Jump to content

about the regulation of water between blood and the tissues....


albertlee

Recommended Posts

"Blood solutes affect the water potential of the blood, and thus the water potential gradient between the blood and the tissue fluid. The size of this water potential gradient is largely due to sodium ions and plasma proteins. The blood solute level regulates the movement of water between blood and tissues."

 

Above is the description from my bio book.

 

What does it mean by:

 

1. Water potential

 

2. tissue fluid, is it plasma?

 

 

What do the sodium ions and plasma proteins affect the gradient?

 

Does the whole description mean that the water moves by osmosis to balance the concentration between tissue and blood solute? does "regulate" mean "move"?

 

Albert

Link to comment
Share on other sites

thx 5614, now I know what does it mean by water potential, it is a tendency that water move from a higher concentration to lower concentration.....

 

but for the last thing, what does it mean by "regulate"? it does not explain in ur site...

 

Albert

Link to comment
Share on other sites

regulate: Control, govern, or direct by rule or regulations; subject to guidance or restrictions; adapt to circumstances or surroundings.

dictionary definition

 

basically it means that it is controlled.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Above is the description from my bio book.

 

What does it mean by:

 

1. Water potential

It means the osmotic gradient between blood and interstitial fluid

 

2. tissue fluid' date=' is it plasma?[/quote']

Tissue fluid (interstitial fluid) is plasma filtrate. It is plasma without the large anionic proteins (albumin) and other solutes contained in plasma.

 

 

What do the sodium ions and plasma proteins affect the gradient?

I'm guessing you mean "How do....etc." Water will always try to 'equalize' across a semipermiable membrane (like capillary walls). If the water on one side contains a higher concentration of solutes than water on the other, then per unit volume, there is less water on the high concentration side. This forms an osmotic gradient. Water will try to move from the low concentration side to the high concentation side, to equalize the amount of water on each side.

 

Does the whole description mean that the water moves by osmosis to balance the concentration between tissue and blood solute?

Put simply, yes.

 

does "regulate" mean "move"?

No. 'Regulate' means 'control'. For example, you use a tap (faucet) to regulate the flow of water, not to move the water. Mains pressure moves the water.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To Glider, I ask how do the sodium ions and plasma proteins affect the gradient, not water........

 

any way, what I really want to know is: what are sodium ions and plasma proteins in Biology? what roles do they play?

 

Albert

Link to comment
Share on other sites

To albertlee, I answer that these are the solutes that determine the concentration gradient that drives osmosis.

 

Plasma proteins are proteins found in plasma (mainly albumin). Sodium ions are sodium ions. If you want to know the role of sodium ions in biology, the answers would fill books. They have a role in just about everything. Cardiac function, neural & nerve function, muscle function, renal function etc., etc.

 

You need to define your questions more clearly.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They are responsible for about 15% of buffering in the blood (keeping acids and bases regulated). They are also responsible for the thyroid transportation. Their most important role is probably in the exchange of fluids across capillaries

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.