Title: Body fluids compositions, and their measurements
1Body fluids compositions, and their measurements
2OBJECTIVES
- a)Discuss the distribution of total body H2O
(TWB) in the body - b) List the ionic composition of different body
compartments - Â
- c) Explain the principles of measurements
- Â
3Body as an open sytemBody exchanges materials
and energywith its surroundings
4Route Range (l/day) Regulatory influences
Insensible - lungs 0.3-0.4 Atmospheric vapor pressure (temperature)
Insensible - skin 0.35-0.4 10x increase in burn victims
Sweat 0.1-2 (per hour) Temperature, exercise
Feces 0.1-0.2 Diarrheal disease
Urine 0.5-1.4-20 Body fluid composition
5FACTORS AFFECTING
- Total Body H2O
- varies depending on body fat
- Infant 73-80
- Male adult 60
- Female adult 40-50
- Effects of obesity
- Old age 45
- Climate Level of physical activity
6PERCENTAGE OF H2O IN TISSUES
7FLUID COMPARTMENTS
- EXTRA CELLUAR
INTRA CELLULAR - FLUID
(cytosol)FLUID - PLASMA INTERSTITIAL
TRANSCELLULAR - FLUID
FLUID - CSF
- Intra ocular
- Pleural
- Peritoneal
- Synovial
- Digestive Secretions
8PERCENTAGE OF WATER IN TISSUES
Average 70 kg person total
body weight 42 litres total H2O
60 28 l. Intracellular fluid
(ICF) 40 14 l.
Extracellular fluid (ECF) 20 is
important in fluid therapy divided into ¾ ISF
and ¼ plasma water 10.5 l. Interstitial fluid
(ISF) 15 3.5 l. Plasma water
5
9Regulation of H2O Intake
- The hypothalamic thirst center is stimulated
- By a decline in plasma volume of 1015
- By increases in plasma osmolality of 12
- Via baroreceptor input, angiotensin II, and other
stimuli
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11Net Osmotic Force Development
- Semipermeable membrane
- Movement some solute obstructed
- H2O (solvent) crosses freely
- End point
- H2O moves until solute concentration on both
sides of the membrane is equal - OR, an opposing force prevents further movement
12Solutes dissolved particles
- Electrolytes charged particles
- Cations positively charged ions
- Na, K , Ca, H
- Anions negatively charged ions
- Cl-, HCO3- , PO43-
- Non-electrolytes - Uncharged
- Proteins, urea, glucose, O2, CO2
13APPROXIMATE IONIC COMPOSITION OF THE BODY H2O
COMPARTMENTS
14Summary of Ionic composition
15Intra-ECF H2O RedistributionPlasma vs.
Interstitium
- Balance of Starling Forces acting across the
capillary membrane - osmotic forces
- hydrostatic forces
- Plasma vs Interstitial Space
- -Balance between Hydrostatic and Colloid Osmotic
forces across the capillary membranes - Intracellular vs Extracellular
- Osmotic effect (e.g. electrolytes)
- ICFV is NOT altered by iso-osmotic changes in
extracellular fluid volume.
16Plasma Osmolarity Measures ECF Osmolarity
- Plasma is clinically accessible
- Dominated by Na and the associated anions
- Under normal conditions, ECF osmolarity can be
roughly estimated as POSM 2 Nap 270-290
mOSM
17Net Osmotic Force Development
Ionic composition very different -Total ionic
concentration very similar -Total osmotic
concentrations virtually identical
- Semipermeable membrane.
- Movement some solute obstructed.
- H2O (solvent) crosses freely.
- End point
- H2O moves until solute concentration on both
sides of the membrane is equal. - OR, an opposing force prevents further movement.
18Disorders of H2O Balance Dehydration
Cells lose H2O to ECF by osmosis cells shrink
2
ECF osmotic pressure rises
Excessive loss of H2O from ECF
3
1
(a) Mechanism of dehydration
19Primary Disturbance
- H2O moves out of cells
- ICF Volume decreases (Cells shrink)
- ICF Osmolarity increases
- Total body osmolarity remains higher than normal
- H2O moves into the cells
- ICF Volume increases (Cells swell)
- ICF Osmolarity decreases
- Total body osmolarity remains lower than normal
20CRITERIA FOR A SUITABEL DYE.
- BODY FLUID MARKER
- Must mix evenly throughout the compartment
- Non toxic, no physiological activity
- Even mixing
- Must have no effect of its own on the
distribution of H2O or other substances in the
body - Either it must be unchanged during the experiment
or if it changes , the amount changed must be
known. - The material should be relatively easy to measure.
21DILUTION PRINCIPLE
Principle of mass conservation Based on using a
marker whose concentration can be measured.
- Inject x gm of marker into compartment
- measure concentration at equilibrium (y gm/L)
- Since concentration mass/ volume
- Volume mass / concentration x/y L
C1V1C2V2
22Measuring Compartment Size Indirect METHOD
INDICATOR (DYE) DILUTION TECHNIQUE(Law of Mass
Conservation)
Based on concentration in a well-mixed substance
that distributes itself only in the compartment
of interest.
Volume (V)
Tracer Concentration (C)
Concentration Amount
Injected Volume of Distribution Amount of
Tracer Remained in Compartment A -
E Compartment Volume (A E)/C
23Indicators used for measuring plasma volume, ECF
volume and total body H2O
Compartment Criterion Indicators
Plasma Substance should not cross capillaries Evans blue dye radioiodinated fibrinogen radioiodinated albumin
ECF volume Substance should cross capillaries but not cross cell membranes Isotonic solutions of sucrose, inulin, mannitol, NaCl
Total body H2O (TBW) Substance distributes evenly in ICF ECF Heavy H2O, tritiated H2O, aminopyrine, antipyrine
24Total Body H2O (TBW)
- Deuterated H2O (D2O)
- Tritiated H2O (THO)
- Antipyrine
25- Blood volume /Markers used
- Obtained from plasma volume and hematocrit
- Total blood volume Plasma volume/1- Hematocrit
- Example If the plasma volume is 4 liters and the
hematocrit is 0.45, total blood volume is ? - PLASME VOL X 100
- 100 -HCT
- 1.T-1824 (Evans blue dye) attaches to plasma
proteins and is removed by the liver. Measures
plasma volume - 2. Radioactive labeled 125 i albumin
- 3. Cr51 (radioactive chromium) is
incubated with red blood cells then injected - Measures total blood volume
26Take this problem
- 100 mg of sucrose is injected into a 70 kg man.
The plasma sucrose level after mixing is 0.01
mg/ml. If 5 mg has been metabolized during this
period, then, what is the ECF volume? - 9.5 L
- 14 L
- 17.5 L
- 10 L
If 1mL of solution (10mg/mL) of dye is dispersed
in chamber B and final concentration is the
chamber is 0.01mg/mL. What is the volume in
chamber B? 1000ml or 1L
27 Compartments with no Compartment-Specific
Substance
- Determine by subtraction
- How would you measure ICF volume?
- Cannot be measured it is calculated
(estimated).. - ICF volume Total body H2O ECF volume
- Interstitial volume
- Can not be measured directly
- Interstitial Fluid Volume (ISFV). ISFV
ECFV - PV
28Measurement of other spaces
- Extracellular volume
- Na24
- Cl35
- Inulin
- Sucrose
- Mannitol
- Sulfate
- I125 iothalamate
- Disperse in plasma and interstitial fluid, but
not permeable to cell membrane - 30-60 min for dispersion to extracellular fluid
29Determining body fat
- Technique bioelectric impedance technique
- Principle
- Body fluids conduct electricity well
- But fat is anhydrous and therefore is a poor
conductor of electricity - The resistance to flow of a small current between
points on the body is proportional to fat mass.
30Lean body mass (LBM)
- Definition LBM is fat free mass
- Total body mass fat mass fat free mass
- Note fat is relatively anhydrous
- Note the H2O content of LBM is constant
- H2O content of LBM is constant - 70 ml /100 g
tissue
31Take this problem
- In a healthy adult male weighing 70 kg, total
body H2O (TBW) was measured to be 42 L. What is
his lean body mass (LBM)? What is his fat mass? - Given TBW 42 L
- Assume all this H2O is in LBM that fat is H2O
free - We know that H2O content of LBM is 70 ml/100 g
- Thus, if TBW is 42 L, LBM 60 kg
- Since he weights 70 kg, his fat mass is 70-60
10 kg
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