Revisão Revisado por pares

The Effects of Hemorrhage on Body Composition

1965; Massachusetts Medical Society; Volume: 273; Issue: 11 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1056/nejm196509092731101

ISSN

1533-4406

Autores

Francis D. Moore,

Tópico(s)

Thermoregulation and physiological responses

Resumo

THE aqueous phase of body composition — the total body water and its solutes — includes as its prime component the great working mass of body cells, participating in energy exchange and substrate oxidation for work performance. The body-cell mass is surrounded, infiltrated and bathed by a second watery component, slightly smaller in volume, and concerned with the bulk movement of oxygen, carbon dioxide, metabolites and regulators, via the circulation: the extracellular fluid. Whatever other differences exist between these two reservoirs of body water, none is more clear cut than the fact that within cell water the predominant cation is . . .

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