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Summary - Integration (acid-base balance) - Homeostasis and Organ Systems (BBS1002)

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These notes provide a clear, structured, and comprehensive overview of the BBS1002 course, covering all essential lecture content and key concepts from Silverthorn and Marieb. Designed with the exam in mind, the notes compile all relevant information in one place, making it easy to review efficiently and focus on high-yield topics. Perfect for preparing for exams quickly while understanding core mechanisms.

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Integration
Friday, 5 December 2025 13:35




How the body maintains pH

• The body must keep pH in a very narrow range (between 7.35 and 7.45).
→ To prevent this, the body uses three lines of defense.
• Molecules present in blood, cells, and urine that act immediately to resist pH changes.
→ Do not require organs to act in the moment; they work instantly by binding or releasing H⁺.

→ Lowest survivable pH ≈ 6.8
→ Highest survivable pH ≈ 7.8

Buffer systems

1) Chemical buffers

→ First line of defense.
→ Fastest response (almost instant).

→ How buffers work:
→ They bind free H⁺ when pH falls (acidosis)
→ They release H⁺ when pH rises (alkalosis).

→ Main chemical buffer systems:

► Bicarbonate buffer (HCO₃⁻ / H₂CO₃)

• Most important in extracellular fluid buffer.
• Controlled by lungs (CO₂) and kidneys (HCO₃⁻).
• Especially effective at acidic pH (≈6.8).

• Components:
§ Carbonic acid (H₂CO₃) — weak acid
§ Bicarbonate ion (HCO₃⁻) — weak base
§ Bicarbonate salts: NaHCO₃ in plasma; KHCO₃ and MgHCO₃ in cells.

• H₂CO₃ supply is almost limitless because it comes from CO₂ (respiratory control).
• HCO₃⁻ concentration is regulated by the kidneys.
• Buffering power depends on the amount of alkaline reserve (available HCO₃⁻).
§ If all HCO₃⁻ is used up, buffering stops.


• Mechanism:
→ When a strong acid is added (e.g. HCl):
→ The bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) acts as a weak base and binds the added H⁺:
HCl + NaHCO₃ → H₂CO₃ + NaCl
→ Goes from strong acid to weak acid.
→ Thus, pH decreases only slightly.


→ When a strong base is added (e.g., NaOH):
§ Carbonic acid (H₂CO₃) donates H⁺ to neutralize OH⁻:
NaOH + H₂CO₃ → NaHCO₃ + H₂O
→ Goes from strong base to weak base.
→ Thus, pH increases only slightly.


► Protein buffer

• Found in intracellualr fluid, blood plasma and RBC's.

• Protein buffer systems:
→ Plasma protein buffers
→ Albumin is a plasma buffer.
→ Intracellular protein buffers
→ Hemoglobin buffer system
• Proteins are good buffers as they contain amino acids with:
→ Carboxyl groups (–COOH) - weak acids
→ Amino groups (–NH₂) - weak bases

• Mechanism:
→ As a weak acid (when pH rises):
→ Releases H⁺ to counteract alkalosis
R–COOH ↔ R–COO⁻ + H⁺

, Intracellular protein buffers
→ Hemoglobin buffer system
• Proteins are good buffers as they contain amino acids with:
→ Carboxyl groups (–COOH) - weak acids
→ Amino groups (–NH₂) - weak bases

• Mechanism:
→ As a weak acid (when pH rises):
→ Releases H⁺ to counteract alkalosis
R–COOH ↔ R–COO⁻ + H⁺

→ As a weak base (when pH falls):
→ Binds H⁺ to prevent acidosis.
R–NH₂ + H⁺ ↔ R–NH₃⁺

• Hemoglobin buffer system:
→ Inside RBCs:
→ CO₂ enters RBC and forms H₂CO₃, which can dissociate into H⁺ + HCO₃⁻.
→ Hemoglobin (Hb⁻ when deoxygenated) binds H⁺:
H⁺ + Hb⁻ → HHb
→ This prevents large pH changes in venous blood.
→ Hemoglobin acts as an amphoteric molecule so it can accept or donate H⁺.


► Phosphate buffer
• Strong buffer in intracellular fluid and kidneys.
→ Concentration of phosphate is higher inside cells.
→ In kidney tubules, phosphate helps excrete H⁺.

• Components:
→ Dihydrogen phosphate (H₂PO₄⁻) — weak acid
→ Monohydrogen phosphate (HPO₄²⁻) — weak base

• Mechanism:
→ When a strong acid is added:
HPO₄²⁻ binds H⁺ → H₂PO₄⁻

→ When a strong base is added:
H₂PO₄⁻ donates H⁺ → HPO₄²⁻


Buffer System Components Main Location Strengths
Bicarbonate H₂CO₃ / HCO₃⁻ ECF Most important ECF buffer; linked to lungs & kidneys
Phosphate H₂PO₄⁻ / HPO₄²⁻ ICF and urine Strong in ICF; major role in renal H⁺ excretion
Protein (incl. Hb) R–COOH/R–NH₂ groups ICF & plasma Most buffering capacity; hemoglobin very powerful

→ Buffers prevent sudden changes in pH when acid is added or removed.
→ They buy time until the lungs and kidneys act.

Chemical Buffer Organ Involved How They Interact
Bicarbonate buffer Lungs Regulate CO₂ (H₂CO₃)
Kidneys Regulate HCO₃⁻ reabsorption & H⁺ excretion
GI tract Secretes & absorbs HCO₃⁻; vomiting/diarrhea alter HCO₃⁻
Phosphate buffer Kidneys Used as major urinary buffer to excrete H⁺
Protein buffer Lungs Hb binds H⁺ during CO₂ transport
Kidneys Maintain protein levels & acid–base environment
GI tract Provides amino acids for plasma proteins

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Physiological buffers

→ Organ-level systems that restore acid–base balance after chemical buffers act.
→ These systems do not buffer chemically.
→ They adjust the components of chemical buffers over minutes to days.
→ Chemical buffers temporarily bind to H+ but cannot remove acid.
→ Only physiological buffers (lungs and kidneys) can eliminate acid from the body.

► Respiratory buffer system (ventilation)

→ Second line of defense (acts in minutes).
→ Ventilation corrects 75% of acute pH disturbances.
→ This is why ventilation is considered a powerful, fast-acting physiological buffer.
→ The lungs regulate CO₂, which is in equilibrium with carbonic acid.
CO₂ + H₂O ↔ H₂CO₃ ↔ H⁺ + HCO₃⁻

→ If pH drops (acidosis):
→ Chemoreceptors sense increased H⁺ or CO₂
→ Ventilation increases (hyperventilation)
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