Environment | Hypertonic | Isotonic | Hypotonic |
Red blood cells | In hypertonic solution, solute concentration is greater than that present in the cell. It means concentration of water in the cell is more than in the solution, so water moves from cell towards the solution. Due, to this, cell will shrink. | In isotonic solution, solute concentration is equal to that present in the cell. It means concentration of water in the cell is equal to that in the solution, so there is no net flow of water in or out of the cell. Due, to this, cell will remain of same size. | In hypotonic solution, solute concentration is less than that present in the cell. It means concentration of water in the cell is less than in the solution, so water moves into the cell from the solution. Due, to this, cell will swell up. Pressure build upon the cell and they may burst. |
Plant cells | Here, concentration of water in the plant cell is more than in the solution, so water moves from cell towards the solution. Due, to this, cytoplasm moves away from the cell wall and it will shrink. | Here, concentration of water in the cell is equal to that in the solution, so there is no net flow of water in or out of the cell. Due, to this, cell will remain of same size. | Here, concentration of water in the plant cell is less than in the solution, so water moves into the cell from the solution. Due, to this, cell will try to swell up. Pressure build upin the cell but they will not burst due to hard and rigid cell wall. |
Animal Red Blood Cells Plant Cells Type of Environment Hypertonic Isotonic Hypotonic Red Blood Cells Plant...
Hemolysis of red blood cells occurs when the cells are placed in ain) isotonic solution hypertonic solution hypotonic solution physiological saline solution
When were the plant cells hypertonic, hypotonic, or isotonic? Name the solutions and the timess that illustrate any of these conditions
Choose to put a red blood cell in a hypotonic, hypertonic, or isotonic solution, what is the effect on the RBC? Why is tonicity important in clinical practice?
16.a is the saturated NaCl solution isotonic, hypertonic or hypotonic with blood? Explain. b. If a patient was administered an intravenous dose of this solution, what would happen to their red blood cells? What would be a likely initial symptom of high levels of Na* and CI? C. Read the label on the 0.9 % Sodium Chloride IV solution bag. 1. What is the osmolarity of this solution? Is this solution isotonic, hypertonic or hypotonic? Explain. 2. Is the stated...
Identify whether the following solutions are hypotonic, hypertonic or isotonic (with respect to a red blood cell). Also indicate whether crenation, hemolysis or no change will occur. a. 1.5 % NaCl b. 5 %glucose c. 0.09 % NaCl d. 3.8 %glucose e. 0.9 % glucose
3. Classify each saline solution as isotonic, hypotonic, or hypertonic (compared with the inside of blood cells). The serum sample shows what the blood cells look like under normal conditions in the bloodstream. Classification Solution 0% NaCl 1% NaCl 10% NaCl
A 1.1%(m/v) solution of potassium chloride is isotonic with red blood cells. A). is a 0.11M solution of potassium chloride hypotonic, isotonic, or hypertonic with red blood cells? convert the 0.11M potassium chloride solution concentration into % (m/v) to support your answer? please show every step. B). what would happen to the red blood cell immersed in a 0.11M potassium chloride solution- nothing, crenation, hemolysis?
In osmosis, water flows from hypertonic/hypotonic/isotonic (highlight one) solutions to hypertonic/hypotonic/isotonic (highlight one) solutions, until both solutions are hypertonic/hypotonic/isotonic (highlight one).
Fish Regulation Saltwater Fish vs Freshwater Fish Is the environment hypertonic / isotonic / hypotonic with respect to the extracellular fluid of the fish? What does the fish have to do to maintain an optimal internal solute and water concentrations?
5. Fill in the blanks below with these terms. (hypertonic, hypotonic, isotonic, outside, inside) Under normal circumstances intracellular fluid is ____________ compared to extracellular fluid. Addition of salt crystals (NaCl) to the cucumber creates _______________ conditions on the outside of cells which causes water to move from the __________ to the ___________ of cells. Adding a ___________ solution to red blood cells will cause them to shrink in volume, while adding a __________ solution to red blood cells will cause...