Fluid, Electrolyte & Acid-base Balance

NURS 101

46 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

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Front Back
Functions of water
Medium for transport
facilitate cellular metabolism
solvent
temperature regulation
digestion/elimination
tissue lubricant
Fluid compartments
ICF - intracellular, 70% total body water
ECF - extracellular, 30% body water
Infants and ECF
Infants have higher proportions of body fluids. ECF loss causes fluid deficits more easily in infants
Normal I & O
1500 - 3500/24H
Sensible/insensible loss
Sensible - can be measured: urine, defecation and wounds
insensible - can't be measured: evaporation through skin, water vapor from respiration
Electrolyte
Substance that can break into electrically charged particles called ions
Cation/anion
Cation - positively charged ion
anion - negatively charged ion
Osmosis
Major method of transporting body fluids. Water moves through a semi-permiable membrane (like cell walls) from an area of lesser solute concentration to an area of greater solute concentration.
Isotonic
A solution with the same osmolarity as plasma
Active transport
Movement against concentration gradient, requiring energy (ATP)
Hydrostatic pressure
Pressure exerted by the weight of water
Colloidal (or oncotic) pressure
The pulling pressure exerted by proteins
Normal plasma pH
7.35 - 7.45
3 mechanisms to regulate pH
Chemical buffer systems, renal system, respiratory mechanisms
Body's most common base
Bicarbonate ion (HCO3-), produced by pancreas, regulated by kidneys