Control and abnormalities of body water Flashcards

1
Q

Define Hyponatraemia

A

When water content has increased and decreased the original sodium ion concentration

Hyponatremia (usually) means hypo-osmolality body fluids

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2
Q

Define Hypernatraemia

A

When water content has decreased and increased the original sodium ion concentration

Hypernatremia always means hyperosmolality

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3
Q

Where are osmoreceptors found and what do they sense?

A

Osmoreceptors: sensory receptors located in hypothalamus sense changes in osmolality of ECFV

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4
Q

What does an increase in osmolarity stimulate?

A

Thirst

Secretion of vasopressin (ADH)

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5
Q

Describe the mechanism of action of ADH

A

On image

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6
Q

What does a large arteriole drop in blood pressure secrete (clue: a hormone)

A

However, a large drop in arterial pressure is also a powerful stimulus for release

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7
Q

Describe the pathway of neurones that leads to the secretion of ADH

A

On image

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8
Q

How and where is angiotensin produced?

A

On image

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9
Q

Define Hyperosmotic thirst

A

If PLASMA OSMOLARITY INCREASES YOU BECOME THIRSTY

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10
Q

Define Hypovolemic thirst

A

IF YOU LOSE A LOT OF BLOOD YOU BECOME THRISRTY

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11
Q

Define solute load

A

Kidney must excrete significant amount of metabolic waste product in solute form: solute load

Estimated as 10 x BW in kg (e.g., 600 mOsmol for 60 kg person)

If max urine concentration is 1200 mOsmol L-1, then 0.5 L is required to excrete this load

If min urine concentration is 50, then 12 L would be required to excrete the same load

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12
Q

What 2 limits can the kidneys control water excretion

A

Dehydration

Over-hydration

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13
Q

Describe the abnormalities of excess water intake and water depletion

A

Water excess:
Excessive water intake
Impairment in renal water excretion

Water depletion:
Insufficient water intake
Impairment in renal water reabsorption

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14
Q

What can Continued water intake with failure to suppress ADH lead to?

Give some examples

A

water overload and hyponatremia

Some examples
Vomiting, diarrhoea
Certain drugs (MDMA, ‘ecstacy’ promotes ADH secretion)
Ectopic secretion of ADH (syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion, SIADH)
Hypocortisolism
Primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison’s disease)

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15
Q

What is a syndrome of inapprotiorate ADH secretion?

A
  1. Excessive ADH reduces urinary excretion of water

Causes:

Low plasma soidum
Low plasma osmolarity
High urine osmolairty

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16
Q

What causes SI ADH?

A

Tumour - ectopic production of ADH: small cell carcinoma of the lung

CNS disturbance - enhanced ADH release, stroke, trauma, infection

Drugs - enhanced release of ADH or response to ADH, carbamazepine, prozac

17
Q

What people does dehydration occur in?

A

infants

elderly

people in coma

people with no access to water

18
Q

What conditions can cause dehydration?

A

Diabetes mellitus

impairment in ADH release

19
Q

What causes central diabetes insipidus?

What causes nephrogenic DI?

A
  1. Lack of secretion of ADH

Genetic mutations
Head trauma
The disease of the hypothalamus/ pituitary

  1. Impaired response to ADH

Mutation of ADH receptor
Mutation of ADH-dependant H2O- channels
Drugs e.g lithium