Questions tagged [physiology]

The study of the normal function of living organisms and their anatomical parts and the means by which their normal functioning is achieved.

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1 answer
73 views

What causes paresthesia from compression?

Compression of a nerve causes loss of afferent and efferent information in it. What is the physiological basis of this?
1 vote
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44 views

What is the term for the physical and behavioral changes that occur in an adult species due to the change in their hierarchy?

For example, when a chicken becomes a rooster its crest becomes larger and their feathers become more colorful. Dominant male lions get larger and darker manes. Also, can these changes also occur ...
4 votes
1 answer
331 views

The onset of hair loss in men

I've seen men starting to lose hair in almost all ages. Why is the onset of hair loss in men different? Is there a normal distribution?
6 votes
1 answer
42 views

By what mechanism do cephalopods regrow limbs?

As far as I can tell, there are two types of limb regeneration: epimorphosis and morphallaxis. Epimorphosis is used by animals such as amphibians and various phyla of worms, while morphallaxis is used ...
5 votes
1 answer
200 views

How much light can pass through the human eyelid?

My sister tells me that at night when the lights in the room are off that she can see the ambient outdoor light from neighboring buildigns and streetlights through her eyelids (i.e., when her eyes are ...
1 vote
1 answer
170 views

GHK Equation and Action potential

Can GHK equation be used to predict the membrane potential even if the cell is not at resting state? To say it again, can we use GHK equation at every moment during Action potential? I'm confused ...
10 votes
2 answers
343 views

What are the effects of caffeine on the mammalian circulatory system?

A friend of mine told me an anecdote about his mother, who drank too much caffeine, to the point she became hypotensive and would pass out. Because caffeine acts as a stimulant, I'm assuming the ...
1 vote
2 answers
393 views

Garden Hose Analogy for Blood Vessel Resistance

I've been trying to reconcile the resistance component of Poisseuille's law with a mental analogy of a garden hose; specifically, I had assumed that the effects of reducing the radius of a blood ...
1 vote
1 answer
39 views

Can oxytocin travel from one cell to another via gap junctions?

Oxytocin is a 9-residue secreted peptide. As a hormone, can it travel through gap junctions, assuming that it is stored in pre-synaptic neuronal vesicles?
3 votes
0 answers
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Hodgkin-Huxley Model and Propagation of Action Potential

I'm studying Hodgkin-Huxley model of action potential, and I have some confusion. In the well-stated HH model, we have time constants for each ion currents, described as the reciprocal of the sum of ...
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36 views

Maximum Allometry of aquatic mammals omitting Kleiber's Law

As far as I understand, blue whales cannot get any physically larger due to the extremely demanding caloric intake it has on consuming large quantities of krill, not due to any other physiological ...
4 votes
1 answer
165 views

Does the brain consume more energy when a person is stressed or anxious

When a person is anxious or stressed or suffering from chronic depression, it is observed that the person is usually tired. Is there there a connection between fatigue and racing thoughts/obsessions. ...
1 vote
0 answers
143 views

What is the water content of avian blood?

I'm doing a work about heavy metal contamination in seabirds. I have found that the toxic threshold for Cu in blood is 1,15 μg/g wet weight. That number refers to an average between some seabirds. I ...
0 votes
1 answer
42 views

Do factors other than concentration gradient and membrane permeability affect the diffusion potential?

If, hypothetically, the concentration gradients and the permeability of 2 different ions (Na+ and K+ for example) in 2 separate solutions are the same, will the diffusion potentials be different? I'm ...
-3 votes
1 answer
88 views

If you only ate fruits, vegetables or smoothies would you be able to skip drinking water?

If you only ate fruits, vegetables or smoothies would you be able to skip drinking water? I do not see some animals (like squirrels) drinking water daily (doesn't mean they don't have a water source) ...
-1 votes
1 answer
42 views

How do birds eliminate oxygen free radicals [closed]

Birds breathe in a lot. Do they produce a lot more of oxygen free radicals than mammals? And how do they cope with oxydative stress? Thanks!
2 votes
0 answers
71 views

Is it incorrect to assume alveoli as spherical and distinct, especially when analysing lung inflation/deflation?

I have recently read the paper "Laplace’s Law and the Alveolus: A Misconception of Anatomy and a Misapplication of Physics". To summarise it, here is a section from its abstract: The ...
1 vote
4 answers
3k views

Does Darwin's Theory of Evolution refute Terence McKenna theory "Stoned Ape" theory of human evolution?

I haven't read it but I'm asking for a quick answer. As far as I know, Terence McKenna's theory of evolution in humans main concept is that a hominid has tried in their diet psilocybin mushrooms, and ...
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0 answers
44 views

Is my understanding of the Bergmann's rule correct? (mass is secondary)

According to Wikipedia, Bergmann's rule applies because animals living in colder areas have greater surface-area-to-volume ratio. If I understand that correctly, the advantage of the bulkier bodies ...
4 votes
1 answer
656 views

What is Lysoferrin?

I was going though my Guyton and Hall Medical Physiology when I came across the name of an antibacterial lysosomal enzyme - Lysoferrin. It said that Lysoferrin "binds to iron and other metals ...
18 votes
4 answers
23k views

Why is the brain dependent on glucose?

The strict dependence of the (human) brain on glucose has always been puzzling to me. While ketones can substitute for a portion of the brain's energy needs, it cannot substitute completely: blood ...
0 votes
1 answer
42 views

How can the pressure during contraction vary between the left and right ventricles?

After reading this passage from my physiology textbook (Vanders Physiology p. 384), I'm confused about how exactly the right and left ventricle can create markedly different pressures as they pump ...
1 vote
1 answer
72 views

Why do people's hands get cold for the first half an hour and then suddenly they are warm when they are doing exercise outdoors in winter? [closed]

When people do exercise outdoors in winter at temperatures less than zero degree celsius, their hands are quite cold and hurt for about half an hour. Then, there is a sudden rush of blood into the ...
8 votes
4 answers
371 views

What gaseous substances do humans emit?

Other than CO₂ and Methane what other gases do humans produce or emit? For example, does skin decomposition, or aerobic respiration emit any special gases that people don't normally realize or know ...
0 votes
0 answers
27 views

Is there any correlation between animal diet and blood pH?

The alkaline diet claim that as we humans have a slightly basic pH we shouldn't eat acidic food like meat (I think they claim that meat ashes are acid). I was wondering that if carnivores animals ...
3 votes
0 answers
440 views

What is blood pH for different animals?

So we all know that humans average blood pH is 7.4. But is it the same for the animals? I need examples of animals with the same blood pH as humans and the ones with different blood pH. I guess dogs ...
0 votes
1 answer
87 views

How does noradrenaline result in rise of systolic blood pressure even when the cardiac output is decreasing?

Systolic blood pressure[SBP] depends on the cardiac output. When Nor adrenaline is given there is vasoconstriction due to alpha-1 action on blood vessel, vasoconstriction results in increased total ...
2 votes
0 answers
53 views

Why doesn't the concentration of one ion affect the concentration gradient of another ion across a plasma membrane?

In the initial stages, some ion channels across the plasma membrane open to allow for ions to flow down their concentration gradient into or out of the cell. I understand that each ion's overall ...
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26 views

Quantitative Physiology Textbooks Recommendations?

I am currently completing a 2nd year (UK) Mamamilian Physiology Module and a Neuroscience Module. However, my degree is also 40% Maths and Statistics. So in order to learn the content better, I am ...
5 votes
1 answer
393 views

Why is urobilinogen reabsorbed from the gut just to be excreted via the kidneys?

The Wikipedia article on Urobilin states: Bilirubin is... excreted as bile, which is further degraded by microbes present in the large intestine to urobilinogen... Some is reabsorbed into the ...
2 votes
0 answers
27 views

Do the posterior legs of mosquito plays the role of antenna?

I have had this question for years and this stems from the observation that when I bring my hand close to a mosquito lying on some surface (e.g : wall) I see its posterior legs - which are in a ...
5 votes
2 answers
100 views

How does gas equilibration occur in the alveolus, numerically?

I am attempting to model gas exchange across the alveolar membrane. My main question is there a direct exchange of O2 molecules for CO2 molecules? If so, then my model predicts (assuming alveolar ...
-5 votes
1 answer
102 views

Why Can't Muscles Push When They Return To Their Original Length?

I understand that muscles can only contract and shorten and thus can only pull, but why can't a muscle push when it relaxes and returns to its initial length?
4 votes
1 answer
181 views

What stops myosin during muscle relaxation?

I understand that when the muscle is relaxed tropomyosin blocks myosin binding sites on actin filaments thereby preventing muscle contraction. What I am concerned with however, is whether myosin ...
1 vote
1 answer
204 views

Why is the current flow shown to be flowing from the negative area towards the positive area?

When I was studying the ECG chapter in the book "Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology", I noticed something odd in one of the pictures: As you can see the current is shown to be ...
2 votes
0 answers
34 views

How to estimate oxygen consumption of an average human during different activities?

I've tried to find some resource on the internet but had little luck. I'm looking to see if there's any data on average oxygen consumption of average to well trained humans during different activities....
2 votes
2 answers
255 views

Is water movement across cell membrane purely diffusive or it always requires channels?

If we see nephrons, in the descending part of Loop of Henle (LoH), water movement is allowed but solute movement is not. On the contrary, in ascending LoH, solute movement is allowed but not water. ...
2 votes
0 answers
166 views

Does The Sympathetic Nervous System Increase or Decrease Urination?

According to my book: Sympathetic nervous system stimulation, leads to the release of Norepinephrine(Noradrenaline), priming the body for the "Fight or Flight" response. It is also stated ...
3 votes
1 answer
158 views

What does sympathetic and parasympathetic 'tone' mean?

My professor's lecture notes say that " The basal rate of firing is called “sympathetic tone” and 'parasympathetic tone" , but a table I found on the internet says that the parasympthetic system has ...
1 vote
1 answer
36 views

Question on thick filaments

In this photo, I know that the arrows pointing towards the M-line of sarcomere on actin filaments are due to the power strokes of myosin heads. However, what I don't understand are the arrows on the ...
1 vote
0 answers
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Why does dryness irritate mucosal surfaces, and what exactly is this "irritation"?

The mucosal surfaces of the body function to moisten the epithelial linings and keep them from becoming dry. Why is this important? As an example, the respiratory tract moistens and warms the air that ...
0 votes
2 answers
60 views

Understanding muscle tone

I am relatively new to Physiology, and I've just learnt about muscle tone. I however find it difficult to understand the electrical changes that initiate (and/or accompany) muscle tone in smooth ...
1 vote
0 answers
31 views

what powers power strokes

I am wondering what really powers the myosin head to undergo the power stroke to push the actin filaments towards the M-line. I have 2 thoughts: when ATP in the myosin head gets hydrolyzed, the ...
2 votes
0 answers
299 views

Summation on muscles

I am learning myology and encountered 2 problems in tetanus and summation: Unfused tetanus is just a continual summation of twitches if I am not mistaken. However, is it a MUST for summation / ...
0 votes
1 answer
50 views

What inhibits linkage between actin and myosin filaments

What is the mechanism behind the inhibition for cross-bridge linkage between actin and myosin filaments in the binding-tilting cycle? There are 2 possible ways that are in my mind: a. Tn-I (tropnin-I)...
1 vote
1 answer
125 views

Does electrotonic spread/conduction occur in saltatory conduction?

Even as textbooks, and almost all web pages I've seen so far, explain electrotonic spread/conduction as the passive current flow along an axon, they do so with continuous conduction only. Apart from ...
0 votes
1 answer
218 views

Coronary circulation

It is said that the coronary artery that gives the posterior descending artery(PDA) determines if the heart is right dominant(most cases) or left dominant. Is there any reason to this? Why PDA?
-1 votes
1 answer
322 views

Do birds have pharynx like mammals? [closed]

I saw this in Wikipedia: Birds do have a larynx, but unlike in mammals, it does not vocalize. And this pdf in Google. It claims that birds do have a pharnyx. Do birds have a structure called pharnyx?...
0 votes
0 answers
19 views

Why does increasing concentration of extracellular sodium have no effect on electrical gradient of potassium? [duplicate]

I learnt that the permeability of an ion across the membrane contributes to the membrane potential as much as(or even more than) its concentration and electrical gradients. And so far I've made peace ...
0 votes
0 answers
20 views

Will renal blood flow decrease in response to dehydration?

If dehydrated, does the correction of ECF osmolarity happen slowly enough for ECF (and therefore plasma) volume to be temporarily depleted and therefore reduce renal blood flow? If dehydration is ...

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