Biology Asked by pincushion44 on October 24, 2020
If dehydrated, does the correction of ECF osmolarity happen slowly enough for ECF (and therefore plasma) volume to be temporarily depleted and therefore reduce renal blood flow?
If dehydration is taken to mean ECF hyperosmolarity, would fluid not just move out of cells to restore normal osmolarity, without affecting ECF volume or renal blood flow?
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