Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W100854703> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W100854703 endingPage "408" @default.
- W100854703 startingPage "393" @default.
- W100854703 abstract "The body's normal homeostasis is maintained by the integrity of the excretory capacity of the kidneys. In advanced cardiac failure, however, the avidity of the renal sodium and water retention contributes to the occurrence of pulmonary congestion and peripheral edema. In patients with advanced cirrhosis, the kidneys again fail to excrete the amounts of sodium and water ingested, thus leading to ascites and peripheral edema. The signals for this renal retention of sodium and water in a patient with cirrhosis must be extrarenal because when the same kidneys are transplanted into persons with normal liver function, renal sodium and water retention no longer occurs; rather, the kidneys maintain normal fluid and electrolyte balance. Excessive sodium and water retention by the kidneys also occurs during pregnancy despite a 30% to 50% increase in plasma volume, cardiac output, and glomerular filtration rate. What are the afferent and efferent signals whereby normal kidneys retain sodium and water so that total extracellular, interstitial, and intravascular volumes expand far beyond those limits observed in normal subjects? These dilemmas are the subject of this review, in which a unifying hypothesis of body fluid volume regulation is presented." @default.
- W100854703 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W100854703 creator A5009700893 @default.
- W100854703 creator A5036446781 @default.
- W100854703 date "1994-10-01" @default.
- W100854703 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W100854703 title "Paradoxes of body fluid volume regulation in health and disease. A unifying hypothesis." @default.
- W100854703 cites W1470093578 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1666404037 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1674514490 @default.
- W100854703 cites W171291507 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1727785519 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1853279621 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1855579400 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1873031022 @default.
- W100854703 cites W188476761 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1886401007 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1918145216 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1965903329 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1970444261 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1978001365 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1981972230 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1984693222 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1990725138 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1991109063 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1991631709 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1997062534 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2001553882 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2004794332 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2004838290 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2011949770 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2014075866 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2014174194 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2024628852 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2027206878 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2027406407 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2029126830 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2029414689 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2031410720 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2032469975 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2035376123 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2036487592 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2045019226 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2047287628 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2051411207 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2052097767 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2054641887 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2057640040 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2060988580 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2062669726 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2066104567 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2072951389 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2073836921 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2074330505 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2075699728 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2075842226 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2079029384 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2083761954 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2084996451 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2086744886 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2088795187 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2090971571 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2091585264 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2094187011 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2099601233 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2101929581 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2114758608 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2120274756 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2164574967 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2278790356 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2279708751 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2303224056 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2316727422 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2338801843 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2400753276 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2415399792 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2470819409 @default.
- W100854703 cites W2474567095 @default.
- W100854703 cites W61036245 @default.
- W100854703 cites W96520221 @default.
- W100854703 cites W1863868690 @default.
- W100854703 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/1022621" @default.
- W100854703 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7817551" @default.
- W100854703 hasPublicationYear "1994" @default.
- W100854703 type Work @default.
- W100854703 sameAs 100854703 @default.
- W100854703 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W100854703 countsByYear W1008547032012 @default.
- W100854703 countsByYear W1008547032016 @default.
- W100854703 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W100854703 hasAuthorship W100854703A5009700893 @default.
- W100854703 hasAuthorship W100854703A5036446781 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C134018914 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C147583825 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C159641895 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C16527932 @default.
- W100854703 hasConcept C178790620 @default.