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4BI1

Homeostasis

Structures and Functions in Living Organisms · 4 question types

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4BI1 Topics

Cell Structure18%
Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport22%
Nutrition & Digestion16%
Photosynthesis20%
Respiration18%
Transport in Plants19%
Transport in Humans15%
Excretion12%
Coordination & Response14%
Homeostasis16%
  1. What Homeostasis Is
  2. Negative Feedback
  3. Blood Glucose Regulation
  4. Diabetes
  5. Osmoregulation: Controlling Water Balance
  6. Bringing It Together

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Exam Frequency Analysis

Past paper frequency (2018 to 2024)

This topic accounts for approximately 16% of your exam marks.

increasing
Very High
Increasing16%

Blood glucose regulation and temperature control are increasing in frequency; insulin/glucagon tested every series.

Homeostasis is the maintenance of a constant internal environment in the body, despite changes in the outside environment

Body cells only work properly within a narrow range of conditions. Enzymes have a fixed optimum temperature and pH; cell membranes only function inside a narrow range of solute concentrations. If conditions drift outside this safe range, the body's chemistry breaks down. A drop in body temperature of more than a few degrees can be fatal, as can a drop in blood glucose to zero or a 30% loss of body water.

Homeostasis is the collection of mechanisms that keep these conditions stable. The major variables that the body keeps constant include:

  • Core body temperature (around 37 °C)
  • Blood glucose concentration (around 4–7 mmol/L)
  • Water content of the blood
  • Salt (ion) concentration of the blood
  • Blood pH (around pH 7.4)
  • Levels of metabolic waste (urea, CO₂)

The mechanisms covered in detail in this topic are blood glucose regulation and osmoregulation (water balance). Temperature regulation by the skin was covered in topic 10 (Coordination and Response), and water reabsorption by the kidneys was covered in topic 9 (Excretion). All of them are examples of the same general principle: negative feedback.

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Negative Feedback