uremia
If water was not reabsorb blood volume and blood pressure would drop. A person could not live under such circumstances.
antidiuretic hormone
Uremia
acute renal failure
Hypovalaemia is a reduced blood volume and can often occur from haemorrhaging, burns, diarrhoea and vomiting. This reduced blood flow is shown by a drop in blood pressure If blood volume is reduced enough it can cause Hypovalaemic shock. This refers to an intravascular volume fluid problem which results in a lack of oxygen perfusion to a person's peripheries.
Generally approximated to 1g Hb drop per 500ml blood loss- but in reality it's very arbitrary. A lot depends on your size, blood volume, if any fluids have been given and whether they are colloid or crystalloid.
1/15th of one millilitre.
A rapid and large decrease in blood volume affects blood pressure and produces shock. Along with the precipitous drop in blood volume from blood loss, there is a drop of RBC that carry O2. Shock is a life-threatening condition.Note: This medical term does not mean a psychological or emotional "shock", or an electrical "shock".
No it is not, a drop of blood is smaller than a drop of water but if you drop two drops of blood then that equals the right amount of water :)
This depends on the volume of this drop.
Blood volume also falls.