Abstract

BackgroundThe paradigm of "buffering" originated in acid-base physiology, but was subsequently extended to other fields and is now used for a wide and diverse set of phenomena. In the preceding article, we have presented a formal and general approach to the quantitation of buffering action. Here, we use that buffering concept for a systematic treatment of selected classical and other buffering phenomena.ResultsH+ buffering by weak acids and "self-buffering" in pure water represent "conservative buffered systems" whose analysis reveals buffering properties that contrast in important aspects from classical textbook descriptions. The buffering of organ perfusion in the face of variable perfusion pressure (also termed "autoregulation") can be treated in terms of "non-conservative buffered systems", the general form of the concept. For the analysis of cytoplasmic Ca++ concentration transients (also termed "muffling"), we develop a related unit that is able to faithfully reflect the time-dependent quantitative aspect of buffering during the pre-steady state period. Steady-state buffering is shown to represent the limiting case of time-dependent muffling, namely for infinitely long time intervals and infinitely small perturbations. Finally, our buffering concept provides a stringent definition of "buffering" on the level of systems and control theory, resulting in four absolute ratio scales for control performance that are suited to measure disturbance rejection and setpoint tracking, and both their static and dynamic aspects.ConclusionOur concept of buffering provides a powerful mathematical tool for the quantitation of buffering action in all its appearances.

Highlights

  • In the preceding article (Buffering I ), we presented a formal and general framework for the quantitation of buffering action

  • The purpose of the present article is to apply that mathematical tool to the analysis of some scientifically important buffering phenomena

  • Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling 2005, 2:9 http://www.tbiomed.com/content/2/1/9 will exploit the equivalencies and interconversions muffling for infinitely long time intervals and infinitely between these categories

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Summary

Introduction

In the preceding article (Buffering I ), we presented a formal and general framework for the quantitation of buffering action. We revisit a classical case of acid-base buffering: H+ ion buffering in a solution of a weak acid. This process can be described in terms of a conserved quantity (total H+ ions) that partitions into two complementary compartments or states (bound vs free). Such a system was termed a "conservative buffered system". We have presented a formal and general approach to the quantitation of buffering action. We use that buffering concept for a systematic treatment of selected classical and other buffering phenomena

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