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PN·Canada·
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Death, Dying, and End-of-Life CarePrevious
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Delegation PrinciplesNext
PN·Canada·General
GeneralPN · LPN · RPNCanada exam scope

Dehydration

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Pathophysiology

Clinical meaning

Dehydration refers to a deficit of total body water that disrupts normal physiological processes. It occurs when fluid output exceeds fluid intake over a sustained period. Water comprises approximately 60% of adult body weight (higher in infants at 70-80%, lower in elderly and obese individuals), making fluid balance essential for cellular function, circulatory volume, thermoregulation, and organ perfusion. Dehydration is classified by the relationship between water and sodium loss into three types. Isotonic (isonatraemic) dehydration involves proportional loss of water and sodium, keeping serum sodium within the normal range (135-145 mEq/L). This is the most common type, occurring with GI losses (vomiting, diarrhoea), haemorrhage, and third-spacing. The primary deficit is intravascular volume loss, leading to reduced cardiac output and tissue perfusion. Hypotonic (hyponatraemic) dehydration involves greater sodium loss relative to water (serum sodium less than 135 mEq/L). This creates an osmotic gradient that pulls water from the extracellular space into cells, causing cellular swelling. This is particularly dangerous for brain cells, which can swell within the rigid skull, causing cerebral oedema with neurological symptoms (headache, confusion, seizures). Hypertonic (hypernatraemic) dehydration...

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Death, Dying, and End-of-Life Care
Delegation Principles

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  1. A nurse is caring for a 5-year-old child who was admitted with severe dehydration due to gastroenteritis. The child is lethargic and has a heart rate of 1…
  2. A nurse is caring for a 2-month-old infant with suspected viral gastroenteritis. The infant is lethargic and has dry mucous membranes. What should the nur…
  3. A 70-year-old female patient is being monitored for dehydration after experiencing vomiting and diarrhea. Her vital signs show a heart rate of 110 bpm and…
  4. A 40-year-old female presents with signs of dehydration after a prolonged illness. What should the RPN assess first?

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  • A 30-year-old male presents with severe dehydration due to gastroenteritis. He is lethargic and has a heart rate of 120 bpm. What is the nurse's priority …
  • A 2-year-old child presents with vomiting and diarrhea for 2 days. The child has dry mucous membranes, no tears when crying, and decreased urine output. V…
  • Practice this topic (app)Question hub · filtered
    • Amniotic Fluid Imbalances for Practical Nurses
    • Calcium Imbalance: Hypocalcemia and Hypercalcemia
    • Electrolyte Emergency Patterns: Recognition
    • Fluid Resuscitation Principles and Monitoring for Practical Nurses
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