PBL #2 Flashcards

1
Q

How do you interpret arterial blood gases?

A
  • pH
    • normal = 7.35 - 7.45
    • <7.35 → Acidemia
    • >7.45 → Alkalemia
  • PCO2
    • normal = 34-45 mmHg (think 40)
    • <40 → respiratory alkalosis
    • >40 → respiratory acidosis
  • PO2
    • normal: >90 mmHg
    • <90 → hypoxia
  • HCO3-
    • normal = 22-32 mEq/L (think 24)
    • <24 → metabolic acidosis
    • >24 → metabolic alkalosis
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2
Q

How do you calculate the anion gap and relate it to the mechanisms of fluid and electrolyte disorders?

A
  • Anion Gap = Na+ – (Cl- + HCO3-)
    • normal = 8-12
    • Metabolic Acidosis with Anion Gap:
      • M: methanol
      • U: Uremia
      • D: DKA
      • P: Paraldehyde, Propylene Glycol
      • I: Iron pills, Isoniazid
      • L: Lactic acidosis
      • E: Ethylene glycol
      • S: Salicylates
    • Metabolic Acidosis with normal Anion Gap:
      • H: Hyperalimentation, post-Hypervenitlation
      • A: Addison disease
      • R: Renal Tubular Acidosis (RTA)
      • D: Diarrhea
      • A: Acetazolamide
      • S: Spironolactone
      • S: Saline infusion
    • Low anion gap think → Multiple Myeloma
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3
Q

What are the major body fluid compartments?

A
  • Human total body water= 60% H2O Males, 50% H2O Females
    • 2/3 of total H2O → Intracellular
    • 1/3 of total H2O → Extracellular
      • 3/4 of Extracellular H2O → Interstitial
      • 1/4 of Extracellular H2O → Intravascular (Plasma volume)
  • If 70 kg male:
    • Total body water = 42 L
      • Total intracellular water = 28 L
      • Total extracellular water = 14 L
        • Total interstitial water = 11 L
        • Total intravascular water = 3 L
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4
Q

What is the role of osmotic and hydrostatic pressure in determining the volume of the major bodily fluid compartments?

A
  • Osmotic Pressure
    • will want to draw fluid into the capillary
  • Hydrostatic Pressure
    • will want to push fluid away/out of capillary
  • These two forces will balance each other out throughout the body with Albumin driving osmotic pressure primarily and your BP driving your hydrostatic pressure.
    • Only spot where these don’t balance out is in the renal corpuscle…driving filtration!
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5
Q

What is osmotic diuresis? When does it occur?

A
  • Occurs when the normal tight coupling between sodium and water reabsorption in the proximal tubule is disrupted.
    • Osmotic diuresis →
      • increased urine flow due to abnormally high amount of any solute that is not reabsorbed (e.g. mannitol)
      • solute is filtered at such a high rate that much is left in the tubule (e.g. very high plasma glucose), leaving large amounts of solute in the lumen (INCREASE OSMOLARITY → More stuff)
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6
Q

What is the the physiology behind orthostatic hypotension?

A
  • Stand up → blood goes to legs, shifts out of central venous compartment to peripheral venous compartment → decreased stroke volume → decreased BP
    • Reflex to decreased BP → decreased baroreceptor firing → increased sympathetic nervous system → increased RAAS in kidneys & increased heart rate
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7
Q

What is the mechanism of Tm (transport maximum) transport of glucose?

A
  • Normally 100% of filtered glucose is reabsorbed in the proximal tubule
    • BUT → Na+/Glucose transporters (SGLT’s) have a saturation point = Transport maximum (Tm)
      • once this is reached, any additional glucose will NOT be reabsorbed → pee out in urine
        • Tm = 15 mM glucose → about 200 mg/dL
          • GLUCOSURIA!
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8
Q

Describe potassium homeostasis.

A
  • 98% is stored intracellularly
  • Low extracellular (plasma)
  • K+ Regulation:
    • Insulin → increases activity of Na+/K+ ATPase
      • drives K+ into cells
    • Catecholemines → activate ß2 receptors → stimulate Na+/K+ ATPase
      • drives K+ into cells
    • pH → increase [H+] → H+ pumped into cells, K+ pumped out to buffer metabolic acidosis after HCO3- is depleted
    • Exercise → muscle cells release K+
  • Renal excretion:
    • Passive movement of K+ into lumen driven by concentration gradient
    • Physiologic regulator: Aldosterone
      • ​stimulates Na+/K+ ATPase
      • increases presence of ROMK channel
        • Inhibited by Angiotensin II & Mg2+
    • BK channel present in High K+ states
  • Renal reabsorption:
    • Alpha-Intercalated cell in Collecting Duct
      • K+/H+ ATPase (H+ exchanged for K+)
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9
Q

What are the mechanisms and rationale for potassium movement across cell membranes in DKA?

A
  • Acidosis buffer mechanism:
    • After blood bicarbonate is depleted, compensation for low blood pH occurs by pushing H+ into cells → need to balance this incoming charge → K+ is antiported out into the serum → Hyperkalemia
    • occurs at the cost of her body cells losing their K+ → her cells are hypokalemic and K+ will need to be repleted during treatment
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10
Q

How does the respiratory system compensate for metabolic acid-base disorders?

A
  • Body wants to get rid of CO2 (acid)
    • to do this you breath more → Kussmaul breathing (rapid, deep, and labored breathing)
  • CO2 + H2O ⇔ H2CO3 ⇔ HCO3- + H+
    • Le Chatelier’s Principle
      • Breathe off some CO2, pull equation to the left → gets rid of H+, decreasing the acidity caused by ketoacids
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11
Q

The following are what type of insulin?

insulin lispro, insulin aspart, insulin glulisine

A

Rapid Acting (ultra rapid)

fast onset, very short duration

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12
Q

The following are what type of insulin?

Insulin glargine, Insulin detemir

A

Long Acting

(slow onset)

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13
Q

What type of insulin is NPH insulin?

A

Intermediate-acting

(not used very often)

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14
Q

What type of insulin is Regular Insulin?

A

Short acting

(slower onset than the rapid acting, but longer duration)

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15
Q

What are the signs and symptoms typical of diabetic ketoacidosis?

A
  • Kussmaul respirations (rapid/deep breathing)
  • N/V
  • abdominal pain
  • psychosis/delirium
  • dehydration
  • fruity breath (exhaled acetone)
  • Chief concerns: polyuria, polydipsia, polyphagia, fatigue, dyspnea, abdominal pain, N/V, HA, confusion, lethargy
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16
Q

What are the preventive care and disease-related risk management strategies appropriate for patients with diabetes?

A
  • cigarette smoking → cessation
  • blood pressure → <130/80
  • LDL → <100 mg/dL
  • HDL → raise HDL (no set goal)
  • prothrombotic state → low dose aspirin therapy
    • (esp. patients with CHD and other risk factors)
  • glucose → HbA1C < 7%
  • overweight/obesity → decrease BMI
  • exercise prescription based on patient’s status
  • nutrition
17
Q

What is the prevalence of Type I diabetes in the United States?

A
  • Prevalence of newly diagnosed Type I diabetes per 1,000 persons
    • 1.93 overall (95% CI 1.88-1.97)
    • 2.55 in whites (95% CI 2.48-2.62)
    • 1.62 in blacks (95% CI 1.5-1.75)
    • 1.29 in Hispanics (95% CI 1.21-1.37)
    • 0.35 in American Indians (95% CI 0.26-0.47)
18
Q

What are the risk factors for Type I Diabetes?

A
  • high birth weight
  • childhood obesity
  • increasing maternal age at birth may be associated with increased risk of childhood type 1 diabetes
19
Q

What is the role of genetics in Type I Diabetes?

A
  • Type 1 has a hereditary component but inheritance pattern is unknown.
    • Mutations in HLA-DR3 and HLA-DR4 are associated with increased risk of developing type 1 diabetes
      • (HLA complex helps the immune system distinguish the body’s own protein from proteins made by foreign invaders)
    • Onset of type 1 diabetes by age 60 years reported in 65% of monozygotic twins of persons with type 1 diabetes. This is based on cohort studies.
20
Q

What is the mechanism of action of insulin, emphasizing receptors and signal transduction pathways?

A
  • Insulin binds to → Insulin receptors
    • Metabolic:
      • activation of phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase→ activation of serine/threonine kinase Akt
      • Akt activation → glucose transporter (GLUT) 4–containing vesicles into cell membrane → increases glycogen and lipid synthesis → stimulates protein synthesis through the activation of mTOR.
    • Mitogenic signaling pathway:
      • activation of Ras → cascade of activating phosphorylations in MAP kinase pathway → cell growth and proliferation.
21
Q

What is the difference between primary gain and secondary gain?

A
  • Primary gain:
    • positive reasons to use treatments (take insulin→ not sick/acidotic)
      • e.g. Tx of medical condition
  • Secondary gain:
    • reasons that a patient would want to NOT take treatment (no insulin → attention from boyfriend and others)
      • e.g. attention from boyfriend