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  2. Extracellular fluid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extracellular_fluid

    The volume of body fluid, blood glucose, oxygen, and carbon dioxide levels are also tightly homeostatically maintained. The volume of extracellular fluid in a young adult male of 70 kg (154 lbs) is 20% of body weight – about fourteen liters. Eleven liters are interstitial fluid and the remaining three liters are plasma. [7]

  3. Homeostasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeostasis

    Other variables include the pH of extracellular fluid, the concentrations of sodium, potassium, and calcium ions, as well as the blood sugar level, and these need to be regulated despite changes in the environment, diet, or level of activity. Each of these variables is controlled by one or more regulators or homeostatic mechanisms, which ...

  4. Osmoreceptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmoreceptor

    Between these two organs is the median preoptic nucleus, which has multiple nerve connections with the two organs, as well as with the supraoptic nuclei and blood pressure control centers in the medulla oblongata. [2] The osmoreceptors have a defined functionality as neurons that are endowed with the ability to detect extracellular fluid ...

  5. Body fluid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Body_fluid

    The extracellular fluid compartment is further subdivided into the interstitial fluid and the intravascular fluid compartments. Body fluids, bodily fluids, or biofluids, sometimes body liquids, are liquids within the body of an organism. [1] In lean healthy adult men, the total body water is about 60% (60–67%) of the total body weight; it is ...

  6. Fluid compartments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluid_compartments

    The human body and even its individual body fluids may be conceptually divided into various fluid compartments, which, although not literally anatomic compartments, do represent a real division in terms of how portions of the body's water, solutes, and suspended elements are segregated. The two main fluid compartments are the intracellular and ...

  7. Acid–base homeostasis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid–base_homeostasis

    An abnormally low pH in the extracellular fluid is called an acidemia and an abnormally high pH is called an alkalemia. [citation needed] Acidemia and alkalemia unambiguously refer to the actual change in the pH of the extracellular fluid (ECF). [24] Two other similar sounding terms are acidosis and alkalosis. They refer to the customary effect ...

  8. Renin–angiotensin system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renin–angiotensin_system

    This increases the volume of extracellular fluid in the body, which also increases blood pressure. If the RAS is abnormally active, blood pressure will be too high. There are several types of drugs which includes ACE inhibitors , angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARBs), and renin inhibitors that interrupt different steps in this system to ...

  9. Fluid balance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluid_balance

    The majority of fluid output occurs via the urine, approximately 1500 ml/day (approx 1.59 qt/day) in the normal adult resting state. [12] [13] Some fluid is lost through perspiration (part of the body's temperature control mechanism) and as water vapor in exhaled air. These are termed "insensible fluid losses" as they cannot be easily measured.