Dehydration Physiology

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Dehydration: Definition & Types - Defining Dryness

  • Definition: Loss of total body water (TBW), with or without electrolytes, leading to ↓TBW & potential hypovolemia.
  • Types (based on serum $Na^+$ & osmolality):
    • Isotonic (Isonatremic):
      • Loss of $H_2O$ & $Na^+$ in proportion.
      • Serum $Na^+$: 130-150 mEq/L.
      • Most common.
    • Hypotonic (Hyponatremic):
      • Greater $Na^+$ loss than $H_2O$.
      • Serum $Na^+$: < 130 mEq/L.
    • Hypertonic (Hypernatremic):
      • Greater $H_2O$ loss than $Na^+$.
      • Serum $Na^+$: > 150 mEq/L.

⭐ Hypertonic dehydration often presents with more pronounced neurological symptoms (e.g., irritability, seizures) due to brain cell shrinkage.

Dehydration: Etiology - Why We Wilt

  • Reduced Fluid Intake:

    • Poor access/water availability
    • Impaired thirst (elderly, infants, hypothalamic)
    • Nausea, vomiting, dysphagia
    • Altered consciousness
  • Increased Fluid Losses:

    • Gastrointestinal (GI): Diarrhea (e.g., cholera, rotavirus), vomiting, NG suction, fistulas.
    • Renal: Diuretics, osmotic diuresis (DKA, HHS), Diabetes Insipidus (DI), adrenal insufficiency.
    • Skin/Insensible: Sweating (fever, exercise), burns.
    • Third Space: Sepsis, pancreatitis, peritonitis, ascites.

⭐ Globally, infectious diarrhea (especially rotavirus) is the most common cause of dehydration in pediatric populations.

Dehydration: Pathophysiology - Body's Battle

  • Core Imbalance: Water loss > intake OR Solute gain > water.
  • Initial Impact: ↓ Total Body Water (TBW) → ↑ ECF osmolality & ↓ ECF volume.
    • Water shifts: ICF → ECF (if hyperosmolar ECF), leading to cellular dehydration.
  • Compensatory Cascade:
  • Key Mediators:
    • ADH (Vasopressin): ↑ water permeability in collecting ducts.
    • RAAS: Angiotensin II (vasoconstriction, thirst, aldosterone) & Aldosterone (Na⁺/water retention).
    • Thirst: Stimulated by hyperosmolality & Angiotensin II.
  • Cellular Stress: Shrinkage, impaired function.

⭐ The primary defense against hyperosmolality is thirst, while ADH is crucial for regulating water excretion.

Dehydration: Clinical Features - Spotting the Signs

  • General: Thirst, dry mucous membranes, ↓ urine output.
  • Mild (3-5% loss):
    • Alert, restless.
    • Vitals stable.
    • Slightly dry mucosa.
  • Moderate (6-9% loss):
    • Irritable/lethargic.
    • Postural hypotension, tachycardia (↑HR).
    • Dry mucous membranes, sunken eyes.
    • ↓ Skin turgor (slow recoil).
    • Oliguria.
  • Severe (≥10%** loss):**
    • Lethargic/comatose.
    • Hypotension (↓BP), shock.
    • Rapid, weak pulse.
    • Parched mouth, deeply sunken eyes.
    • Markedly ↓ skin turgor (tenting >2s).
    • Anuria/severe oliguria.
    • Cool, clammy skin; delayed capillary refill (>3s).

⭐ Skin turgor assessment (e.g., abdominal skin pinch) is a crucial bedside indicator of dehydration severity.

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Dehydration: Diagnosis & Complications - Tests & Troubles

  • Diagnosis:
    • Clinical: ↓Skin turgor, dry mucous membranes, tachycardia, hypotension, ↓urine output (<0.5 mL/kg/hr).
    • Labs: ↑Serum Osmolality (>295 mOsm/kg), ↑Urine Specific Gravity (>1.025), ↑BUN/Creatinine ratio (>20:1), electrolyte disturbances (Na⁺, K⁺).
  • Complications:
    • Hypovolemic shock, Acute Kidney Injury (AKI).
    • Severe electrolyte imbalance → arrhythmias, seizures.
    • Thromboembolic events.
    • ⚠️ Cerebral edema (esp. with rapid hypotonic fluid rehydration).

⭐ Loss of >10% body weight indicates severe dehydration.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Dehydration: Water deficit > intake, leading to hypovolemia & cellular dysfunction.
  • Isotonic (diarrhea): Most common; proportional Na+ & water loss.
  • Hypertonic (fever, DI): Water loss > Na+ loss; ↑ serum osmolality, intracellular dehydration.
  • Hypotonic (diuretics): Na+ loss > water loss; ↓ serum osmolality, cellular swelling.
  • Key responses: ↑ ADH & aldosterone (RAAS) to conserve Na+ & water.
  • Signs: Tachycardia, hypotension, oliguria, ↓ skin turgor; severe cases cause shock/AKI.

Practice Questions: Dehydration Physiology

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A 4-year-old child is brought to the emergency department with severe dehydration due to diarrhea. What is the initial management for severe dehydration?

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Flashcards: Dehydration Physiology

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_____ volume can be measured using D2O or tritiated water (THO)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ volume can be measured using D2O or tritiated water (THO)

Total body water

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