MLT130 CC Osmolality & Electrolytes & Trace Elements
What are the 2 major body compartments (at cellular level)?
1. Intracellular fluid (ICF) 2. Extracellular fluid (ECF)
Four Colligative Properties
1. Vapor pressure depression 2. Boiling point elevation 3. Melting point depression 4. Osmotic pressure
Osmolality Reference Range
275-295 mOsm/kg (milliosmoles per kilogram)
Bicarbonate (HCO₃)
2nd major EC anion Sometimes ordered as Total CO₂ RR = 22-28 mmol/L 95% total plasma CO₂ is bicarbonate
Normal Urine Concentration
300-900 mOsm/kg. can range from 50-1200 MOsm/kg due to kidney\'s ability to concentration/dilute urine to maintain tight control of plasma osm.
Total Body Water
50-60% body weight in males 45-50% in females (more fat cells)
Function of ADH on the kidneys
ADH acts in the distal portion of the renal tubule (Distal Convoluted Tubule) as well as on the collecting duct and causes the retention of water, but not solute. ADH activity effectively dilutes the blood (decreasing the concentrations of solutes such as sodium).
Major body anions
Chlorine (Cl⁻) bicarbonate or hydrogen carbonate (HCO₃⁻) Hydrogen Phosphate (HPO₄⁻2) Sulfate (SO₄ ⁻2)
Hypernatremia
Dehydrated - blood is dry. Increased blood levels of sodium, is associated with values of >150 mmol/L and is always hyperosmolar, (a greater deficiency of EC than of sodium)
Low Na = Dilutional
Dilutional = high water which appears that low Na Ex. decrease OSM
Low levels of Osmolality - disorders
Excessive fluid intake Hyponatremia Overhydration Paraneoplastic Syndromes assoc. with lung cancer Syndrom of inappropriate ADH secretion
Osmolal Gap RR
Gap <10 mOsm/kg = NOT normal Gap >30 mOsm/kg = grave prognosis (↑↑ alcohol)
ADH (antidiuretic hormone)
High levels of ADH prevent urination Low levels of ADH body produces large levels of urine
ANP (Atrial natriuretic peptide)
Hormone that has opposite effect from aldosterone. High BP in heart, ANP gets release from atria which increases GFR & decrease Na reabsorption in nephrons which promotes rapid diuresis & Na excretion (natriuresis) in response to persistent hypervolumia
What are the major contributors to OP in each compartment?
ICF = Potassium (K+) ECF = Sodium (NA+) IV = plasma proteins (esp. albumin) = oncotic pressure
Hypokalemia Process
In metabolic alkalosis, K+ moves from ECF into the cells as H+ moves in the opposite direction.
Causes of Hypernatremia
Ingestion of large amount of sodium salts admin of hyperton NaCl or NaHCO3 primary hyperaldosteronism (conn syndrome) excessive sweating diabetes insipidus osmotic diuresis
ECF has 2 subdivisions
Interstitial Fluid Intravascular (IV) fluid
Electrolytes
Ions are charged particles. Substances that dissociate into ions when placed in solution.
FP depression occurs because...
It is important to realize that freezing point depression occurs because the concentration of water molecules in a solution is less than the concentration in pure water. The nature of the solute doesn\'t matter.
Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone Pathway
JGA cells sense low plasma volume/low BP in afferent arteriole. this releases renin which converts angiotensin to stimulate aldosterone to be released from AC, which increases NA reabsorption in DCT/CT in exchange for potassium excretion which increases plasma Na+, water follows to increase volume & BP
Potassium Regulations
Kidney can regulate increase K+ so it directly activates aldosterone. Kidney regulates EC K+ filtered glom to reabsorbed in PCT.
Chloride
Major EC anion RR = 99-109 mmol/L Chloride function w/Na+ to maintain water & OP balance, therefore [CL-] changes with [Na+] wieh fludi shifts between ICF & ECF
Potassium
Major intracellular cation (98% within cells) Plasma K+ = Low. RR 3.5-5.0 mmol/L NA+/K+ pump keeps NA+ EC K& K+ IC in balance (Na-K-ATPase Pump) Body uses more ATP to run NA+/K pump for any other energy required function.
Measuring Osmolality
Measure colligative properties = proteries affected by number of particles in solution (freezing, point, boiling point, vapor pressure) Common method = Freezing point depression Instrument = osmometer
Osmolality/Osmolarity
Measure of number of dissolved particles (solutes) in a solution
Hypokalemia Conditions
Metabolic alkalosis, diuretic admin, increased GI loss, increase urinary loss.
Hyponatremia
Na <136 mmol/L = refection of Na:plasma volume ratio, not total body Na content
Regulation of body sodium performed by kidneys
Na filters thru glomerulus and 70% of NA is reabsorbed by AT in PCT. NA reabsorption in DCTR/CT under aldosterone control.
RR - Rule of 4
Na+ 140 K+ 40 Cl¯ 104 HCO₃ 24
Distribution 4 Major Electrolytes
Na⁺ = major extracellular cation K⁺ = major intracellular cation Cl⁻ = major extracellular anion HCO₃ = both in/out (ECF>ICF)
Four major electrolytes
Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, HCO₃⁻ (total CO₂) These 4 are measured on lytes order
Anions
Negative charge ion
What happens when osmolality is increased?
OSM increases, the body releases ADH, this causes kidneys to reabsorb H₂O, resulting in more concentrated urine. the reabsorbed H₂O dilutes the blood, allowing to fall back to normal.
Hypertonic - OSM
OSM level high (increased sodium) in ECF the solute increases in ECF the water decreases to ICF water shifts from ECF to ICF to est. osmotic balance. Cells may SHRINK)
Hypotonic - OSM
OSM level low (decreased sodium) in ECF the solute decreases in ECF the water increases to ICF water shifts from ECF to ICF to re-establish osmotic balance. (Cells May SWELL)
osmolal gap
Osmolal Gap = Measured osmolality-calculated osmolality. an increased osmolal gap indicates presence of unaccounted solutes, which include ingested volatiles such as methanol, ethylene glycol, and isopropanol, high trig., high proteins. -increased gaps are also observed in metabolic conditions e.g. ketoacidosis, presence of ketone bodies adds to the measured osmolality
Dilutional Hyponatremia
Patients who retain excess water in assoc with weight gain or excess edema
Cations
Positive charge ion
Calculate Plasma Osmolality from NA, Glu, Urea
Posm = 1.86[NA+] + [glucose]/18 + [bun]/2.8 +9
Sodium = Major ECF cation
RR plasma = 136-145 mmol/L (mEq/L) Function: maintain H2O distribution & plasma OP (osmotic pressure). Sodium also functions with (K+) to maintain resting membrane potential & allow neuromuscular excitability in muscle & nerve cells.
Potassium Functions
Regulates many cells processes (enzyme co-factor) Neuromuscular excitability: resting membrane potential depends on proper ratio of EC NA+ to IC K+ (balance resting potential)
Principle of FP depression
Serum (or urine) placed in controlled cooling bath becomes supercool to -7°C (below FP) - it is vibrated rapidly which releases heat of fusion the sample reaches FP the you measure FP temp
What are the two molecules that are major contributors to osmotic (plasma) pressure of ECF
Sodium & chloride (NaCl)
Major Body Cations
Sodium (NA⁺) Potassium (K⁺) Magnesium (Mg ⁺2) Calcium (Ca⁺2)
Sodium functions
Sodium also functions (with potassium) to maintain resting membrane potential & allow neuromuscular excitability in muscle & nerve cells
Who are the contributors that maintain plasma osmolality?
Sodium, Water, ADH Glucose & Urea
Major contributor to osmolality in ECF
Sodium. high or low levels of sodium - levels of water increase/decrease, to maintain osmotic balance - net movement of water into cells -> cells either shrink or swell
Hormone ANP, BNP, CNP
Stimulus: ↑ ECF Site: collecting duct Effect: ↓NaCl & H₂O reabsorption
Hormone ADH
Stimulus: ↑ Plasma osmol ↓ ECF Site: distal tubule & collecting duct Effect: ↑ H₂O reabsorption
Hormone Aldosterone
Stimulus: ↑Angiotensin II, ↑ plasma K⁺ Site: distal tubule, collecting ducts Effect: ↑ NaCL & H₂O reabsorption
Hormone Urodilatin
Stimulus: ↑ECF Site: collecting duct Effect: ↓NaCl & H₂O reabsorption
Hormone Angiotensin II
Stimulus: ↑renin Site: Proximal tubule Effect: ↑ NACl & H₂O reabsorption
Decreased ECF Sodium
Symptoms of low Na not evident til <125mmol/L. Decrease ECF Na which causes water shifts in ECF to ICF causing braine cells to swell, severe symptoms
SIADH
The syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone hypersecretion (SIADH). Excessive release of antidiuretic hormone (ADH or vasopressin) from the posterior pituitary gland or another source. The result is hyponatremia and sometimes fluid overload. Found in patients diagnosed with pneumonia, brain tumors, head trauma, strokes, meningitis, encephalitis, or small-cell carcinoma of the lung.
Major contributors of OP can upset?
any of the major contributors in OP (K+, NA+, IV) When any of these have an upset balance of solutes in each compartment - this will lead to change in water distribution to balance osmotic pressure
Interstitial fluid
between cells & outside cells, by no within blood vessels; separated from ICF by plasma membrane (PM)
Colligative Properties
colligative properties of solutions are properties that depend upon the concentration of solute molecules or ions, but not upon the identity of the solute.
Sodium - decrease ↓ plasma Na⁺
decrease in sodium = decrease plasma osm (↓solute ↑H₂O in ECF) causes H₂O to move from ECF to ICF to equalize OP - which leads to decreased plasma volume
OSM increases with ...
dehydration
High Levels of Osmolality - disorders
dehydration, diabetes insipidus ethylene glycol poisoning, hyperglycemia hypenatremia, Uremia Methanol poisoning stroke or head trama resulting in dificient ADH secretion
Low Na = Depletional
depletional = renal or nonrenal loss = true NA loss
Low Na - artifactual (pseudo)
displacement of plasma water due to thigh lipids or proteins
Major \"lytes\" in ECF & ICF
each compartment (ICF & ECF) = electroneutral where sum positive = sum negative.
Hyponatremia
hypo [deficiency] + new latin natrium [sodium] + emia [blood]
Depletional-type hyponatremia - name conditions
hypoosmotic hyponatremia - due to excessive loss of Na. Also, osmotic diuresis, adrenal insufficiency & diuretics
Sodium - increase ↑ plasma Na⁺
increase in sodium will increase plasma osm (↑ solute ↓H₂O in ECF) causes H₂O to move from ICF to ECF which leads to increased plasma volume
ICF (intracellular fluid)
inside cell
Electrolytes (lytes)
ions that carry electric charge; substances that dissociate into ions when placed in solution
Osmolality
is a test that measures the concentration of all chemical particles found in the fluid part of blood. (plasma osmolality)
Dilutional Hyponatremia conditions
liver failure, congestive heart failure (CHF), renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, inappropriate ADH secretion
ECF (extracellular fluid)
outside cell
OSM decreases with ...
overhydration
Hypokalemia
plasma K+ concentration <3.5 mmol/L. Is caused by movement of K+ into the cell from the ECF space, increased output, or decreased intake.
Osmotic Pressure (OP)
presence of solutes (especially lytes) holding water in a compartment (water follows solute)
ADH
related mechanism: increases water reabsorption in response to high plasma osmolality
Osmotic Pressure (OP)
water moves randomly between compartments by osmosis (from high conc. to low conc. across semiperm. membrane.
Intravascular Fluid (IV)
within blood vessels (capillaries surround cells/tissue beds); separated from interstitial by capillary wall