Relations (1)

related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts

Oxygen and pH are both critical physiological variables regulated by the body to maintain homeostasis and cellular function, as evidenced by their joint inclusion in regulatory mechanisms [1], [2], and [3], as well as their roles in circulatory transport [4] and allostatic models [5], [6].

Facts (6)

Sources
Homeostasis vs. Allostasis: Why Your Body Needs More Than Stability trueself.health 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.
Physiology, Homeostasis - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf ncbi.nlm.nih.gov National Library of Medicine 1 fact
claimCellular homeostasis requires the regulation of pH, temperature, oxygen, ion concentrations, and blood glucose concentration to ensure enzymes function optimally.
Homeostasis vs Allostasis — The Urban Health Council urbanhealthcouncil.com Urban Health Council 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.
Understanding Allostasis: Stability Through Change - Cannelevate cannelevate.com.au CannElevate 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.
List of systems of the human body - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 1 fact
referenceThe circulatory system circulates blood to transport nutrients, waste, hormones, oxygen, and carbon dioxide, and aids in maintaining pH and temperature, utilizing blood, the heart, arteries, veins, and capillaries.