Scariano
40-80 mg/day = normal protein in urine
<300 mg.dL = microproteinuria >300 mg/dL = macroproteinuria
"foot strike hemolysis" in long distance runners = urine findings
ketones = acetoacetate and hydroxybutyrate (conjugate bases of their acids) (contribute to anion gap of metabolic acidosis)
specific gravity - normal range 1.003 - 1.035 (distilled water = 1.000)
pH minimum pH of urine about 4.5 ([H] = 0.03 mEq/L)
oval fat bodies - hyperlipidemia associated with nephrosis. low albumin levels stimulate hepatocytes to produce lipoproteins = hyperlipedemia.
red blood cells - dysmorphic erythrocytes = acanthocytes - acanthocyte is derived from the Greek word "acantha" meaning "thorn." imbalance in membrane lipids causes cells to stiffen, wrinkle, pucker, and form spicules.
Rohrscheib
60:40:20 rule Intracellular volume is 2x extracellular. therefore, K is major cation of the body.
Ins and Outs: GI loss is normally 10% vs. renal at 90%.
GI loss increases with diarrhea; K =30-40 mEq/L in diarrhea fluid. can lose 5L or more (e.g., cholera) per day.
a good review of K and ECG. ECG findings can be understood from high K effects on cardiac myocytes and nodal cells (decreased slope of phase 4 = bradycardia).
Myocyte
solid line = normal; dashed line = hyperkalemia. decreased slope of phase 0 causes slowed cell to cell conduction time (long PR interval; widening of QRS). Increased rate of repolarization (higher conductance of K channels) causes peaked T wave.
Practice question: Predict effect of Bartter and Gitelman syndromes on plasma Na and K.
This blog is for UNM medical students taking the CV/Pulmonary/Renal block. It is based on notes I took during lectures. Some comments make minor corrections, some are memory tools and mnemonics (red font), some give numerical examples of formulas, some point out high yield concepts, etc. You are welcome to comment on the posts as are the faculty who gave the lectures. If you want to follow the blog by email, enter your email address below. Steve Wood, PhD, block tutor, scwood@salud.unm.edu
what is the physiological basis for ECG changes in Hyperkalemia
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