Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 10, Issue 12 , Pages 593-596, December 2009

Physiology of fluid balance

Iain Campbell MD FRCA is a Consultant Anaesthetist at the University Hospital of South Manchester NHS Trust and Visiting Professor of Human Physiology at Liverpool John Moores University. He qualified from Guy's Hospital Medical School, London, and trained in anaesthesia in Zimbabwe, Southend, Montreal and Leeds. Conflicts of interest: none declared

Abstract 

The body, in broad terms, is divided into intra- and extracellular fluid compartments, of which the extracellular consists of intravascular and interstitial compartments. The osmotic pressure of all of these compartments is equal, but their composition is different. This difference and the shifts in fluid between the intra- and extracellular compartments are brought about, in part, by the presence of intracellular proteins, which are negatively charged but which have no osmotic effect and cannot pass across cell membranes, and also by the inability of charged electrolytes to pass across cell membranes except via specialized transport proteins. Intake of fluid is in part voluntary but fluid is also present in food and is derived from the oxidation of food. Fluid balance is controlled by volume and osmolar mechanisms largely under the control of aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone, respectively.

Keywords: electrolytes, extracellular fluid, intracellular fluid

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PII: S1472-0299(09)00221-5

doi:10.1016/j.mpaic.2009.09.001

Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 10, Issue 12 , Pages 593-596, December 2009