Average intake of water for a healthy person?
2000mL of water per day
75% oral intake
25% extracted from solid food
Daily water losses come from?
800-1200mL Urine
250mL Stool
600mL Insensible losses (75% skin, 25% lungs)
+ Fever, hypermetabolism, hyperventilation
To clear the products of metabolism, the kidneys must excrete how much urine?
A minimum of 500-800mL of urine per day, regardless of the amount of oral intake.
What is the most common fluid disorder in surgical patients?
Extracellular volume deficit
Differentiate signs of acute versus chronic ECF volume deficit.
Acute volume deficit: CV and CNS signs
Chronic deficits: Tissue signs
The most common cause of volume deficit in surgical patients?
Loss of GI fluids
Causes of extracellular volume excess?
Symptoms are pulmonary and cardiovascular.
Causes of dilutional hyponatremia?
Causes of depletional hyponatremia?
There is usually a Concomitant ECF volume deficit.
Causes of hyperosmolar hyponatremia?
Excess of solute relative to free water
Computation for the corrected sodium concentration in hyponatremic, hyperglycemic patients?
For every 100mg/dL increment in plasma glucose above normal, plasma sodium should decrease by 1.6mEq/L.
Pseudohyponatremia is caused by?
Extreme elevations in plasma lipids and proteins
No true decrease in extracellular sodium relative to water
How to determine cause of hyponatremia?
Hypervolemic hypernatremia is caused by?
Laboratory findings in hypervolemic hypernatremia?
2. Urine osmolarity >300 mOsm/L
Causes of normovolemic hypernatremia?
Labs in hypovolemic hypernatremia?
2. Urine osmolarity <300-400 mOsm/L (>400 in nonrenal water loss)
Symptomatic hypernatremia manifests at what sodium level?
> 160 mEq/L
Pathophysiology of symptomatic hypernatremia?
Water shifts from the ICF to ECF in response to a hyperosmolar extracellular space, resulting in cellular dehydration. This can put traction on the cerebral vessels and lead to SAH.
Classic signs of hypovolemic hypernatremia?
*Others: Dry, sticky mucous membranes
How much of the total body potassium is in the extracellular compartment?
2%
Causes of hyperkalemia?
Symptoms of hyperkalemia?
GI (nausea, vomiting, intestinal colic, diarrhea) Weakness, ascending paralysis, respiratory failure ECG changes (high peaked T waves-- early, widened QRS complex, flattened p wave, prolonged PR interval-- first degree block, sine wave formation, ventricular fibrillation), arrhythmia, arrest
Causes of hypokalemia?