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There is a net movement of water into a cell from the surrounding tissue fluid. Is the tissue fluid more or less concentrated than the fluid inside this cell?

Question

There is a net movement of water into a cell from the surrounding tissue fluid. Is the tissue fluid more or less concentrated than the fluid inside this cell?

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Solution

The tissue fluid is less concentrated than the fluid inside the cell. This is because water moves from areas of lower solute concentration to areas of higher solute concentration, a process known as osmosis. So if water is moving into the cell, it means the concentration of solutes is higher inside the cell than in the tissue fluid.

Similar Questions

If a cell requires a large amount of water to be moved to the intracellular fluid, which of the following processes would the cell use?Simple diffusionExocytosisEndocytosisCarrier-mediated diffusion

Which process could result in the net movement of a substance into a cell, if the substance is more concentrated in the cell than in the surroundings?facilitated diffusiondiffusionosmosisactive transport

Which of the following body fluids is categorized as intracellular fluid?

Which of the diagrams below correctly shows osmosis when the cell is less concentrated than the surrounding fluid?The blue arrows show the movement of water molecules.

A cell is placed in an isotonic solution. The movement of water across the plasma membrane would ResponsesA not occur.not occur.B be faster into the cell than out of the cell.be faster into the cell than out of the cell.C be faster out of the cell than into the cell.be faster out of the cell than into the cell.D occur at the same rate into and out of the cell.

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