Monday, April 13, 2009
Automaticity of the Body
The purpose of this chapter has been to point out, first, the overall  organization of the body and, second, the means by which the different parts of  the body operate in harmony. To summarize, the body is actually a social  order of about 100 trillion cells organized into different functional  structures, some of which are called organs. Each functional structure  contributes its share to the maintenance of homeostatic conditions in the  extracellular fluid, which is called the internal environment. As long as  normal conditions are maintained in this internal environment, the cells of the  body continue to live and function properly. Each cell benefits from  homeostasis, and in turn, each cell contributes its share toward the maintenance  of homeostasis. This reciprocal interplay provides continuous automaticity of  the body until one or more functional systems lose their ability to contribute  their share of function. When this happens, all the cells of the body suffer.  Extreme dysfunction leads to death; moderate dysfunction leads to sickness.
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