Fluid Homeostasis - Body's Balancing Act
- Total Body Water (TBW): Approx. 60% body weight (adult male); ICF (2/3), ECF (1/3).
- ECF: Plasma (1/4 of ECF), Interstitial Fluid (ISF) (3/4 of ECF).
- Effective Circulating Volume (ECV): Dynamic; portion of ECF within vascular space that effectively perfuses tissues. Critical for blood pressure & organ perfusion.
- Key Sensors for Volume & Osmolality:
- Osmoreceptors: Hypothalamus (OVLT, SFO); sense ↑ plasma osmolality (normal range: 280-295 mOsm/kg).
- Baroreceptors (Stretch/Pressure Receptors):
- High-pressure: Carotid sinus, aortic arch (sense ↓ arterial BP).
- Low-pressure (Volume): Atria, large pulmonary vessels (sense ↓ central venous volume).
- Intrarenal: Juxtaglomerular (JG) apparatus (senses ↓ renal perfusion pressure).

⭐ ECV, not total ECF volume or plasma osmolality alone, is the primary physiological parameter defended by renal sodium and water excretion regulation for maintaining tissue perfusion an_d blood pressure stability_
Hypervolemia Response - Floodgates Open!
Hypervolemia (↑ ECF volume) activates mechanisms for excess fluid & $Na^+$ excretion.
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Primary Responses:
- Natriuretic Peptides (ANP & BNP): From atrial stretch.
- Effects: Dilate afferent arterioles (↑ GFR), inhibit $Na^+$ reabsorption (PCT, CD), suppress Renin, Aldosterone, ADH.
- RAAS Suppression: (↓ Renin, Angiotensin II, Aldosterone)
- Result: Reduced $Na^+$ and $H_2O$ reabsorption.
- Reduced Sympathetic Tone: Via baroreceptors.
- Effect: Renal vasodilation, ↓ $Na^+$ reabsorption.
- Pressure Natriuresis/Diuresis: ↑ renal arterial pressure → ↓ tubular $Na^+$/$H_2O$ reabsorption.
- ↓ ADH (Vasopressin):
- Effect: ↓ $H_2O$ reabsorption (CD), promoting free water excretion.
- Natriuretic Peptides (ANP & BNP): From atrial stretch.
-
Overall Goal: Significant ↑ natriuresis ($Na^+$ excretion) & diuresis ($H_2O$ excretion) to normalize ECF volume.
⭐ ANP is a key counter-regulatory hormone to RAAS, directly inhibiting renin and aldosterone secretion, and promoting vasodilation and natriuresis.
Hypovolemia Response - Desert Survival Mode
Body's defense against ↓ECF volume. Goal: Conserve fluid, restore pressure.
- RAAS Activation: ↓Renal perfusion → ↑Renin → ↑Ang II. Effects:
- Aldosterone (↑Na⁺, H₂O reabsorption in DCT/CD).
- Systemic vasoconstriction (↑TPR).
- Stimulates ADH & thirst.
- ADH (Vasopressin) Release: From posterior pituitary (by Ang II & ↑plasma osmolality).
- Action: ↑H₂O reabsorption (aquaporin-2 in collecting ducts).
- Sympathetic NS Activation: Baroreceptor reflex.
- Effects: ↑HR, ↑contractility, vasoconstriction (α₁), ↑renin (β₁).
- Thirst Stimulation: Hypothalamic; by Ang II & hyperosmolality.
- Integrated Renal Response:
- ↓GFR (afferent constriction).
- ↑Na⁺ & H₂O reabsorption.
- Concentrated urine (Urine $U_{Osm}$ > 800 mOsm/kg).

⭐ In severe hypovolemia, ADH's V1 receptor-mediated vasoconstriction significantly contributes to maintaining BP, often overriding its V2 antidiuretic effects.
Osmoregulation - Salt Stress Signals
- Goal: Maintain plasma osmolality (280-295 mOsm/kg H₂O).
- Salt Stress (Hypertonicity): Triggered by ↑ plasma osmolality.
- Sensors: Hypothalamic osmoreceptors (OVLT, SFO); detect 1-2% osmolality change.
- Effectors:
- ADH (Vasopressin) release from posterior pituitary.
- Thirst stimulation (cerebral cortex).
- ADH Action:
- V2 receptors (collecting duct principal cells) → ↑ AQP2 insertion.
- Effect: ↑ Water reabsorption, ↓ plasma osmolality, concentrated urine (↑ $U_{osm}$). 📌 ADH = Anti-Diuresis Hormone.
- Thirst: ↑ Water intake → ↓ plasma osmolality.

⭐ Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus (OVLT & SFO) are exquisitely sensitive, detecting changes as small as 1-2% in plasma osmolality to initiate corrective responses.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Volume expansion (saline) ↑ ECF, ↑ renal Na+ excretion (pressure natriuresis, ↓ aldosterone, ↑ ANP).
- Hemorrhage ↓ RBF, activates RAAS, ↑ ADH, ↑ sympathetic drive, conserving Na+/water.
- Water deprivation (hyperosmotic contraction) stimulates ADH release for water reabsorption.
- Excess water intake (hypo-osmotic expansion) suppresses ADH, leading to dilute urine.
- ANP/BNP from stretch promote natriuresis and diuresis.
- Effective arterial blood volume (EABV) is the key regulated parameter.
- Osmolality changes regulate ADH; EABV changes regulate RAAS/ANP.
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