Relations (1)
related 2.81 — strongly supporting 6 facts
Heart rate is a critical physiological parameter that the body monitors and adjusts to maintain homeostasis, as described in [1], [2], and [3]. Furthermore, heart rate is dynamically regulated to support the maintenance of homeostasis, as noted in [4], [5], and [6].
Facts (6)
Sources
Homeostasis and Feedback Loops | Anatomy and Physiology I courses.lumenlearning.com 2 facts
claimThe human body maintains homeostasis through constant internal activity, such as adjustments to heart rate, breathing patterns, muscle group activity, and eye movement, even while at rest.
claimHomeostasis involves continuous internal activity, such as the brain monitoring and adjusting heart rate, breathing patterns, and muscle activity, rather than a state of inactivity.
Homeostasis vs Allostasis — The Urban Health Council urbanhealthcouncil.com 1 fact
claimMcEwen proposed a unifying model where allostasis is complementary to homeostasis, acting as the process that maintains homeostasis through dynamically changing physiological parameters such as blood pressure and heart rate to respond to environmental demands.
How Inflammation Affects Your Health | News - Yale Medicine yalemedicine.org 1 fact
claimHomeostasis is the process the body uses to maintain critical functions necessary for survival, including heart rate, breathing, and glucose and insulin levels.
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.
Acute vs. chronic inflammation - UCLA Health uclahealth.org 1 fact
claimHomeostasis is a state where the body's crucial systems, such as blood pressure, heart rate, temperature, blood sugar, and fluid levels, remain in a normal range.