Week 1 Renal Flashcards
Water is added to the body by two major sources?
(1) it is ingested in the form of liquids or water in food, which together normally add about 2100 ml/day to the body fluids
(2) it is synthesized in the body by oxidation of carbohydrates, adding about 200 ml/day. These mechanisms provide a total water intake of about 2300 ml/day.
Breakdown of the body fluid compartments?
60/40/20/16/4
Plasma & interstitial (extracellular) fluids are similar in composition?
Highly permeable capillary membrane
Protein level > in plasma because of low membrane permeability
Intracellular Fluid
Separated by cell membrane
Highly permeable to water not electrolytes (semi-permeable)
What is the Gibbs Donnan Equilibrium
-when two solutions are separated by a membrane that is permeable to some ions but is not to others an electrochemical equilibrium is established
-electrical and chemical energies on either side of the membrane are equal and opposite to each other
Conservation of mass principle
the total mass of a substance after dispersion in the fluid compartment will be the same as the total mass injected into the compartment.
If none of the substance leaks out of the compartment, the total mass of substance in the compartment (Volume B × Concentration B) will equal the total mass of the substance injected
Describe the fluid exchange and osmotic equilibrium
-Distribution of fluid between intracellular & extracellular compartments determined by osmotic effect of small solutes.
-Electrolytes or small ions (i.e.: sodium & chloride) determine distribution of fluids across the semi-permeable cell membrane
-Osmotic factors cause fluids to shift between compartments
What is the rate of osmosis?
The rate of diffusion of water is called the are of osmosis
What is the osmolality?
Osmoles / kg of water
What is osmolarity?
Osmoles / liter of solution
What is osmosis?
-the net diffusion of water across a selective membrane
-high water concentration to low water concentration
What is osmotic pressure?
-refers to the amount of pressure required to prevent osmosis
-Pressure applied in opposite direction of osmosis
Total osmolarity of both the interstitial fluid and plasma, and intracellular fluid?
Total osmolarity of each compartment @ 300 mOsm/L
Net effect of an isotonic solution?
increase in extracellular fluid volume
Net effect of a hypertonic solution?
an increase in extracellular volume (greater than the volume of fluid added), a decrease in intracellular volume, and a rise in osmolarity in both compartments