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Fluids and Electrolytes. Staying Balanced Spring 2008. Water – H 2 O. “Universal solvent” 60% of body’s weight Cells “haf to have it.” –Arnold Schwarzenegger. How much is that?. 154# person x .60 (60%) = 92# Water is approx 8# per gallon 11 ½ gallons water (Obese people/ less)
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Fluids and Electrolytes Staying Balanced Spring 2008
Water – H2O • “Universal solvent” • 60% of body’s weight • Cells “haf to have it.” • –Arnold Schwarzenegger
How much is that? • 154# person x .60 (60%) = • 92# • Water is approx 8# per gallon • 11 ½ gallons water • (Obese people/ less) • (Thin people/ more) • Infants • Elders
Basic Cellular Review • The fundamental unit • Requires: • Cell membrane • Enzymes • Internal membranes • Genetic material
Basic tissue types • Epithelial • Connective • Muscle • Nervous
The cellular environment • All metabolic reactions occur • The precise regulation of volume and composition of body fluid is essential to health.
Body fluid compartments • Intracellular Fluid - ICF • Extracellular Fluid – ECF • Intravascular Fluid- Plasma • Interstitial Fluid
Intracellular - ICF • Fluid in all body cells • 75% of the water (60%) • 31.50 L (70 kg adult) • 40% of total body weight
Extracellular - ECF • 20% of water (60%) • 10.50 L (70 kg adult)) • Includes intravascular and interstitial compartments
ECF • Intravascular • 4% of (60%) • 7.5 L
ECF • Interstitial • 16% of (60%) • 17.5 L • Fluid between cells and outside the vascular bed • Connective tissue, cartilage, bone, CSF, intraocular fluid
Hydration • Water – Universal Solvent • Intake & Output (I&O)
Hydration • Homeostasis • The body’s need for balance
Aging and distribution of fluids • Newborns – TBW ~ 80% • Children – TBW ~ 60-65% • Elders – TBW < ~ 60%
Intake vs Output • Food - 1200 ml • Drink - 1000 ml • Metabolic sources - 300 ml = 2,500 ml • Lungs - 400 ml • Kidneys - 1500 ml • Skin - 400 ml • Intestine (Feces) - 200 ml = 2,500 ml
Hydration • Osmoreceptors - anterior hypothalamus • Baroreceptors - carotid sinus, aortic arch, kidneys • High and low blood pressure
Hydration • Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH) • If tide goes out • Pituitary Gland Excretes • Tide comes in!!! • Re-absorb from kidneys • Decrease urine • Thirst also regulates
Dehydration • Abnormal decrease in TBW • Thus the weigh-in at fires • Rarely involves only water loss • Electrolyte loss
Dehydration Causes • Signs and symptoms? • Treatment?
Causes of dehydration • GI losses • N/V/D • Insensible losses • Normal losses + with fever • Hyperventilation • High Environmental Temps • Increased sweating
Causes Of Dehydration • Internal losses • “Third” spacing • Peritonitis • Pancreatitis • Malnourished • No protein to retain water
Causes of Dehydration • Plasma Losses • Burns • Surgical Drains • Open Wounds
Signs And Symptoms • Signs of shock • Skin changes (turgor) • Orthostatic hypotension • Thirst • Increased pulse rate • Furrowed tongue
S/S, cont. • Decreased BP • Dry mucosa • Infants: Anterior fontanelle sunken • Dry diapers • Absent tears • Cap refill > 2 seconds • Dry mucosa
Treatment • O2 • ABCs • Fluids • Flavor? • Consider PASG • ECG
Overhydration – “No thanks I’m full.” • Edema • Peripheral vs. central (more later…) • Aggressive treatment if Pulmonary Edema
Overhydration • ABCs • O2 • Consider ETT • Meds: • NTG. • Lasix • M.S.
Fluid & Electrolyte Disturbances • Medical causes • Diabetes • Heat Emergencies • Blood Loss • Traumatic causes • Blood loss
Electrolytes • In H2O dissociate into ions • Cations = positive • Anions = negative
Principle CationsSodium-Potassium Pump • Sodium (Na+) • Prevalent in ECF • “Water follows it” • Nerve impulses • Hyper/ • Hyponatremia • Potassium (K+) • Prevalent in ICF • Nerve impulses • Hypo/ • Hyperkalemia
Other Cations • Calcium (Ca++) • Prevalent in ICF • Muscle contraction • Nerve impulse • Hypo/hypercalcemia
Other Cations • Magnesium (Mg++) • Present in ICF • Necessary for many processes • Found in some: • Antacids • Laxatives • Most associated with phosphate • Renal Functions
Principal Anions • Chloride (Cl-) • Present in ECF • Balances cations • Fluid balance • Renal function • Usually found hanging around sodium
Principal Anions • Bicarbonate (HCO3-) • Found in ECF • The Buffer • Neutralizes Acidic (H+) • Tx for acidosis
Anions • Phosphate (HPO4--) • Found in ICF - buffer • Energy stores • Mg++ in renal function
Electrolytes - mEq/L • Non-Electrolytes - • Glucose • Urea • Proteins
How does it get there? • Osmosis • Diffusion • Active Transport • Facilitated Diffusion
Isotonic • Hypertonic • Hypotonic • Osomotic gradient - difference in concentration
Osmosis • Movement of water (solvent) • Semi-permeable membrane • Towards highersoluteconcentration
Diffusion • Movement of solutes • Across membrane • Towards lesser solute concentration
Active transport • Movement of solutes • Across membrane • Against osmotic gradient • Requires energy (ATP) • Sodium-potassium pump
Facilitated diffusion • Helper proteins • Insulin • Open gate • Glucose
Osmotic Pressure • Governs movement of water and solutes across cell membrane • Pressure exerted by concentration of solutes • Pulls from other side of membrane
Blood Plasma • Colloid osmotic pressure • Plasma • Hydrostatic pressure • Blood pressure • Filtration
Edema • Localized • Site of injury • Organ systems - brain, lungs, heart, abdomen • Generalized • Dependent edema • Pitting edema
RELATIVE HYDRATION • Body water in interstitial spaces not available for metabolism • Relative dehydration
Edema • Decrease in production of plasma proteins • Liver disorder • Burns • Open wounds