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The Simple Acid/Base Disorders. Dr. Dave Johnson Associate Professor Dept. Physiology UNECOM. Acid / Base Tutorial. An acid base tutorial that I have used for years now is available at UCONN medical center: http://fitsweb.uchc.edu/student/selectives/TimurGraham/Anion_Gap.html.
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The Simple Acid/Base Disorders Dr. Dave Johnson Associate Professor Dept. Physiology UNECOM
Acid / Base Tutorial • An acid base tutorial that I have used for years now is available at UCONN medical center: • http://fitsweb.uchc.edu/student/selectives/TimurGraham/Anion_Gap.html
Simple Acid Base Disorders 1) metabolic acidosis 2) respiratory acidosis 3) metabolic alkalosis 4) respiratory alkalosis • A respiratory disorder is by definition an acid/base disorder that is due to a primary disturbance (increase or decrease) in pCO2. • A metabolic disorder is by definition an acid/base disorder that is due to a primary disturbance (increase or decrease) in HCO3-.
Compensation • A respiratory acid/base disorder is always compensated by an appropriate change in NaHCO3. • A metabolic acid/base disorder is always compensated by an appropriate change in pCO2. • The ‘appropriate change’ will always go in the same direction as the primary disturbance!
Acute vs Chronic • We refer to respiratory acid/base disorders as “acute” (less than one day in duration) or “chronic” (more than three or four days in duration). That’s because it can take the kidneys three to four days before they are fully compensating a respiratory acid/base disorder • These terms are generally not applied to metabolic disorders. That’s because the lungs can begin to compensate metabolic disorders within minutes or hours, by alterations in respiration rate.
Simple Metabolic Acidemia • [CO2]dissolved + H20<------------>H+ + HCO3- - Usually caused by the appearance of excess fixed acids in the blood. - HCO3- is consumed, and equation above is shifted LEFT. - PCO2 goes up transiently, but increased compensatory respirations eventually results in a LOW PCO2 , so usual findings in this disorder (if compensated) are low PCO2 and low HCO3-.
Anion Gap • Once you have identified a metabolic acidosis, then look at the Anion Gap. The anion gap is estimated by subtracting the sum of Cl- and HCO3- concentrations from the plasma Na+ concentration. Anion gap = [Na+] – ([Cl-] + [HCO3-]) • The major UNMEASURED cations are calcium, magnesium, gamma globulins and potassium. The major UNMEASURED anions are negatively charged plasma proteins (albumin), sulphate, phosphates, lactate and other organic anions. • The anion gap is defined as the quantity of anions not balanced by cations. This is usually equal to 12 ± 4 meq/L and is usually due to the negatively charged plasma proteins as the charges of the other unmeasured cations and anions tend to balance out.
Anion Gap • If the anion of the acid added to plasma is Cl- , the anion gap will be normal (i.e., the decrease in [HCO3-] is matched by an increase in [Cl-]). For example: HCl + NaHCO3 → NaCl + H2CO3→ CO2 + H2O -In this setting, there is a milliequivalent for milliequivalent replacement of extracellular HCO3- by Cl- ; thus, there is no change in the anion gap, since the sum of [Cl-] + [HCO3-] remains constant. -This disorder is called a HYPERCHLOREMIC acidosis, because of the associated increase in the Cl- concentration. -GI or renal loss of HCO3- produces the same effect as adding HCl as the kidney in its effort to preserve the ECV will retain NaCl leading to a net exchange of lost HCO3- for Cl-.
Anion Gap • In contrast, if the anion of the acid is not Cl- (e.g. lactate, or β-hydroxybutyrate), the anion gap will increase (i.e. the decrease in [HCO3-] will not be matched by an increase in the [Cl-] but rather by an increase in the [unmeasured anion]: HA + NaHCO3 → NaA + H2CO3→ CO2 + H2O, where A- is the unmeasured anion of the acid that was added to the ECF. • Causes of elevated Anion gap acidosis is best remembered by the mnemonic KULT or the popular MUDPILES
Causes of elevated Anion gap acidosis • K = Ketoacidosis (DKA,alcoholic ketoacidosis, starvation) • U = Uremia (Renal Failure) • L =Lactic acidosis • T = Toxins (Ethylene glycol, methanol, paraldehyde, salicylate) • M = Methanol • U = Uremia • D = DKA (also AKA and starvation) • P = Paraldehyde • I = INH • L = Lactic acidosis • E = Ethylene Glycol • S = Salycilate
Simple Respiratory Acidemia • [CO2]dissolved + H20 <--------> H+ + HCO3- - Caused by a build-up in blood PCO2, usually due to decreased respirations, or inability of CO2 to diffuse into alveoli to be expired. This occurs secondarily CNS respiratory center defects, and intrinsic pulmonary diseases (COPD’s, alveolar filling, atelectasis, and loss of lung parenchyma). - The increase in pCO2 shifts the equation above to the RIGHT, increasing plasma H+ + HCO3-concentrations.
Simple Respiratory Acidemia • [CO2]dissolved + H20 <--------> H+ + HCO3- - The excess H+ion produced herecan NOT be buffered by the HCO3- produced, because that would drive the equation BACK to the left again, which is kinetically impossible (there are higher levels of reactants on the left). - So in respiratory acidemia, the excess H+ ions diffuse into cells, and are buffered by phosphate and protein buffers, including hemoglobin.
Simple Respiratory Acidemia • [CO2]dissolved + H20 <--------> H+ + HCO3- -Intracellular buffering of H+ ions increases plasma HCO3- only slightly (remember, removal of H+ ions from plasma is equivalent to addition of HCO3- to plasma). - Renal compensation occurs over 3-5 days resulting in an in urinary H+ excretion, and therefore in a in new HCO3- synthesis. This drives plasma HCO3- levels up, in the same direction as the primary disturbance (which in this case was an in in PCO2).
Method for Evaluating Blood Gasses • Step 1: Assess the pH. Low pH (< 7.35) is acidemia, high pH (>7.45) is alkalemia. • Step 2: Determine the cause of the alkalemia or acidemia. Acidemia can only be caused by acidosis, and therefore implies the presence of an acidosis. Similarly, alkalemia can only be caused by alkalosis, and therefore implies the presence of an alkalosis. • Step 3: Look at the change from normal values of the conjugate acid and conjugate base in your buffer (pCO2 and HCO3- in the case of the bicarbonate buffering system) and determine which change can explain the change in pH.
Method for Evaluating Blood Gasses • Lets say pH is low, so you have an acidemia: An acidemia may either be respiratory or metabolic (remember, HCO3- is the conjugate base, and pCO2 is the conjugate acid in this buffering pair). • Therefore, either a DECLINE IN HCO3- or AN INCREASE IN PCO2 can explain the presence of an acidemia. • If a high PCO2 is the primary disturbance, it’s a respiratory acidemia • If a low HCO3- is the primary disturbance, it’s a metabolic acidemia WHAT IF BOTH A LOW HCO3- AND A HIGH PCO2 - CAN ACCOUNT FOR THE ACIDEMIA THAT IS PRESENT? = mixed acid/base disorder
Method for Evaluating Blood Gasses Lets say pH is high, and you have an alkalemia: An alkalemia may either be respiratory or metabolic. • Therefore, either a DECLINE IN PCO2 - or AN INCREASE IN HCO3- can produce an alkalemia. • If a low PCO2 can explain the alkalemia, it’s a respiratory alkalemia. • If high HCO3- can explain the alkalemia, it’s a metabolic alkalemia WHAT IF BOTH A HIGH HCO3- AND A LOW PCO2 - CAN ACCOUNT FOR THE ALKALEMIA?
Compensation For Simple Acid Base Disorders • If the primary disturbance is in plasma HCO3- (i.e., a metabolic disorder), then the compensator will be PCO2. • If the primary disturbance is in PCO2 (i.e., a respiratory disorder), then the compensator will be HCO3-. The compensation always occurs in the same direction as the primary disturbance.