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      Tangram of Sodium and Fluid Balance

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          Abstract

          Homeostasis of fluid and electrolytes is a tightly controlled physiological process. Failure of this process is a hallmark of hypertension, chronic kidney disease, heart failure, and other acute and chronic diseases. While the kidney remains the major player in the control of whole-body fluid and electrolyte homeostasis, recent discoveries point toward more peripheral mechanisms leading to sodium storage in tissues, such as skin and muscle, and a link between this sodium and a range of diseases, including the conditions above. In this review, we describe multiple facets of sodium and fluid balance from traditional concepts to novel discoveries. We examine the differences between acute disruption of sodium balance and the longer term adaptation in chronic disease, highlighting areas that cannot be explained by a kidney-centric model alone. The theoretical and methodological challenges of more recently proposed models are discussed. We acknowledge the different roles of extracellular and intracellular spaces and propose an integrated model that maintains fluid and electrolyte homeostasis and can be distilled into a few elemental players: the microvasculature, the interstitium, and tissue cells. Understanding their interplay will guide a more precise treatment of conditions characterized by sodium excess, for which primary aldosteronism is presented as a prototype.

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          Age-related and disease-related muscle loss: the effect of diabetes, obesity, and other diseases.

          The term sarcopenia refers to the loss of muscle mass that occurs with ageing. On the basis of study results showing that muscle mass is only moderately related to functional outcomes, international working groups have proposed that loss of muscle strength or physical function should also be included in the definition. Irrespective of how sarcopenia is defined, both low muscle mass and poor muscle strength are clearly highly prevalent and important risk factors for disability and potentially mortality in individuals as they age. Many chronic diseases, in addition to ageing, could also accelerate decrease of muscle mass and strength, and this effect could be a main underlying mechanism by which chronic diseases cause physical disability. In this Review, we address both age-related and disease-related muscle loss, with a focus on diabetes and obesity but including other disease states, and potential common mechanisms and treatments. Development of treatments for age-related and disease-related muscle loss might improve active life expectancy in older people, and lead to substantial health-care savings and improved quality of life. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            Cardiovascular events and target organ damage in primary aldosteronism compared with essential hypertension: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

            There is conflicting evidence, relying on heterogeneous studies, as to whether aldosterone excess is responsible for an increased risk of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular complications in patients with primary aldosteronism. We aimed to assess the association between primary aldosteronism and adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events, target organ damage, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome, compared with the association of essential hypertension and these cardiovascular and end organ events, by integrating results of previous studies.
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              Interstitial fluid and lymph formation and transport: physiological regulation and roles in inflammation and cancer.

              The interstitium describes the fluid, proteins, solutes, and the extracellular matrix (ECM) that comprise the cellular microenvironment in tissues. Its alterations are fundamental to changes in cell function in inflammation, pathogenesis, and cancer. Interstitial fluid (IF) is created by transcapillary filtration and cleared by lymphatic vessels. Herein we discuss the biophysical, biomechanical, and functional implications of IF in normal and pathological tissue states from both fluid balance and cell function perspectives. We also discuss analysis methods to access IF, which enables quantification of the cellular microenvironment; such methods have demonstrated, for example, that there can be dramatic gradients from tissue to plasma during inflammation and that tumor IF is hypoxic and acidic compared with subcutaneous IF and plasma. Accumulated recent data show that IF and its convection through the interstitium and delivery to the lymph nodes have many and diverse biological effects, including in ECM reorganization, cell migration, and capillary morphogenesis as well as in immunity and peripheral tolerance. This review integrates the biophysical, biomechanical, and biological aspects of interstitial and lymph fluid and its transport in tissue physiology, pathophysiology, and immune regulation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Hypertension
                Hypertension
                HYP
                Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. : 1979)
                Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (Hagerstown, MD )
                0194-911X
                1524-4563
                12 December 2023
                March 2024
                : 81
                : 3
                : 490-500
                Affiliations
                [1]Emergency and Hypertension Unit, Dipartimento di Medicina (DIMED), Università degli Studi di Padova, Italy (D.B., G.P.R., G.R.).
                [2]School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health, University of Glasgow, United Kingdom (G.R., C.D.).
                [3]Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Norway (H.W.).
                Author notes
                Correspondence to: Giacomo Rossitto, Emergency Medicine and Hypertension, Dipartimento di Medicina (DIMED), Università degli Studi di Padova, Via Giustiniani 2, 35128 Padova, Italy. Email giacomo.rossitto@ 123456unipd.it
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7963-0931
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2238-2612
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7740-8210
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9023-0835
                Article
                00011
                10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.19569
                10863667
                38084591
                243a0b7b-7dd3-4dde-b62b-2d199a1a4a01
                © 2023 The Authors.

                Hypertension is published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.

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                10041
                Reviews
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                body fluids,electrolytes,homeostasis,hypertension,water
                body fluids, electrolytes, homeostasis, hypertension, water

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