Fluids & Electrolytes Flashcards

1
Q

what is the percentage of body fluid compartments?

A
  • ICF= 60%
  • ECF= 40%; 1/4 is plasma, 3/4 interstitial
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2
Q

how do compartments interact?

A
  • semipermeable membranses separate compartment
  • water moves freely between compartments
  • effective osmolality is the same
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3
Q

what changes ICF volume?

A

sodium

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4
Q

how do you assess ICF?

A

osmolality= total osmoles in body/Total water in body

  • changes in sodium concentration change ICF volume
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5
Q

Major properties of ECF?

A
  • all fluid outside the cell
  • major solues include Na, Cl-, and HCO3
  • changes in sodium content (not concentration) affect ecf
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6
Q

How to asscess ECF?

A

Symptoms

  • thirst
  • lightheadedness
  • palpitations

Signs

  • orthostasis
  • urine output
  • dry mouth/moist membranes
  • dry axilla
  • low JVP/high JVP
  • skin turgor/edema
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7
Q

What is hypernatremia?

A

too little water

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8
Q

what is hyponatremia?

A

Too much water

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9
Q

how do you treat hyponatremia?

A
  • hyponatremia- headache, nausea, confusion, falls, seizures
  • excess water in cells includes brain cells which are confined in limited space
  • Treatment with hypertonic solution to draw water out of cells- most commonly hypertonic saline
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10
Q

major causes of hypernatremia

A
  • comes in two varieties
  • central DI: neurosurgery, trauma
  • nephrogenic DI: lithium, hypokalemia, hypercalcemia
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11
Q

what happens with too much sodium?

A

total body volume overloaded

  • CKD/inability of kidney to excrete sodium intake
  • CHF
  • cirrhosis
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12
Q

which diuretics block different parts of the nephron?

A

proximal tubule: no clincal diuretic
thick ascending limb: loop diuretics
distal tubule: thiazide diuretics
collecting duct: aldosterone antagonists, ENaC blockers

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13
Q

how do you assess volume status ?

A
  • thirst
  • JVP
  • skin turgor and presence/absence of edema (interstitial bed)
  • low BP (arterial bed)
  • Urine sodium and chloride for effective circulating volume
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14
Q

treatment of volume contraction?

A

Volume contraction = loss of sodium
treatment= give back sodium

  • usually given as isotonic fluids (lactated ringers or 0.9% normal saline)
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15
Q

treatment of volume overload

A

volume overload= overload of sodium
treatment= remove sodium
removal of extra sodium is by; decrease intake of sodium, increase output of sodium

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16
Q

Extracellular Fluid (ECF)

  • Influences cell membrane potential
  • regulated in narrow window (3.5-5mmol/L)
  • GI reabsorption and ICF uptake
  • renal excretion
A

potassium function

17
Q
  • delayed repolarization of the ventricle
  • ventricular instability
  • arrhythmias
A

hypokalemia

18
Q
  • sustained subthreshold depolarization
  • delayed depolarization
  • EKG changes
  • arrhythmias
  • death
A

Hyperkalemia

19
Q

causes of hyperkalemia?

A

transcelluar shift

  • tissue breakdown
  • acidosis
  • insulin deficiency
  • use of B-blockers

Increased intake

  • would need to be > 5500mg to overwhelm a normal functioning kidney
  • IV replacement can overwhelm balance
20
Q

Treatment of Hyperkalemia

A
  1. restore excitability of cardiac myocyte: calcium gluconate or calcium chloride, antagonize potassium effect
  2. shift potassium into the ICF: GIve insulin and glucose; if acidosis then give bicarb, B2 agonist (30-60min)
  3. sodium polystyrene sulfonate: decrease uptake of potassium in the gut, given with sorbitol to increase bowel movement
  4. enhance urine output-> IV fluids to increase tubular flow, diuretics –> dialysis (low potassium concentration in dialysate)