Chapter 24: Clinical Dehydration and Edema Flashcards
1
Q
Clinical Dehydration
A
- combination of 2 fluid disorders
- Extracellular volume deficit
- Hypernatremia
- too small a volume of fluid in the extracellular compartment and too concentrated body fluids
2
Q
Etiology of Clinical Dehydration
A
- vomiting
- diarrhea
- knowledge deficit about salt and fluid replacement
3
Q
Clinical Manifestations of Clinical Dehydration
A
- postural blood pressure decrease with concurrent increased heart rate
- Lightheadedness, dizziness, or syncope on standing
- Flat neck veins when supine or neck veins that collapse during inspiration
- sunken fontanel (infants)
- Rapid, thready pulse
- sudden weight loss
- decreased skin turgor
- Dryness of oral mucous membranes
- hard stools
- soft, sunken eyeballs
- longitudinal furrows in the tongue
- thirst
- increased serum sodium concentration
- confusion, lethargy
- hypovolemic shock
- oliguria (low urine output)
4
Q
Edema
A
- Excess fluid in interstitial compartment
- may be a manifestation of excess extracellular fluid volume
- increased capillary hydrostatic pressure: too much volume; from inflammation
- Increased interstitial fluid osmotic pressure: inflammation causes protein to leak out from vascular permeability
- blockage of lymphatic drainage: lymphedema; frequently localized
- decreased capillary osmotic pressure: plasma proteins decreased; extensive edema