Body Fluids 1 and 2: Obejctives
Body Fluids 1 and 2: Obejctives
OBEJCTIVES:
Water content (total body water, or TBW) comprises about 60% of body weight.
The percentage varies between 50-70%, depending on gender and amount of
adipose tissue. Males tend to have a higher percentage of water than females.
Water content is inversely correlated with adipose tissue. Infants have up to 75%
body weight as water, which is why severe diarrhea can be life-threatening.
A simple tool is the 60-40-20 rule. Approximately 60% of body weight is water
(TBW), 40% of body weight is ICF, and 20% is ECF. (ICF is 2/3 of TBW, i.e.,
40% of body weight; ECF is 1/3 of TBW, i.e., 20% of body weight.)
The volumes of body fluid compartments are measured with a method based on
the principle of dilution.
A. Method
3. Knowing the amount present in the body (amount given any minus
loss during equilibration) and the measured concentration,
calculate the volume of distribution of the marker substance (the
volume it was dissolved in). This is the volume of that body fluid
compartment, e.g., volume of distribution of D20 is volume of
TBW, etc.
Volume = amount
concentration
B. Marker substances
Marker Substances
D20
TBW HT0
Antipyrene
Mannitol
ECF Inulin
Radioactive sulfate
Radioiodinated serum albumin (RISA)
Plasma Evan’s blue (dye that binds to serum
albumin)
= 1350 mg
90 mg/L
a. % can mean “g per 100 ml.” For example, 0.9% NaCl is 0.9 g
NaCl/100 ml. It’s weird, but that’s what it means.
b. mg % means “mg per 100 ml.” For example, 5 mg% KCl
means 5 mg KCl/100 ml.
2. Osmolarities of ECF and ICF are always equal in the steady state
(see Table above).
B. Method for analyzing fluid shift problems – do it this way every time!
1. Read the problem or case scenario and determine clearly what was
gained or lost. For example, if a person eats dry NaCl, then NaCl
was gained. If a person sweats profusely on a hot day, then NaCl
and water were lost.
2. Assume that any gain or loss from the body affects the ECF first.
A. How to analyze and calculate. Fluid shift problems can also be analyzed
quantitatively. That is, in addition to the qualitative approach above (e.g.,
whether osmolarity is increased or decreased, and whether ECF volume is
increased or decreased), we also can calculate the exact values for new
steady state osmolarity and body fluid volumes. That’s what I mean by
“quantitative.” To work these problems correctly and reliably, you must
perform the following steps in the following order. In the next section of
Examples, you will see how to work problems using these steps.
B. Examples
2 L of 0.45% NaCl
0.45 g/100 ml x 2000 ml ÷ 58
= 0.155 moles
g/mole
0.155 moles x 2 = 0.310 osmoles
= 310 mosmoles
2. Man with TBW= 45L, ECF volume=17L, and plasma osmolarity= 300
mOsm/L eats some yummy Sunchips (original) containing 450 mOsmoles
of NaCl. Being on a tight budget, he washes them down with 1.5 L of
water.
New osmolarity?
Direction of water shift?
Plasma protein inc, dec, or unchanged?
Hct inc, dec, or unchanged?
New plasma Na concentration (inc, dec, or unchanged)?
4. A man is injected with 2000 :Ci of tritiated water (HTO) and 4000 mg of
inulin. After equilibration, a plasma sample had an HTO concentration of
4 :Ci/100 ml and an inulin concentration of 16 mg/100 ml. During
equilibration, 20% of the inulin injected was excreted in the urine, and 2%
of the HTO injected was excreted. What are the man’s TBW, ECF, and
ICF volumes?
VII. ANSWERS