Body Fluid Compartments - Compartment Secrets
- Total Body Water (TBW): ~60% body weight (adult male), ~50% (female). 📌 Rule of 60-40-20: 60% TBW, 40% ICF, 20% ECF of body weight.
- Compartments:
- Intracellular Fluid (ICF): 2/3 TBW. Major cation: $K^+$; Major anions: $PO_4^{3-}$, proteins.
- Extracellular Fluid (ECF): 1/3 TBW. Major cation: $Na^+$; Major anions: $Cl^-$, $HCO_3^-$.
- Plasma: 1/4 ECF. Contains proteins (e.g., albumin).
- Interstitial Fluid (ISF): 3/4 ECF. Protein-poor.
- Transcellular Fluid: Small volume (e.g., CSF, intraocular fluid).
- Measurement (Indicator Dilution Principle):
- TBW: $D_2O$, Antipyrine.
- ECF: Inulin, Mannitol, $SO_4^{2-}$.
- Plasma Volume: Evans blue (T-1824), $^{131}I$-albumin.
- Osmolality: Equal across compartments (~280-295 mOsm/kg $H_2O$).
- Calculated Plasma Osmolality: $2 \times [Na^+]{plasma} + (\text{Glucose}{mg/dL}/18) + (\text{BUN}_{mg/dL}/2.8)$.
⭐ Plasma oncotic pressure, primarily due to albumin, is crucial for maintaining fluid balance between plasma and interstitial fluid (Starling forces).
Thirst Regulation - Brain's SOS
- Primary Thirst Stimuli:
- Hyperosmolality: ↑ Plasma osmolality (> 280-290 mOsm/kg), sensed by osmoreceptors. Main stimulus.
- Hypovolemia: ↓ Blood volume/pressure (activates baroreceptors, RAAS → ↑Angiotensin II).
- Angiotensin II: Potent dipsogen.
- Neural Pathway - "Brain's SOS":
- Sensors (CVOs - No BBB):
- OVLT (Organum Vasculosum Lamina Terminalis) & SFO (Subfornical Organ).
- Detect plasma osmolality & Angiotensin II.
- Integrator: Median Preoptic Nucleus (MnPO) - inputs from OVLT, SFO, baroreceptors.
- Conscious Perception: Anterior Cingulate Cortex, Insula → thirst sensation.
- Sensors (CVOs - No BBB):
- Thirst Satiation:
- Oropharyngeal signals (cold water): Rapid, pre-absorptive.
- Gastric distension: Slower.

⭐ Angiotensin II is a potent dipsogen (thirst-inducing agent), acting directly on the Subfornical Organ (SFO) and Organum Vasculosum of the Lamina Terminalis (OVLT).
Hormonal Water Control - Hormonal Harmony
- Antidiuretic Hormone (ADH/Vasopressin):
- Origin: Hypothalamus (SON, PVN) → Post. Pituitary.
- Triggers: ↑ Plasma osmolality (main); ↓ blood volume/pressure.
- Action: V₂ receptors (collecting ducts) → Aquaporin-2 insertion → ↑ H₂O reabsorption.
- Effect: Concentrated urine, ↓ plasma osmolality, ↑ blood volume.
- Aldosterone (RAAS component):
- Origin: Adrenal Cortex (Zona Glomerulosa).
- Triggers: Angiotensin II, ↑ plasma K⁺.
- Action: ↑ Na⁺ reabsorption (ENaC, Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase) & K⁺ secretion (DCT/CD). Water follows Na⁺.
- Effect: ↑ Blood volume/pressure, ↓ plasma K⁺.
- Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP):
- Origin: Atrial Myocytes.
- Triggers: Atrial stretch (↑ blood volume).
- Action: Natriuresis/diuresis; inhibits Na⁺ reabsorption, ADH & aldosterone release; afferent arteriole dilation.
- Effect: ↓ Blood volume/pressure.
⭐ SIADH: excessive ADH → euvolemic/hypervolemic hyponatremia; inappropriately concentrated urine (Urine Osm > 100 mOsm/kg despite serum hypo-osmolality).

Fluid Imbalances - Balance & Bumps
- Homeostasis: Fluid Intake = Output. Disruption causes imbalance.
- Assess: Clinical signs, weight, urine output, serum Na⁺, osmolality.
- Dehydration (↓ECF Volume):
- Types: Isotonic (diarrhea), Hypertonic (fever, ↓H₂O), Hypotonic (diuretics).
- Causes: Vomiting, diarrhea, burns, fever, diuretics, ↓intake.
- Signs: Tachycardia, hypotension, orthostasis, dry mucosa, ↓skin turgor, oliguria.
- Overhydration (↑ECF Volume / Edema):
- Types: Isotonic (IV overload), Hypotonic (SIADH).
- Causes: Renal/heart failure, cirrhosis, SIADH, iatrogenic.
- Signs: Pitting edema, ↑JVP, pulmonary crackles, S3, weight gain, dyspnea.

⭐ In dehydration, a BUN/Creatinine ratio > 20:1 is a classic sign of pre-renal azotemia, indicating kidneys are conserving volume.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Hypothalamic osmoreceptors (OVLT, SFO) detect ↑plasma osmolality, stimulating thirst & ADH release.
- Angiotensin II acts on SFO, powerfully increasing thirst and ADH secretion.
- ADH (Vasopressin) release is primarily triggered by ↑osmolality and ↓blood volume/pressure.
- Baroreceptors (carotid, aortic, atrial) modulate ADH and thirst via blood pressure signals.
- ↓Effective circulating volume is a potent non-osmotic stimulus for thirst and ADH.
- Hyponatremia (e.g., SIADH, excess water) contrasts with Hypernatremia (usually water deficit).
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