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Mechanisms for controlling water movement between the fluid compartments of the body constitute the slowest-acting fluid balance devices.

True.
False.

1 Answer

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Final answer:

Mechanisms for controlling water movement are mistakenly identified as the slowest when, in fact, there are both rapid (like filtration and osmosis) and slower mechanisms (like hormonal control) at play.

Step-by-step explanation:

The statement that mechanisms for controlling water movement between the fluid compartments of the body constitute the slowest-acting fluid balance devices is false. Control of water movement and balance involves several different mechanisms that can act swiftly or slowly. Rapid mechanisms include osmosis and filtration, which rely on hydrostatic and osmotic pressure gradients.

Slower mechanisms involve hormonal control such as the action of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) or aldosterone on kidney function, which adjusts water reabsorption over a period of hours. However, the deterministic factor for the speed of fluid balance adjustments is not the physical movement of water itself but the rate at which the controlling hormonal signals are produced and the related physiological responses are executed.

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