Your body is approximately water.
This type of body fluid is located within or inside the cell.
Intercellular fluid
Intracellular fluid (ICF)
Interstetial fluid
Cellular fluid
The two principal electrolytes of ICF are:
K+
Na+
phosphate
Cl-
The body is made up of 2 body fluid compartments which are:
interstitial fluid
intercellular fluid
Extracellular fluid (ECF)
Interstitial fluid and plasma are examples of ECF
The two principle electrolytes of ECF are:
When giving a patient an IV the IV fluids go into the ECF ICF( ECF, ICF ) and are isotonic hypertonic( isotonic, hypertonic ) so it will not cause the fluid to( not, cause the fluid to ) shrink or swell the cells.
Water losses of which the individual is aware are called water loss.
Water produced by cellular reactions is called water.
Which of the following examples are considered insensible water loss (may choose more than one)
urination
breathing
mild perspiration you do not feel or see
vomiting
put the following in order to give a mathematical formula ❌ = ❌ ❌
A pH of 10 is 1,000 100 10( 1,000, 100, 10 ) times more alkaline acidic( alkaline, acidic ) than a pH of 7.
Normal arterial blood pH is:
7.2
7.0
7.4
6.8
❌ ------> hyperventilation ❌ ---------> kidney failure, diabetes ❌ -------> COPD ❌ --------> taking too many tums
What two ways do you regulate your pH?
by decreasing your ADH production and diuresing off hydrogens
buffer system
respiratory
acid/base regulatory system
Buffer alkalinic chemicals neutral elements( Buffer, alkalinic chemicals, neutral elements )s are two or more molecules which minimize pH change on addition of acid or base.
The buffer system is a weak acid minus the salt of that acid.
If hydrogen ion concentration goes up pH will go down up stay the same( down, up, stay the same ).
Acids are H+ acceptors donors( acceptors, donors ) and bases are H+ donors acceptors( donors, acceptors ).
What determines if an acid is strong or weak?
the level of H+ ion concentration
the degree in which it dissociates in water
how corrosive the acid is based on an acid fast test
where it rates on the pH scale
Buffers stop the change of pH an acid would have on a solution
Blood CO2 regulation is a balance is CO2 and CO2 .
A reason blood CO2 levels would be high is:
production
elimination
both
none of these
Respiratory acidosis: ? [H+] ? pH ? CO2
retention of CO2
increase [H+}
decrease pH
decrease [H+]
increase pH
loss of CO2
Respiratory Alkalosis: ? [H+] ? pH ? CO2
increase [H+]
Normal urine pH
6.0
6.5
8.0