The ultimate goal of all body systems is to maintain life. However, life is extraordinarily fragile and requires that several factors be present. These factors, which we will call survival needs, include nutrients (food), oxygen, water, and appropriate temperature and atmospheric pressure.
Nutrients, taken in via the diet, contain the chemical substances used for energy and cell building. Most plant-derived foods are rich in carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals, whereas most animal foods are richer in proteins and fats. Carbohydrates are the major energy fuel for body cells. Proteins, and to a lesser extent fats, are essential for building cell structures. Fats also provide a reserve of energy-rich fuel. Selected minerals and vitamins are required for the chemical reactions that go on in cells and for oxygen transport in the blood. The mineral calcium helps to make bones hard and is required for blood clotting.
All the nutrients in the world are useless unless oxygen is also available. Because the chemical reactions that release energy from foods are oxidative reactions that require oxygen, human cells can survive for only a few minutes without oxygen. Approximately 20% of the air we breathe is oxygen. It is made available to the blood and body cells by the cooperative efforts of the respiratory and cardiovascular systems.
Water accounts for 60-80% of body weight and is the single most abundant chemical substance in the body. It provides the watery environment necessary for chemical reactions and the fluid base for body secretions and excretions. Water is obtained chiefly from ingested foods or liquids and is lost from the body by evaporation from the lungs and skin and in body excretions.
If chemical reactions are to continue at life-sustaining rates, normal body temperature must be maintained. As body temperature drops below 37°C (98.6°F), metabolic reactions become slower and slower, and finally stop. When body temperature is too high, chemical reactions occur at a frantic pace and body proteins lose their characteristic shape and stop functioning. At either extreme, death occurs. Most body heat is generated by the activity of the muscular system.
Atmospheric pressure is the force that air exerts on the surface of the body. Breathing and gas exchange in the lungs depend on appropriate atmospheric pressure. At high altitudes, where atmospheric pressure is lower and the air is thin, gas exchange may be inadequate to support cellular metabolism.
The mere presence of these survival factors is not sufficient to sustain life. They must be present in appropriate amounts; excesses and deficits may be equally harmful. For example, oxygen is essential, but excessive amounts are toxic to body cells. Similarly, the food we eat must be of high quality and in proper amounts; otherwise, nutritional disease, obesity, or starvation is likely. Also, while the needs listed above are the most crucial, they do not even begin to encompass all of the body’s needs. For example, we can live without gravity if we must, but the quality of life suffers.