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Composition of Fluid & Electrolytes

The document discusses the composition of electrolytes in body fluids, including their roles and regulation. Sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, calcium, magnesium, and proteins are the major electrolytes present in extracellular fluid and intracellular fluid. Imbalances in electrolytes can cause various clinical issues related to fluid balance, acid-base balance, and other physiological functions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
164 views

Composition of Fluid & Electrolytes

The document discusses the composition of electrolytes in body fluids, including their roles and regulation. Sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate, calcium, magnesium, and proteins are the major electrolytes present in extracellular fluid and intracellular fluid. Imbalances in electrolytes can cause various clinical issues related to fluid balance, acid-base balance, and other physiological functions.

Uploaded by

Dwi Siregar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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COMPOSITION OF FLUID &

ELECTROLYTES
Editor:
dr. Husnil Kadri, M.Kes

Biochemistry Departement
Medical Faculty Of Andalas University
Padang
Electrolyte Composition of Body Fluids
Electrolyte Composition of Body Fluid
Electolyte Plasma(mEq/L Interstetiel Intracelluler
(mEq/KgH2o) (mEq/KgH2o)
Cation:
Na+ 142 145 10
K+ 4 4 159
Ca2+ 5 3 1
Mg2+ 2 2 40
Total 153 154 210
Anion:
Cl- 103 117 3

HCO3- 25 28 7
Protein 17 - 45
Others 8 9 155
Total 153 154 210
Electrolyte Balance
• Electrolytes are salts, acids, and bases,
but electrolyte balance usually refers only
to salt balance
• Salts are important for:
– Neuromuscular excitability
– Secretory activity
– Membrane permeability
– Controlling fluid movements
• Salts enter the body by ingestion and are
lost via perspiration, feces, and urine
4
THE MAJOR COMPOSITION
OF ECF & ICF
ICF (mEq/L) ECF (mEq/L)
Sodium 20 135 - 145
Potassium 150 3- 5
Chloride --- 98 - 110
Bicarbonate 10 20 - 25
Phosphate 110-115 5
Protein 75 10

5
Sodium in Fluid and Electrolyte
Balance
• Sodium holds a central position in fluid and
electrolyte balance
• Sodium salts:
– Account for 90-95% of all solutes in the ECF
– Contribute 280 mOsm of the total 300 mOsm
ECF solute concentration
• Sodium is the single most abundant cation in
the ECF
• Sodium is the only cation exerting significant
osmotic pressure
6
Sodium in Fluid and Electrolyte Balance

• Changes in plasma sodium levels affect:


– Plasma volume, blood pressure
– ICF and interstitial fluid volumes
• Renal acid-base control mechanisms are
coupled to sodium ion transport

7
Regulation of Sodium Balance:
Aldosterone
• Adrenal cortical cells are directly
stimulated to release aldosterone by
elevated K+ levels in the ECF
• Aldosterone brings about its effects
(diminished urine output and increased
blood volume) slowly
Sodium (Na+)

Key role (s): plasma osmolality and water balance

Regulation: Thirst
Kidney
Na+/K+ ATPase pumps
Na+/H+ pumps
Blood volume status
 ADH (saves water) when  blood volume
 aldosterone (saves salt) when  Na+ ( renin)

Clinical: Na disorders = water disorders


Hyponatremia
Hypernatremia
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Hyponatremia

Sodium and/or Water

Symptoms Possible causes


nausea/vomiting excessive renal loss of salt
weakness (aldosterone deficiency)
mental confusion excessive ADH secretion
headache water overload
possible coma if too (congestive heart failure)
low

11
Hypernatremia

Sodium and/or Water

Symptoms Possible causes


dehydration extrarenal loss (diarrhea)
thirst renal losses ( water intake)
fever impaired secretion or ability to
tremors respond to ADH (diabetes insipidus)
lethargy excessive water loss
seizures hyperaldosteronism
coma

12
Potassium (K+)

Key role (s): Regulate cardiac contraction and rhythm,


muscle contraction

Regulation: Kidneys
Na+/K+ -ATPase pump
Acid/Base balance (i.e., K+/H+ pumps)
 Aldosterone results in  K+ excretion and
shift extracellular to intracellular.

Clinical: Hypokalemia
Hyperkalemia

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Hypokalemia

Potassium and/or Water

Symptom Possible Causes


weakness extra -> intracellular shifts
fatigue (alkalosis, diuretics)
anorexia extrarenal losses
nausea (excessive diarrhea)
arrhythmia renal losses
cardiac arrest (renal disease)
hyperaldosteronism

14
Hyperkalemia

Potassium and/or Water

Symptoms Possible Causes


muscular weakness intra -> extracellular shifts
tingling (acidosis)
numbness renal disfunction
confusion (K+ secretion deficiency)
cardiac arrhythmias adrenal disfunction
cardiac arrest (hypoaldosteronism)
leukemia
15
Calcium (Ca2+)

Key role (s): primarily resides in bone, muscular contraction,


neurotransmission, membrane transport,
enzymes, and blood coagulation

Regulation: Kidney (reabsorbed in the proximal tubules)


Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
Vitamin D – active form controls homeostasis
Calcitonin – exact mechanism not known
Clinical: Hypocalcemia – hypoparathyroidism
Hypercalcemia – hyperparathyroidism

Serum Calcium = Ca2+ionized (45%) + Caprotein-bound (45%)


+ Cacomplexed to anions (10%)
16
Magnesium (Mg2+)

Key role (s): enzyme cofactor; calcium and bone homeostasis

Regulation: Kidney
 PTH,  serum Mg2+
aldosterone

Clinical: hypomagnesemia – decreased intake


- increased loss

hypermagnesemia – usually increased intake of


magnesium or renal disease

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Chloride (Cl-)

Key role (s): Maintains osmolality, blood volume, electric


neutrality

Regulation: kidneys (reabsorbed in the proximal tubules)


aldosterone

Clinical: Hypochloremia – similar causes as hyponatremia,


prolonged vomiting, high [bicarbonate] associated
metabolic alkalosis

Hyperchloremia – similar causes as hypernatremia,


dehydration, low [bicarbonate] associated with
prolonged diarrhea or metabolic acidosis
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Bicarbonate (HCO3-)

Key role (s): determines pH (along with H+); buffering


the blood and maintaining acid/base equilibrium

Regulation: kidneys (reabsorption in the tubules)


lungs

Clinical: Acid/Base disorders

CO2 + H2O  H2CO3  HCO3- + H+

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Calcium, phosphate, and magnesium metabolism
Protein Imbalances
• Plasma proteins(especially albumin) are
important determinants of plasma volume

• Hyperproteinemia is rare
– Occurs with dehydration-induced
hemoconcentration

10/1/2019 21
Hypoproteinemia
• Caused by
– Anorexia
– Malnutrition
– Starvation
– Fat dieting
– Poorly balanced vegetarian diets

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Hypoproteinemia:
Clinical Manifestations
• Edema (b/c insufficient oncotic pressure to “hold” water in
vascular space)

• Slow healing
• Anorexia
• Fatigue
• Anemia
• Muscle loss
• Ascites (same reason as edema)
10/1/2019 23
Components of Whole Blood

Plasma
(55% of whole blood)

Buffy coat:
leukocyctes and
platelets
(<1% of whole blood) Formed
elements
Erythrocytes
1 Withdraw blood 2 Centrifuge (45% of whole blood)
and place in tube

• Hematocrit
• Males: 47% ± 5%
• Females: 42% ± 5%
Blood Plasma
• Blood plasma components:
– Water = 90-92%
– Proteins = 6-8%
– Organic nutrients – glucose, carbohydrates,
amino acids
– Electrolytes – sodium, potassium, calcium,
chloride, bicarbonate
– Nonprotein nitrogenous substances – lactic acid,
urea, creatinine
– Respiratory gases – oxygen and carbon dioxide
Formed Elements
• Formed elements comprise 45% of
blood
• Erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets
make up the formed elements
– Only WBCs are complete cells
– RBCs have no nuclei or organelles, and
platelets are just cell fragments
• Most blood cells do not divide but are
renewed by cells in bone marrow
NON-ELECTROLYTES
Ureum
• Kadar ureum serum mencerminkan
keseimbangan antara produksi dan
ekskresi.
• Peningkatan kadar ureum disebut uremia.
• Uremia prerenal perombakan protein
meningkat .
• Uremia renal  gagal ginjal.
• Uremia postrenal  obstruksi saluran urin
10/1/2019 28
NON-ELECTROLYTES

• Di Amerika Serikat, kadar nitrogen ditetap-


kan sebagai Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN).
• Nilai BUN serum normal = 8 – 25 mg/dl.
• Nitrogen menyusun 28/60 dari berat ureum.
• Kadar ureum dapat dihitung dari BUN dgn
menggunakan perkalian 2,14.

10/1/2019 29
NON-ELECTROLYTES

Kreatinin
• Adalah produk akhir dari metabolisme
kreatin.
• Kreatin terdapat hampir di semua otot
rangka berupa fosfokreatin.
• Sebagian kecil kreatin berubah menjadi
kreatinin.

10/1/2019 30
NON-ELECTROLYTES

• Kreatinin ini akan dibawa ke ginjal.


• Kadar kreatinin sebanding dengan massa
otot rangka.
• Kegiatan otot tidak banyak berpengaruh.
• Kadar pada pria = 0,6 – 1,3 mg/dl sedang-
kan pada wanita = 0,5 – 1 mg/dl
• Kreatinin serum meningkat pada gagal
ginjal
10/1/2019 31
NON-ELECTROLYTES

• Kadar BUN yang meningkat, tetapi kadar


kreatinin serum normal berarti uremia non-
renal.
• Kalau kreatinin serum sangat meningkat,
maka akan diekskresi melalui saluran
cerna.

10/1/2019 32
Reference

1. Beaudoin, D. Electrolytes and ion sensitive


electrodes. PPT. 2003.
2. Kersten. Fluid and electrolytes. PPT.
3. Marieb, EN. Fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base
balance. PPT. Pearson Education, Inc. 2004
4. Widmann, FK. Clinical Interpretation of
Laboratory Tests. 9th Ed. terjemahan

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