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Exam (elaborations)

PY 435 Exam 2 Questions With Accurate Answers

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Uploaded on
March 28, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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PY 435 Exam 2 Questions With
Accurate Answers

dry mouth theory (cannon) - ANSWER dry mouth causes thirst

evidence for dry mouth theory - ANSWER cocaine study coated people's mouth in
cocaine so they couldn't feel their mouth become dry and their thirst levels decreased

evidence against dry mouth theory - ANSWER 1. people without salivary glands have
normal thirst levels

2. when you take a sip of water (wetting the mouth) and spit it out, your thirst isn't
quenched

3. sham-drinking experiment

what motivates us to drink? - ANSWER depletion of water from your body cells

intracellular - ANSWER inside of the cell

extracellular - ANSWER between the cells (in the blood and csf)

sham-drinking experiment - ANSWER gave water to dogs (wet their mouths) but drained
the water from their stomachs and they kept drinking water (so thirst was not decreased
from a wet mouth)

methods for wetting the mouth - ANSWER putting a pebble in your mouth to activate
salivary glands, cocaine makes the tongue numb to dryness

what causes thirst? - ANSWER evaporation of water from the body through speaking,
sweating, breathing, vomiting, etc.

osmosis - ANSWER movement of molecules from a high concentration to a low
concentration through a barrier

what % of water in the body is intracellular? - ANSWER 60

thirst happens because - ANSWER the concentration of water in the cells drops

two types of thirst - ANSWER osmotic and hypovolemic

what is osmotic thirst? - ANSWER loss of water from inside the cells; happens when
solute concentration outside the cells increases causing water to exit

why do solutes cause water to exit the cell? - ANSWER the semi-permeable membrane
of cells does not allow certain solutes to enter, to maintain homeostasis, water exits the

, cell

why does eating sugar make you less thirsty than eating salt? - ANSWER sugar can
easily pass through the semipermeable cell membrane and water does not need to exit
the cell

why are diabetics thirstier? - ANSWER without insulin, sugar cannot enter the cell

anderson goat study - ANSWER goat farmers thought that increasing thirst would
increase milk production so anderson injected a salty solution into the goat's
hypothalamus but there was only an increase in urination

anderson - ANSWER found "osmoreceptors" on the lateral hypothalamus that regulate
thirst

baroreceptors in the heart - ANSWER located in the heart, detect a drop in bp and signal
the posterior pituitary to release vasopressin

hypovolemic thirst - ANSWER caused by losing blood volume and losing salts through
excessive exercise

fitzimmons - ANSWER put a balloon in the vena cava (the vein that feeds blood into your
heart) of a dog and it immediately started drinking water

kidneys - ANSWER detect a drop in bp and release renin

renin - ANSWER converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin II

angiotensin II functions - ANSWER 1. constricts blood vessels to compensate for loss so
bp is increased

2. activates subfornical organs to increase thirst

3. stimulates posterior pituitary to release vassopresin

4. stimulates adrenals to secrete aldosterone to retain salt and give you a salt craving

why are there so many areas of the body involved in thirst? - ANSWER because drinking
is so important to life and if one area fails, it wouldn't be as detrimental to thirst if only a
few areas were involved (it's a failsafe)

hunger is caused by - ANSWER a drop in blood-glucose levels

glucostatic hypothesis (mayor) - ANSWER as our blood glucose levels decrease, our
hunger increases and vice versa

gastrocontractions theory (walter cannon) - ANSWER stomach contractions are painful
so to avoid displeasure, we eat and satisfy hunger BUT... this is disproven because
people without stomachs have normal hunger levels

orosensory factors theory (psychologists) - ANSWER seeing/ smelling food induces

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