Fluid and Electrolyte Balance
Acid-Base Balance
IV Therapy
Concepts of Inflammation and Immunity
Miscellaneous
100

lab value 3.5-5.0

What is potassium?

100

It is the normal pH range critical for optimal body function.

7.35- 7.45

100

The most common reasons for using infusion therapy

Maintain fluid balance or correct fluid imbalance, administer medications, replace blood and blood products

100

Protection from illness or disease that is maintained by the body's physiologic defense mechanisms.

What is Immunity?

100

Warmth, redness, swelling, pain, decreased function

What are the Five Cardinal symptoms of inflammation?

200

This is the movement of water only through a semipermeable membrane

What is Osmosis?

200

This is represented by pH values of less than 7.35 

What is acidosis?

200

Parenteral fluids within normal range 270-300 mOsm/L

Isotonic

200

The response that occurs to help provide immediate protection against the effects of tissue injury and invading foreign proteins.

What is inflammation?

200

Stage I (vascular) Stage II (cellular exudate, pus)

Stage III (tissue repair and replacement)

What is the sequence of inflammation?

300

In high levels palpitations, skipped heartbeats, cardiac irregularities, muscle twitching could happen. 

What is Hyperkalemia?

300

It is the most common base in human body fluid.

What is Bicarbonate (HCO3-)?

300

Parenteral fluids less than 270 mOsm/L.

Hypotonic

300

Occurs when the body is exposed to a disease organism through infection and the immune system produces antibodies to that disease.

What is Active Immunity?

300

pH of 7.5

What is Alkalosis?

400

This happens when fluid intake or retention is less than what is needed to meet the body's fluid needs.

What is Dehydration?

400

When this happens more CO2 is exhaled ("blown off") from the lungs.

What is hyperventilation?

400

It is the delivery of medications in solutions and fluids by parenteral route.

What is Infusion Therapy?

400

Develops when people are given antibodies to a disease instead of producing them within their own immune system. 

What is Passive Immunity?

400

Adequate arterial blood flow through the peripheral tissues. 

What is peripheral perfusion?

500

High levels can lead to kidney stones.

What is Hypercalcemia?

500

Respiratory compensation through the lungs corrects for this type of problem.

What is metabolic problems?

500

Platelets, Fresh frozen plasma, albumin, and several specific clotting factors

What are blood components?

500

Cell Types involve in inflammation. Hint: "Nobody Likes My Educational Background"

Neutrophil, Leukocytes, Macrophages, Eosinophils, Basophils

500

Chemical messengers that tell specific cells how an when to respond.

What are Cytokines?