Sodium homeostasis
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Sodium is a positive ion or a cation noted with Na.
Most of the sodium in our body is located outside the cells, in the extracellular fluid, or ECF for short.
In the extracellular fluid, sodium has a concentration of about 135 milliequivalents (mEq) per liter.
And remember that sodium concentration doesn’t necessarily reflect the total amount of sodium in the body, but rather the amount of sodium relative to the amount of water in the body.
So sodium homeostasis refers to the mechanisms employed by the body to maintain a normal sodium concentration in the extracellular fluid.
Sodium is essential in maintaining water balance, as well as for nerve impulse conduction and muscle contraction.
Additionally, sodium is an important determinant of the volume and osmolality of the extracellular fluid, which is made up of plasma and interstitial fluid.
Now, osmolality refers to the total solute concentration in a certain amount of solvent or water.
By affecting plasma osmolality, sodium determines plasma and blood volume.
So, at the end of the day, it’s important to maintain the sodium concentration in order to keep enough blood inside our arteries.
This blood is called the effective arterial blood volume or EABV, and it’s what ends up perfusing our various organs and tissues.
Okay, now, sodium comes from our diet.
The daily recommended sodium intake is about 2.3 grams per day which is the equivalent of a teaspoon of salt per day.
Once ingested, sodium is absorbed in the blood by the GI tract, and travels through the bloodstream unbound to plasma proteins.
At the other end, some sodium is eliminated from the body through sweat and through feces, but most of it comes out, along with water, as pee.
So the kidneys are the cornerstone of sodium homeostasis.
See, the kidneys are made up of lots and lots of nephrons, and each nephron is made up of a renal corpuscle and a renal tubule.
The renal corpuscle, in turn, is made up of the glomerulus, which is a tiny clump of capillaries, and Bowman’s capsule surrounding it.
So, blood gets to the glomerulus through the afferent arteriole, which is a branch of the renal artery, and leaves the glomerulus through the efferent arterioles.
These vessels act like a coffee filter, allowing everything but red blood cells and proteins to pass from the bloodstream into Bowman’s capsule - which is connected to the renal tubule.
And the resulting fluid is called filtrate.
Now, upon exiting the glomerulus, the efferent arterioles divide into capillaries a second time, forming the peritubular vessels, which wrap around the segments of the renal tubule: the proximal convoluted tubule, the U- shaped loop of Henle, which has a descending and ascending limb, the distal convoluted tubule, and the collecting duct.
As filtrate passes through the renal tubule, ions like sodium are filtered from the capillaries into the lumen of the tubule, and reabsorbed from the lumen into the capillaries, depending on the amount of sodium in the bloodstream.
So first, 67% of the sodium in the tubule lumen is reabsorbed in the proximal convoluted tubule or in the PCT.
This segment is also permeable to water, so whenever a sodium molecule is reabsorbed, water is reabsorbed along with it - which is called isosmotic reabsorption.
Now, in the early PCT, sodium is reabsorbed together with other molecules, through 3 different channels found on the surface of tubular cells.
Sodium and glucose are reabsorbed together through the sodium-glucose cotransporter, sodium and amino acids are also reabsorbed together through the sodium- amino acid cotransporter and finally, phosphate and sodium are reabsorbed together through the sodium-phosphate cotransporter.
An important regulatory mechanism here is parathyroid hormone or PTH which is produced by the parathyroid glands in response to low serum calcium or high serum phosphate.
PTH inhibits the sodium-phosphate cotransporter, so more sodium and phosphate are excreted.
Finally, in the early PCT there’s also a sodium-hydrogen exchanger, which is a cell membrane protein that reabsorbs sodium in exchange for hydrogen.
And this is mainly regulated by a molecule called angiotensin II, which is a product of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system.
Now, renin is an enzyme that’s released by the kidneys in response to hypotension.
In short, the way it goes is that renin stimulates angiotensinogen conversion into angiotensin I which is then converted into angiotensin II.
Angiotensin II has many functions, some of which include vasoconstriction of the efferent renal arteriole and stimulating the sodium-hydrogen exchanger.
In turn, this increases sodium reabsorption and water reabsorption, in order to bring up blood pressure.
Second, in the late PCT, sodium is still reabsorbed through the sodium-hydrogen exchanger, and also along with chloride, through the chloride-formate exchanger.
This transporter reabsorbs chloride and secretes formate, which is a negative ion derived from formic acid.
In the late PCT, sodium and chloride can also get reabsorbed through a paracellular way, meaning that they don’t use any channels, but rather they sneak between two epithelial cells and go back into the bloodstream.
Summary
Sodium homeostasis refers to the regulation of sodium levels in the body. Sodium is an important electrolyte mainly found in extracellular fluid, which helps maintain fluid balance, blood pressure, nerve impulse conduction, and muscle contraction. The body regulates sodium levels through hormones that control the reabsorption of sodium in the kidneys, as well as through thirst mechanisms. Factors that stimulate sodium reabsorption include the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, ADH, and the sympathetic nervous system. Factors that stimulate sodium excretion include PTH, and peptides like ANP. An imbalance in sodium levels can lead to health problems such as edema, hyponatremia, and hypernatremia.
Sources
- "Medical Physiology" Elsevier (2016)
- "Physiology" Elsevier (2017)
- "Human Anatomy & Physiology" Pearson (2017)
- "Principles of Anatomy and Physiology" Wiley (2014)
- "Sodium and Potassium in the Pathogenesis of Hypertension" New England Journal of Medicine (2007)
- "Potassium Homeostasis: The Knowns, the Unknowns, and the Health Benefits" Physiology (2017)
- "Sodium balance is not just a renal affair" Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension (2014)