3 - Acid/Base Disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between acidosis/ alkalosis and acidemia/ alkalemia?

A
  • Acidosis and alkalosis = processes that tend to change pH in a given direction
  • Acidemia and alkalemia = resultant pH of blood
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2
Q

Definition of acidemia

A

pH < 7.4

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3
Q

Definition of alkalemia

A

pH > 7.4

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4
Q

Where are the sites of acid-base regulation?

A
  • Chemical buffers
  • Lungs
  • Kidney
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5
Q

Definition of metabolic acidosis

A

Serum bicarbonate < 24 mEq/L (normal range = 18-24 mEq/L)

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6
Q

Definition of metabolic alkalosis

A

Serum bicarbonate > 24 mEq/L (normal range = 18-24 mEq/L)

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7
Q

Definition of respiratory acidosis

A

pCO2 > 40 mmHg (normal range = 35-45 mmHg)

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8
Q

Definition of respiratory alkalosis

A

pCO2 < 40 mmHg (normal range = 35-45 mmHg)

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9
Q

What is the major buffering system of the body?

A

Bicarbonate/ carbonic acid system

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10
Q

What determines the body pH?

A
  • Relative ratio between CO2 (acid source) and bicarbonate (base)
  • Normally 20 parts bicarbonate to 1 part carbonic acid; if this ratio is altered => acid-base abnormality
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11
Q

What does metabolic acidosis trigger (compensatory response)?

A

Respiratory center to increase rate and depth of respiration (greater quantity of CO2 is eliminated by lungs) => both HCO3 and CO2 are lost, so 20:1 ratio is closer to normal and pH isn’t affected as greatly

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12
Q

Describe renal regulation of H+ and HCO3

A
  • Kidneys reabsorb filtered HCO3 and eliminate H+
  • In the presence of respiratory acidosis, kidneys excrete H+ ions and conserve bicarbonate ions
  • In the presence of respiratory and metabolic alkalosis, kidneys retain H+ ions and excrete HCO3 ions
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13
Q

What is the compensatory change for acute respiratory alkalosis?

A

10 mmHg decrease in pCO2 = 2 mmole decrease in HCO3

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14
Q

What is the compensatory change for acute respiratory acidosis?

A

10 mmHg increase in pCO2 = 1 mmole increase in HCO3

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15
Q

What is the compensatory change for acute metabolic alkalosis?

A

1 mmole increase in HCO3 = 0.7 mmHg increase in pCO2

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16
Q

What is the compensatory change for acute metabolic acidosis?

A

1 mmole decrease in HCO3 = 1 mmHg decrease in pCO2

17
Q

What are the 2 types of metabolic acidosis?

A
  1. High anion gap (generation of an acid which titrates the bicarbonate; chloride concentration remains normal)
  2. Normal anion gap (processes that cause bicarbonate loss and chloride retention, ex: diarrhea)
18
Q

Formula for anion gap

A

AG = Na+ - (Cl- + HCO3-)

19
Q

Standard range of sodium

A

135-145 mEq/L

20
Q

Standard range of potassium

A

3.5-5 mEq/L

21
Q

Standard range of chloride

A

98-106 mEq/L

22
Q

Standard range of bicarbonate

A

18-24 mEq/L

23
Q

Standard range of lactate

A

< 2 mEq/L

24
Q

Standard range of pCO2

A

35-45 mmHg

25
Q

Standard range of pO2

A

90-100 mmHg

26
Q

Standard range of pH

A

7.35-7.45

27
Q

Causes of high anion gap metabolic acidosis (normochloremic acidosis)

A
  • Renal failure (accumulation of endogenous acids)
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Ketoacidosis (diabetic, alcoholic, starvation)
  • Drugs and toxins (beta-adrenergic drugs, caffeine, salicylates, cyanide, ethanol, methanol, formaldehyde)
28
Q

Causes of normal anion gap metabolic acidosis (hyperchloremic acidosis)

A
  • Drugs (acetazolamide, acidifying agents, arginine HCl, cholestyramine)
  • GI bicarbonate loss (diarrhea)
  • Chloride retention (renal acidosis)