Physiology

Regulation of Body Fluids and Electrolytes

A Comprehensive Article

Renal System

The kidneys maintain ~60% of body weight as water, divided into compartments: Intracellular fluid (ICF): 2/3 of total body water. Extracellular fluid (ECF): 1/3 (includes plasma + interstitial fluid). Maintaining the right volume and composition of these fluids is crucial for normal cellular function, blood pressure, and metabolism — and the kidneys are the key players.

⚙️ 1️⃣ Body Fluid Compartments

Compartment % of Body Weight Major Cation Major Anion
ICF ~40% K⁺ Phosphate, proteins
ECF ~20% Na⁺ Cl⁻, HCO₃⁻
🧠 High-yield fact: Water moves freely between compartments — driven by osmotic gradients, not active transport.

💧 2️⃣ Regulation of Body Fluid Volume

Fluid volume is mainly determined by total body sodium (Na⁺), because Na⁺ is the major ECF osmotic solute. Thus: Where Na⁺ goes, water follows. The body regulates ECF volume by controlling Na⁺ balance, and regulates osmolality by controlling water balance.

A. Neural Regulation — Baroreceptor Reflex

  • Sensors: Atrial stretch receptors, carotid sinus, aortic arch
  • Low volume / BP → activates sympathetic nervous system (SNS)
  • Constricts renal arterioles → ↓ GFR (conserve water)
  • Stimulates renin release
  • ↑ Na⁺ reabsorption (via proximal tubules)
💡 Rapid response (seconds–minutes)

B. Hormonal Regulation — RAAS System

The Renin–Angiotensin–Aldosterone System (RAAS) is the body’s main long-term regulator of volume and BP.

  1. ↓ BP or ↓ Na⁺ → Juxtaglomerular cells release renin
  2. Renin converts angiotensinogen → angiotensin I
  3. ACE (lungs) converts angiotensin I → angiotensin II
  4. Angiotensin II: Constricts arterioles → ↑ BP. Stimulates aldosterone from adrenal cortex → ↑ Na⁺ and water reabsorption. Stimulates thirst and ADH release.
🧠 Key effects: ↑ Na⁺, ↑ water, ↑ BP
💡 Clinical pearl: ACE inhibitors block this system → ↓ BP, ↓ Na⁺ retention.

C. Aldosterone — The Sodium Saver

  • Secreted by adrenal cortex (zona glomerulosa)
  • Acts on distal tubule & collecting duct
  • ↑ Na⁺ reabsorption and K⁺ secretion
🧠 Summary: Aldosterone saves salt and squeezes blood vessels → restores volume.
💡 Deficiency (Addison’s disease): Na⁺ loss, dehydration, hypotension. Excess (Conn’s syndrome): Na⁺ retention, hypertension, hypokalemia.

D. Antidiuretic Hormone (ADH / Vasopressin) — The Water Keeper

  • Secreted by posterior pituitary
  • Stimulus: ↑ plasma osmolality (detected by hypothalamic osmoreceptors) or ↓ blood volume
  • Action: Inserts aquaporin-2 channels in collecting ducts → ↑ water reabsorption
💡 High ADH: concentrated urine (dehydration). Low ADH: dilute urine (overhydration).
🧠 Clinical note: Diabetes insipidus: ↓ ADH or renal insensitivity → excessive dilute urine. SIADH: ↑ ADH → water retention, hyponatremia.

E. Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP) — The Volume Reliever

  • Released from atria when they stretch due to high blood volume
  • Effects: ↓ Renin, ↓ aldosterone. ↑ Na⁺ and water excretion (natriuresis). Vasodilation → ↓ BP.
💡 Mnemonic: ANP = “A Nice Pee.” 😄

3️⃣ Regulation of Major Electrolytes

Electrolyte Normal Plasma Range Regulated by Main Function
Na⁺ 135–145 mEq/L Aldosterone, ANP ECF volume, nerve function
K⁺ 3.5–5.0 mEq/L Aldosterone, pH, insulin Nerve & muscle excitability
Ca²⁺ 8.5–10.5 mg/dL PTH, calcitonin, vitamin D Muscle contraction, coagulation
Cl⁻ 95–105 mEq/L Follows Na⁺ Osmotic balance
HCO₃⁻ 22–28 mEq/L Kidneys Buffer for acid-base balance

🧠 Potassium Regulation (High Yield)

  • Aldosterone: ↑ K⁺ secretion → ↓ plasma K⁺
  • Acidosis: K⁺ moves out of cells → hyperkalemia
  • Alkalosis: K⁺ moves into cells → hypokalemia
  • Insulin & catecholamines: shift K⁺ into cells (via Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase)
💡 Clinical tip: K⁺ imbalance → arrhythmias, muscle weakness → always check K⁺ in renal and cardiac patients!

💧 Calcium and Phosphate Balance

  • Parathyroid hormone (PTH): ↑ Ca²⁺ reabsorption (kidney). ↓ phosphate reabsorption. Stimulates vitamin D activation → ↑ intestinal Ca²⁺ absorption.
  • Calcitonin: lowers plasma Ca²⁺
  • Vitamin D (calcitriol): enhances Ca²⁺ and phosphate absorption in the gut
🧠 Clinical tie: Hypocalcemia → tetany, cramps. Hypercalcemia → stones, bones, groans, moans.

🩸 4️⃣ Integration — Water and Salt Homeostasis

Condition Response
Dehydration ↑ ADH, ↑ RAAS, ↓ ANP → water retention
Overhydration ↓ ADH, ↓ RAAS, ↑ ANP → water excretion
Na⁺ depletion ↑ Aldosterone, ↑ thirst
Na⁺ excess ↑ ANP → natriuresis
💡 Ultimate goal: maintain ECF volume + osmolality + BP within narrow limits.

🧠 Summary Table

Regulator Main Stimulus Primary Effect Net Result
RAAS ↓ BP / ↓ Na⁺ ↑ Na⁺ & water retention ↑ Volume, ↑ BP
Aldosterone Angiotensin II, ↑ K⁺ ↑ Na⁺ reabsorption, ↑ K⁺ excretion ↑ Volume
ADH ↑ Osmolality / ↓ Volume ↑ Water reabsorption ↓ Osmolality
ANP ↑ Atrial stretch ↑ Na⁺ excretion ↓ Volume, ↓ BP
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