Relations (1)
related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts
Oxygen and blood pressure are both physiological variables regulated by the body's homeostatic and allostatic systems, as evidenced by their shared inclusion in regulatory feedback loops [1], [2] and maintenance models [3], [4], [5]. Additionally, sleep apnea demonstrates a direct clinical link where low oxygen levels trigger an increase in blood pressure [6].
Facts (6)
Sources
Homeostasis vs. Allostasis: Why Your Body Needs More Than Stability trueself.health 2 facts
claimNegative feedback loops in the human body regulate blood glucose, pH, oxygen, carbon dioxide, blood pressure, and electrolyte concentrations including sodium, potassium, and calcium.
claimNegative feedback loops regulate physiological variables including blood glucose, pH, oxygen, carbon dioxide, blood pressure, and electrolyte concentrations such as sodium, potassium, and calcium.
Homeostasis vs Allostasis — The Urban Health Council urbanhealthcouncil.com 1 fact
claimIn McEwen's model, homeostasis maintains the stability of core tissue parameters like pH and temperature, while allostasis dynamically modifies pericellular parameters like blood pressure and oxygen to support that stability.
Feedback Mechanisms | Overview & Research Examples - Perlego perlego.com 1 fact
claimHomeostatic regulation in the human body maintains constant levels of blood pressure, blood glucose, oxygen and carbon dioxide in tissues and blood, body fluid pH, and water and electrolyte concentrations.
How sleep deprivation can harm your health - Harvard Health health.harvard.edu 1 fact
claimSleep apnea causes low oxygen and high carbon dioxide levels during sleep, which raises stress hormone levels, blood pressure, and heart rate.
Understanding Allostasis: Stability Through Change - Cannelevate cannelevate.com.au 1 fact
claimHomeostasis regulates core vital parameters such as pH, temperature, and oxygen, while allostasis regulates supporting parameters including blood pressure, heart rate, and hormones.