In a hypotonic solution, the water potential of the environment is higher. Since water travels from areas of high water potential to low water potential, it will flow into the cell faster than it can be removed. The cell, which lacks a pressure-resisting wall, will swell and soon burst.
In a hypertonic solution, it's the opposite. The water potential of the environment is lower, so the water will flow from inside of the cell to outside. The cell will basically shrivel.
Compare this to the final option. In an isotonic solution, the water potential in both the inside of the cell and the surrounding environment is zero. This means that there is no net movement of water, so the cell will neither burst nor shrivel and remain healthy.
The cell's interior is considered isotonic to the surrounding fluid when there is an equal concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell, resulting in no net movement of water across the cell membrane. This balance prevents the cell from either shrinking or swelling due to osmosis.
Interstitial fluid also called extracellular fluid.
Tissue fluid is the the fluid that surrounds the bodies cells, or technically it "bathes" the cells in the body or cleans them.
While surrounding tissues it is called interstitial fluid. Once it enters the lymphatic system it is called lymphatic fluid.
Location also LYMPH . - Lymph means clear water and it is derived from the fluid and protein that has been squeezed out of the blood (i.e. blood plasma). - It is a pale fluid that bathes the tissues of an organism, maintaining fluid balance, and removes bacteria from tissues; it enters the blood system by way of lymphatic channels and ducts. - Prominent among the constituents of lymph are lymphocytes and macrophages, the primary cells of the immune system with which the body defends itself from invasion by foreign microorganisms. - It contains fluid from the intestines called chyle, which contains proteins and fats. INTERSTITIAL FLUID - Interstitial fluid (or tissue fluid, or intercellular fluid) is a solution which bathes and surrounds the cells of multicellular animals. - To prevent a build-up of tissue fluid surrounding the cells in the tissue, the lymphatic system plays a part in the transport of tissue fluid. - Tissue fluid can pass into the surrounding lymph vessels (now called Lymph), and eventually ends up rejoining the blood.
Yes, the interstitial fluid is an extracellular fluid that surrounds the cells.
Tissue fluid is the the fluid that surrounds the bodies cells, or technically it "bathes" the cells in the body or cleans them.
Capillaries
The fluids in the blood leak through the capillaries and into the surrounding tissue. After the cells are bathed the fluid moves into the the lymphatic system. It is then returned into the bloodstream
The tissue fluid is mainly made of water and will be made through exchanges of the cells in biological process. Other contents of the tissue fluid include amino acids, sugars, salts, fatty acids and so much more.
The cell's interior is considered isotonic to the surrounding fluid when there is an equal concentration of solutes inside and outside the cell, resulting in no net movement of water across the cell membrane. This balance prevents the cell from either shrinking or swelling due to osmosis.
A 5% glucose solution is isotonic to cellular fluid because it has the same osmotic pressure as the fluid inside the cells. This means that the concentration of solutes in the glucose solution is balanced with the concentration of solutes inside the cells, preventing fluid from moving in or out of the cells and maintaining cell volume and shape.
Interstitial fluid also called extracellular fluid.
Tissue fluid is the the fluid that surrounds the bodies cells, or technically it "bathes" the cells in the body or cleans them.
: it would have no effect
Tissue fluid helps substances to diffuse into and out of cells. Useful substances like glucose and oxygen pass from tissue fluid into cells. Carbon dioxide and waste chemicals like urea pass out of cells into the tissue fluid. Most of the tissue fluid then passes back into the blood capillaries. Fluid is constantly flowing from the plasma and back into the plasma, but some of it drains into our lymphatic system.
Exudate means fluid, cells, or cellular debris that oozed into tissue.