When directional control over fluid distribution is impaired—such as in microgravity or central dysregulation—physiological systems lose the ability to coordinate fluid retention, redistribution, and clearance. This results in disordered signaling across RAAS, ADH, vascular tone, and compartmental fluid dynamics. This paper proposes that temporal sequencing functions as a compensatory control mechanism under these conditions. By organizing physiology into structured phases of hydration and metabolic processing, timing separates incompatible regulatory processes and restores coordinated signaling. In this framework, sequence replaces spatial reference, allowing the system to approximate directional control without reliance on positional accuracy. The model reframes timing from a passive circadian feature to an active regulatory system capable of restoring coherence when spatial signaling fails. It further predicts that disruption of temporal structure leads to oscillatory instability, treatment resistance, and inconsistent physiological responses despite adequate inputs. This work extends prior models of directional control failure by defining timing as a functional axis of control, with implications for both microgravity physiology and terrestrial conditions involving central dysregulation.
Beth Ann Martell (Mon,) studied this question.