Kidneys Flashcards

1
Q

Total Body Water

A
  1. Extracellular fluid (1/3): ISF (3/4 = 9L), plasma (1/4 = 3L)
  2. Intracellular fluid (2/3)
    ~36L = in a 60 kg Man
    60% in Man; 50% in woman. Decreases with increasing age, increasing fat composition b/c bone, proteins, fat have less water content.
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2
Q

ECF (components, predominant ion, amount, addition/loss of pure H2O, addition/loss of isotonic NaCl)

A
  1. 1/3 of TBW = ~12 L
  2. Predominant ion is Na+ [140 mmol/L]
  3. Interstitial fluid + plasma. Two components are separated by a capillary wall.
  4. Fluid enters through gastrointestinal tract (via absorption), lost via: 1) skin; 2) GI tract; 3) Urine
  5. Addition/Loss of pure water –> 1/3 will go into/out ECF
  6. 1/4 plasma (3L); 3/4 interstitial fluid (9L)
  7. Fluid gained/loss initially from ECF, then will be redistributed through ICF so that the final ratio of the pure water is 1/3 ECF, 2/3 ICF. Particularly through plasma.
  8. Addition of isotonic NaCl –> 1.Increased plasma volume 2. Increased hydrostatic pressure 3. Decreased intravascular oncotic pressure –> 1/4 of fluid will remain in the plasma; 3/4 of fluid will move towards the ISF. NONE will move towards ICF b/c isotonic solution. Fluid will be redistributed throughout the 2 compartments of ECF so osmolarity is equal in all compartments (ECF = ICF).
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3
Q

ICF (components, predominant ion, amount, addition/loss of H2O)

A
  1. 2/3 of TBW = ~ 24 L
  2. Addition/Loss of pure water –> 2/3 will go into/out ICF
  3. Predominant ion is K+ [140 mmol/L]
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4
Q

Interstitial fluid

A
  • Fluid found in the microscopic spaces b/w tissue cells. Associated w/ the glycosaminoglycan matrix of tissues.
  • 3/4 of ECF = 9 L of TBW
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5
Q

Major difference b/w interstitial fluid & plasma

A
  • Plasma has a much higher concentration of proteins (i.e. albumin) than interstitial fluid. Prevents proteins from moving across the capillary wall and into ISF.
  • Colloid oncotic pressure, mainly due to albumin. ~25 mmHg in plasma.
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6
Q

Similar components in ISF & plasma

A
  1. Bicarbonate; 2. Na+; 3. Cl-; 4. K+; 5. Urea; 6. Protein; 7. Glucose
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7
Q

Hypernatremia

A

An increase in [Na+] in the ECF, plasma (high ECF osmolarity). Occurs through the loss of free water from the ECF. Water will exit cells. Shrunken cells.

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8
Q

Free water

A

aka pure water. Free water is lost 2/3 from the ICF, 1/3 from the ECF. *Adding free water will change BOTH ICF & ECF. *Adding isotonic NaCl solution will only change the ECF. Would like to retain osmolarity.

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9
Q

Principles and impact of the loss/gain of fluid with any [Na+] on the various body fluid compartments

A
  1. Det. the total amount of Na+ lost (in moles)
  2. Det. the volume of isotonic fluid that would contain this amount of Na+. Achieved by (total amount of Na+ lost/gained in moles) / 140. The remaining fluid lost/gained w/ the Na+ is free water.
  3. This isotonic volume is lost/gained in the ECF (in a distribution of 1/4 in plasma, 3/4 in interstitial fluid) while the free water is lost/gained 1/3 in the ECF, 2/3 in the ICF.
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10
Q

Isotonic; hypotonic, hypertonic

A

Tonicity is equal, less, greater than normal plasma.

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11
Q

Cell membrane permeability

A
  1. Not very permeable to Na+, K+ (maintained by Na+/K+ ATPase pump)
  2. Not permeable to H20 (travels via aquaporins)
  3. Urea, ethanol is soluble
  4. Glucose requires a transporter
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12
Q

Hyponatremia

A

[Na+] in ECF (plasma) is low. H2O will leave cells –> shrunken cells.

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13
Q

Situations where patients w/ hyponatremia do not necessarily have swollen cells

A
  1. Hyperglycemia - Water leaves muscle cells & travels to ECF –> dilution of Na+ (shrunken cells). i.e. adding mannitol for cerebral edema or sorbitol (prostate surgery).
  2. Severe hypertriglyceridemia or hyperproteinemia in plasma -
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14
Q

ADH (Synthesis, mechanism of action, stimuli for release

A

aka vasopressin.
Synthesis: supraoptic & paraventricular nuclei of hypothalamus. Stored & released from the posterior pituitary.
Mechanism of action: Activates vasopressin receptors. V1 - vasoconstriction. V2 - antidiuretic response in renal collecting duct.
Insertion of water channels in luminal membrane of cortical & medullary collecting duct. –> increased water absorption.
Stimuli for release: 1) increased ECF osmolarity (hypernatremia via osmoreceptor in hypothalamus); 2) decreased effective arterial volume (hypovolemia, heart failure, cirrhosis)

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