# Physiological condition

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> Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiological_condition
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{{Short description|Naturally-occurring phenomena for organisms}}
'''Physiological condition'''<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Petersen |first=Ole H |date=2023-08-04 |title=What Does Physiological Mean? |journal=Function |volume=4 |issue=5 |article-number=zqad042 |doi=10.1093/function/zqad042 |issn=2633-8823 |pmid=37601812|pmc=10433090 }}</ref> or, more often "physiological conditions" is a term used in [biology](/source/biology), [biochemistry](/source/biochemistry), and [medicine](/source/medicine). It refers to conditions of the external or [internal milieu](/source/milieu_interieur) that may occur in nature for that organism or cell system, in contrast to artificial [laboratory](/source/laboratory) conditions. A temperature range of 20-40 [degrees Celsius](/source/degrees_Celsius), [atmospheric pressure](/source/atmospheric_pressure) of 1, [pH](/source/pH) of 6-8, glucose concentration of 1-20 mM, [atmospheric oxygen](/source/atmospheric_oxygen) concentration, [earth gravity](/source/earth_gravity) and [electromagnetism](/source/electromagnetism) are examples of physiological conditions for most earth organisms.

==References==
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Category:Physiology

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