) Tells liver to turn glucose into glycogen
- 3) Blood glucose reduced
- When blood glucose level is too low:
- 1) Glucagon secreted by pancreas
- 2) Tells liver to turn glycogen into glucose
- 3) Blood glucose increased
- Type 1 Diabetes
Anmerkungen:
- Condition where pancreas produces little/no insulin - person's blood glucose can rise to a level that can kill them
- Can be controlled by: Avoiding foods rich in
sugars, doing exercise & injecting insulin
- Amount of insulin needed
depends on person's diet & activity
- Insulin used to be extracted from pig/cow pancreases
- But is now made by genetic engineering -
human insulin doesn't cause adverse reaction
- Injecting can control level but not as well as normal pancreas - diabetics can have a pancreas transplant
- Has same issues as kidney transplant
but could mean no more injecting