SS3. ADH and Aldosterone Flashcards
What is the difference between ADH and Aldosterone?
Aldosterone: H2O permeable, pulls in Na, K pushed into urine. Na+ cannot cross membrane, increasing tonicity –> H2O flows into blood
ADH: H2O impermeable. Uses H2O channels to get water into the blood cells.
What happens with osmolarity when Aldosterone incvreases osmoles?
It works on increasing osmoles, thereby increasing volume. Because they’re both effected, the osmolarity is not affected.
What happens with osmolarity when ADH causes an increase in volume in blood vessels?
Osmoles don’t go up, so osmolarity decreases.
What do you do when you want to increase volume, but maintain osmolarity?
Increase aldosterone, ADH isn’t used.
What do you do when you want to increase volume regardless of osmolarity?
Both aldosterone and ADH should be increased
What do you do if you want to decrease osmolarity regardless of volume?
Use ADH to decrease osmolarity. Don’t use aldosterone
What do you do if you want a decrease in osmolarity, but maintain the volume?
Decrease aldosterone (decreases osmoles and volume, unaffecting osmolarity) Increase ADH (increases volume that's been decreased by aldosterone, and lowers osmolarity).