This document discusses the pathophysiology of fluid deficit, which can occur due to lack of fluid intake or excessive fluid loss. The body responds to fluid deficit through increased secretion of antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone, which cause sodium and water reabsorption to restore blood volume. However, failure to restore blood volume through these mechanisms can lead to dehydration and an inflammatory response.
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This document discusses the pathophysiology of fluid deficit, which can occur due to lack of fluid intake or excessive fluid loss. The body responds to fluid deficit through increased secretion of antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone, which cause sodium and water reabsorption to restore blood volume. However, failure to restore blood volume through these mechanisms can lead to dehydration and an inflammatory response.
This document discusses the pathophysiology of fluid deficit, which can occur due to lack of fluid intake or excessive fluid loss. The body responds to fluid deficit through increased secretion of antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone, which cause sodium and water reabsorption to restore blood volume. However, failure to restore blood volume through these mechanisms can lead to dehydration and an inflammatory response.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document discusses the pathophysiology of fluid deficit, which can occur due to lack of fluid intake or excessive fluid loss. The body responds to fluid deficit through increased secretion of antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone, which cause sodium and water reabsorption to restore blood volume. However, failure to restore blood volume through these mechanisms can lead to dehydration and an inflammatory response.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd