3.body Fluid
3.body Fluid
TOPIC
BODY FLUID COMPARTMENT
LECTURER
CORRECTION FACTOR
Some amount of marker substance is lost through urine during distribution.
Therefor, the formula is corrected as follows:
• Volume = M – Amount of substance excreted
C
Uses of Indicator Dilution Method
❑ It is used to measure ECF volume, plasma volume and the volume of total body
water.
Characteristics of Marker Substances
❑ It must be nontoxic.
❑ Must have the ability to mix with the fluid compartment thoroughly within
reasonable time.
❑ It should not be excreted rapidly.
❑ It should be excreted from the body completely within reasonable time.
❑ It must not change the color of the body fluid.
❑ It must not alter the volume of the body fluid.
MEASUREMENT OF TOTAL BODY WATER
❖ Deuterium oxide and tritium oxide mix with fluids of all the compartments
within few hours after injection.
❖ Since plasma is part of total body fluid, the concentration of marker substances
can be obtained from sample of plasma.
❖ The formula for indicator dilution method is applied to calculate total body
water.
V=M
C
V = volume of fluid in the compartment
M = Mass or total quantity of marker substance injected
C = Concentration of the marker substances in the sample of fluid
❖ Antipyrine is also used to measure total body water.
❖ But as it takes longer time to penetrate various fluid compartments, the value
obtained is slightly low.
MEASUREMENT OF EXTRACELLULAR FLUID VOLUME
❑ Substances which pass through the capillary membrane but do not enter the
cells, are used to measure ECF volume.
❑ These substances remain only in ECF and do not enter the cell (ICF).
❑ When any of these substances is injected into blood, it mixes with the fluid of
all sub-compartments of ECF within 30 minutes to 1 hour.
❑ Indicator dilution method is applied to calculate ECF volume.
❑ Since ECF includes plasma, the concentration of marker substance can be
obtained in the sample of plasma.
❑ Some of the marker substances like sodium, chloride, inulin and sucrose diffuse
more evenly throughout all sub-compartments of ECF.
❑ The measured volume of ECF by using these substances is referred as sodium
space, chloride space, inulin space and sucrose space.
Example for Measurement of ECF Volume
Quantity of sucrose injected (Mass) : 150 mg
Urinary excretion of sucrose : 10 mg
Concentration of sucrose in plasma : 0.01 mg/mL
V=M
C
Sucrose space = Mass – Amount lost in urine
Concentration of sucrose in plasma
= 150 – 10 mg
0.01 mg/mL
= 14,000 mL
Therefore, the ECF volume = 14 L.
MEASUREMENT OF PLASMA VOLUME
❑ The substance which binds with plasma proteins strongly and diffuses into
interstitium only in small quantities or does not diffuse is used to measure
plasma volume.
❑ Plasma volume is determined by using the formula,
Volume = Amount of dye injected – Amount excreted
Average concentration of dye in plasma
❑ OSMOLALITY
❖ It is the concentration of osmotically active substance in the
solution which can create osmotic pressure.
❖ Osmolality is expressed as the number of particles (osmoles)
per kilogram of solution (osmoles/kg H2O).
❑ OSMOLARITY
➢ It express the osmotic concentration.
➢ It is the number of particles (osmoles) per liter of solution
(osmoles/L).
➢ Often, these two terms are used interchangeably.
➢ Change in osmolality of ECF affects the volume of both ECF and
ICF.
➢ When osmolality of ECF increases, water moves from ICF to ECF.
➢ When the osmolality decreases in ECF, water moves from ECF to
ICF.
➢ Water movement continues until the osmolality of these two fluid
compartments becomes equal.
However, in practice, the osmolarity and not osmolality is considered to
determine the osmotic pressure because of the following reasons:
➢ Measurement of weight (kilogram) of water in solution is a difficult
process.
➢ Difference between osmolality and osmolarity is very much
negligible and it is less than 1%.
TYPES OF EDEMA
➢ Intracellular edema
➢ Extracellular edema
INTRACELLULAR EDEMA
It is the accumulation of fluid inside the cell.
Factors that causes intracellular edema
➢ Inflammation of the tissues.
➢ Poor metabolism
➢ Malnutrition
Edema due to Inflammation of Tissues
➢ The permeability of cell membrane increases during inflammation of
the tissues.
➢ Thereby causing the movement of many ions, including sodium into
the cells resulting in endosmosis and intracellular edema.
Edema due to Poor Metabolism
➢ Poor metabolism is caused by poor blood supply.
➢ Poor blood supply leads to lack of oxygen which in turn results to
poor function of cell membrane and edema.
Edema due to Malnutrition
➢ Malnutrition occurs because of poor intake of food or poor
circulatory system, through which the nutritive substances are
supplied.
➢ The ionic pumps of the cell membrane are depressed leading to poor
exchange of ions due to the lack of nutrition.
➢ Sodium ions leaking into the cells especially cannot be pumped out.
➢ Excess amount of sodium inside the cells causes endosmosis,
resulting in intracellular edema.
EXTRACELLULAR EDEMA
➢ It is the accumulation of fluid outside the cell.
Causes for extracellular edema
➢ Obstruction of lymphatic vessels that prevents fluid return from
interstitium to blood.
➢ Abnormal leakage of fluid from capillaries into interstitial space
Conditions which lead to extracellular edema
➢ Increased endothelial permeability
➢ Heart failure.
➢ Renal disease.
➢ Decreased amount of plasma proteins.
➢ Lymphatic obstruction.
Edema due to Increased Endothelial Permeability
➢ In conditions like burns, inflammation, trauma, allergic reactions and
immunologic reactions there is increase permeability of the capillary
endothelium which lead to oozing out of fluid.
➢ Accumulation of this fluids leads to the development of edema.
Edema due to Heart Failure
➢ Failure of the heart to pump blood from veins to arteries increases
venous pressure and capillary pressure.
➢ This leads to increased capillary permeability and leakage of fluid
from blood into interstitial fluid, causing extracellular edema.
➢ Fall in blood pressure during heart failure decreases the glomerular
filtration rate in the kidneys, resulting in sodium and water retention.
➢ Thereby causing the volume of blood and body fluid to increases which in turn
increases the capillary hydrostatic pressure.
➢ During heart failure blood supply to kidneys becomes low thereby increasing
renin secretion, which in turn increases aldosterone secretion.
➢ Aldosterone increases the reabsorption of sodium and water from renal tubules
into ECF resulting in the development of extracellular edema.