Water and Electrolyte Balance Flashcards
(138 cards)
4 factors which must be controlled in the human body to maintain homeostasis
- Water balance b/w fluid compartments
- Electrolyte balance
- pH: 7.40
- Temperature: 37°C
All water w/in cell membranes; the medium through which CHEMICAL RXNS OF CELLULAR METABOLISM OCCUR
Intracellular fluid
Major ions/constituents in intracellular fluid
- Cations: K+ and Mg2+
- Anions: protein, organic phosphates, sulfates
- Low concentrations of: Na+, Cl-, HCO3-
All water outside of cell membranes; the medium through which all METABOLIC CHANGES occur
Extracellular fluid
Major ions/constituents in extracellular fluid
Interstitial fluid and plasma
The directly measureable plasma is known as what?
Intravascular fluid (plasma)
Major ions/constituents in intravascular fluid
- Large amount of protein
- High concentrations: Na+, Cl-
- Moderate concentrations: HCO3-
- Low concentrations: Ca2+, Mg2+, phosphate, sulfate, K+, organic acids
Fluid that directly bathes the cells of body includes pericardial, pleural, peritoneal, and synovial body fluids; cannot be sampled for direct measurement
Interstitial fluid
Major ions/constituents in interstitial fluid
- High: Na+, Cl-
- Medium: HCO3-
- Low: NO proteins
The force that tends to move water from dilute solutions to concentrated solutions
Osmotic pressure
How do osmotic pressure differences maintain the composition of extracellular and intracellular fluids?
Predominance of K+ in the intracellular fluid and Na+ in the extracellular fluid PLUS plasma proteins that are the major contributors to the osmotic pressure b/w these compartments
What maintains electroneutrality b/w compartments?
Gibbs-Donnan Equilibrium
How does the Gibbs-Donnan equilibrium maintain the composition of extracellular and intracellular fluids
It maintains the electroneutrality b/w compartments by keeping the anion total equaling the total cations (the use of non-diffusable anions is important)
3 chemical constituents that contribute to osmotic pressure differences b/w EXTRACELLULAR and INTRACELLULAR fluid compartments
- K+
- Na+
- Plasma proteins
3 means by which water balance is maintained b/w INTERSTITIAL and INTRACELLULAR fluid compartments
- Membrane characteristics
- Colloid osmotic pressure (COP)
- NaK- ATPase pump
How do passive transport differences maintain an equilibrium b/w intravascular and interstitial fluids, including importance of maintaining normal plasma protein concentrations in homeostasis?
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How do colloid osmotic pressure differences maintain an equilibrium between intravascular and interstitial fluids, including importance of maintaining normal plasma protein concentrations in homeostasis?
Protein in the plasma causes water to move into the plasma from the interstitial fluid b/c there is no protein in the ISF. This movement is from colloid osmotic pressure
How do hydrostatic pressure differences maintain an equilibrium between intravascular and interstitial fluids, including importance of maintaining normal plasma protein concentrations in homeostasis
Hydrostatic pressure from the heart causes fluid to move from the plasma into the interstitial fluid
How do colloid osmotic pressure differences maintain an equilibrium between interstitial and intracellular fluids
Because there is protein in the cells and not in the interstitial fluid, water flows from the interstitial fluid to the cells due to osmotic pressure
How do membrane characteristics (lipid solubility, size of solute, water permeability, and charge) maintain an equilibrium between interstitial and intracellular fluids
Permeability is directly related to lipid solubility and size and inversely related to the water solubility of the solute
How does the NA-K-ATPase pump maintain an equilibrium between interstitial and intracellular fluids
The pump actively pumps sodium out of cells and pumps in K+ maintaining equilibrium
Why is the NaK-ATPase pump necessary for water balance?
Keeps the water balanced b/w the interstitial and intercellular fluids
NaK-ATPase pump movement of substances IN and OUT of the cell
- Water?
- Na+?
- K+?
- Water: out (follows Na+)
- Na+: out
- K+: in
How does the hypothalamus regulate water balance?
Neurons shrink and hypothalamus signals need for water