fluids & electrolytes Flashcards

1
Q

what affects ECF vs ICF

A

ECF: changes in sodium CONTENT
ICF: changes in serum sodium concentration

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2
Q

ECF is assessed via P.E. list some signs of low ECF

A
  • Sx: thirst, lightheadedness, palpitations
  • signs: orthostasis, urine output, dry mouth/moist membranes, dry axilla, low/high JVP, skin turgor or edema
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3
Q

2 physiologic stimuli for ADH release

A

high osmolality & low volume

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4
Q

what stimulates water absorption w/o sodium

A

ADH

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5
Q

hyponatremia means there is water loss from which compartment?

A

ICF.. it moved into the ECF

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6
Q

what 2 things cause hyponatremia w/ high osmolality

normal osm: 275 to 290 mOsm/kg

A

hyperglycemia
mannitol infusion

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7
Q

hyponatremia + normal ECF (net water gain, no change in salt) is caused by what 4 conditions?

A
  • SIADH
  • primary polydipsia
  • hypothyroidism
  • adrenal insufficiency
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8
Q

hyponatremia + high ECF (++ water, + salt) is caused by what 4 conditions?

THEY HAVE EDEMA

A

renal failure
heart failure
liver failure
nephrotic syndrome

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9
Q

hyponatremia + low ECF (- water, – salt) is caused by what 4 conditions?

A
  • extra renal: vomiting, diarrhea
  • renal: diuretics, osmotic diuresis
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10
Q

what are 5 symptoms of hyponatremia

A
  • HA
  • nausea
  • confusion
  • falls
  • seizures

excess water in cells including brain cells

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11
Q

treatment of extreme hyponatremia

A

3% hypertonic saline

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12
Q

why do you make more urine with DI?

A

thirst center works fine. so you drink water which decreases osmolality and makes ADH stop being secreted causing you to NOT hold onto water = more urine.

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13
Q

2 causes of central DI and 3 causes of nephrogenic DI

A
  • Central: neurosurgery, trauma
  • nephrogenic: lithium, hypokalemia, hypercalcemia
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14
Q

you do the water deprivation test & the urine osmolality is unchanged what is this?

A
  • DI
  • if they respond to DDAVP then its central DI
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15
Q

when doing the water deprivation test, what result cues you to check for DDAVP response?

A

if urine osm. does not change

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16
Q

you do the water dep. test and urine osmo increases, what does this mean?

A

psychogenic polydipsia

17
Q

what causes hypernatremia + normal ECF (pure water loss)

A

DI

18
Q

3 things that cause hypernatremia + low ECF (— water loss, - salt loss)

A

GI (diarrhea)
skin (burns, sweat)
renal (diuretics)

19
Q

2 things that cause hypernatremia + high ECF (+ water gain, +++ salt gain)

A

hypertonic fluid administration
mineralocorticoid excess

20
Q

treatment of volume contraction (sodium loss)

A

give it back– LR or 0.9% normal saline

21
Q

how does hypokalemia affect cardiac cell function?

A

hyperpolarizes the cell membrane causing delayed ventricular repolarization, ventricular instability, arrhythmias

22
Q

how does hyperkalemia affect cardiac cell function? (5)

A
  • sustained subthreshold depol.
  • delayed depolar.
  • EKG changes
  • arrhythmias
  • death
23
Q

where is most of k+ reabsorbed?

A
  • proximal convoluted tubule
24
Q

3 general causes of hypokalemia

A
  • decreased dietary intake
  • increased urine losses– diuretics
  • increased stool losses– diarrhea illnesses, laxative use
25
Q

what level do you start replacing K+

A

3.5

26
Q

4 general causes of hyperkalemia

A
  • transcellular shift: tissue breakdown, acidosis, use of BB, insulin deficiency
  • increased intake
  • decreased renal function– AKI, CKD, ESRD
  • hypoaldosteronism
27
Q

4 steps to treating hyperkalemia

A
  1. restore excitaility– calcium fluconate or CaCl
  2. Insulin + glucose (if acidosis, add sodium bicard), B2 agonist
  3. Kayexalate (sodium polystyrene sulfonate
  4. enhance urine output– IVF, diuretics, dialysis

C BIG K DIE