Fluid-Electrolyte Balance and Disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

_________ controls threshold.

A

ionized calcium

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2
Q

A _______ in plasma calcium concentration leads to an increase in nerve and muscle excitability because the threshold shifts towards the resting potential.

A

decrease (hypocalcemia)

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3
Q

______ % of Calcium are in bones/teeth, the _____ % that is called ionized calcium is what controls all of the threshold potentials.

A

99%; 1%

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4
Q

Can s\s of hypocalcemia be elicited when the patient hyperventilates?

A

Yes. hyperventilation causes a resp alkalosis. Ionized calcium decreases, thus eliciting s\s of hypocalcemia.

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5
Q

Name in order of the fastest to slowest for treatment of hyperkalemia. (7)

A

1) give Ca++ (fastest, but does not correct the K+); only takes 1-2 min
2) administer HCO3-; takes 3-5 min; HCO3- decreases H+ concentration in plasma (metabolic alkalosis)–> H+ shifts out of cells to buffer alkalosis, and in exchange K+ shifts into cells
3) hyperventilate; 10-15 min; H+ concentration in plasma decreases (resp alkalosis)–> H+ shifts out to buffer the alkalosis in exchange for K+
4) give insulin-glucose–> insulin stimulates Na-K+ pump, driving K+ into cells; insulin also opens glucose channels; glucose is given with insulin to prevent hypoglycemia; ~30 min to work
5) administer a B2-agonist (stimulates Na-K pump); ~30 min to work
6) Give Kayexalate; min–> hours–> days
7) Dialyze patient–> min–> hours–> days
* loop diuretics take approx… 25-45 min to work

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6
Q

For each _____mmHg decrease in PaCO2, serum K+ decreases ______ mEq/L.

A

10; 0.5

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7
Q

Normal RMP for nerve cells is _____mV.

A

-70

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8
Q

Normal RMP for muscle cells is _____mV.

A

-90

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9
Q

Normal threshold for muscle cells is _____mV.

A

-60

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10
Q

Cardioplegia solution used during CABG surgery has a high concentration of _____, and the cardiac cells depolarize to a level between threshold and 0mV.

A

K+; action potential is elicited and contraction occurs–> after that there is no electrical activity and Na+ gates are shut in inactivated state until normal K+ is restored

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11
Q

Why are PVCs seen with hypokalemia?

A

hypokalemia leads to a decrease in excitability d\t hyperpolarization of the SA and AV node–> but there are ventricular Purkinje fibers that more readily depolarize to threshold and PVCs occur

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12
Q

How does hyperventilation lead to the lowering of ionized calcium?

A

Both H+ and Ca+ bind to plasma proteins-> hyperventilation lowers H+ concentration causing protein to release H+ (law of mass action), thus freeing up Prot- which can then bind ionized calcium and correspondingly lower plasma concentration of ionized calcium

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13
Q

S\S of what two electrolyte abnormalities may be manifested in the hyperventilated patient?

A

hypokalemia and hypocalcemia
*remember that with hyperventilation there may develop a TRUE hypokalemia b\c K+ gets pushed into the cells in exchange for H+ to buffer the resp alkalosis; but true hypocalcemia does NOT develop–> it just binds to the free proteins- (total calcium, ionized plus nonionized, does not change)–> so s\s of hypocalcemia may still develop b\c there is a decrease in FREE ionized calcium

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