Acid-Base Flashcards

1
Q

normal pH of blood

A

7.35-7.45

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2
Q

What is acidemia

A

Increased hydrogen ion concentration in blood with pH of less than 7.35

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3
Q

What pH is incompatible with life?

A
  1. 9 or less
  2. 8 or more
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4
Q

Alkalinity

A

fewer hydrogen ions in blood
pH greater than 7.45

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5
Q

What factors impact the body’s ability to maintain homeostasis?

A
  1. length of time of imbalance
  2. baseline functioning of organs involved
  3. underlying condition resulting in imbalance
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6
Q

3 methods the body uses to maintain acid-base homeostasis

A
  1. chemical buffers
  2. respiratory regulation
  3. renal regulation
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7
Q

How do chemical buffers work?

A

They make acids more weak or bind to acids to neutralize their effects

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8
Q

Where are chemical buffers found?

A

ICF

ECF

Urine

within erythrocytes

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9
Q

What are the 3 chemical buffers in the body?

A
  1. carbonate/carbonic acid
  2. phosphate
  3. plasma protein
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10
Q

Which chemical buffers are most abundant?

A

Plasma protein buffers

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11
Q

Describe the bicarbonate-carbonic acid buffer

A
  • Buffer is formed when there are large amounts of both
  • normally bicarbonate to carbonic acid ratio is 20:1 (cellular housekeeping produces much more acid)
  • Blood is more basic and neutralizes the metabolic acid produced
  • if blood gets too acidic, bicarbonate will accept hydrogen ions to form carbonic acid, which is broken into C02 and H20 by enzymes
  • if blood is too alkaline, carbonic acid forms bicarbonate and free hydrogen ions, and the body reabsorbs the hydrogen
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12
Q

How does respiratory regulation work?

A
  • cells produce Co2, which combines with H20 to form carbonic acid
  • chemoreceptors sense change in partial pressure of arterial CO2 and H+.
  • Too much carbonic acid = hyperventilation = excess carbonic acid is exhaled
  • Too little carbonic acid = hypoventilation = retention of C02
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13
Q

What kinds of acids do the kidneys excrete?

the lungs?

A

Lungs excrete carbonic acid

kidneys excrete all other acids

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14
Q

How does renal regulation work (general)?

A
  • acidosis = kidneys increase excretion
  • alkalemia = kidneys decrease excretion until acids accumulate to normal level
  • takes 2-3 days
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15
Q

Mechanisms kidneys use to excrete acids

A
  1. fluid enters glomerular capsule of nephron
  2. renal tubular fluid passes through nephron and becomes urine (epithelial cell lining of renal tubule is a filter: allows substances to diffuse into tubule for excretion or reabsorbed into interstitial fluid)
  3. at proximal tubules: epi cells secrete H+ ions into the tubule
  4. For each H+ ion secreted into the tubule, 1 bicarbonate is diffused into interstitial fluid
  5. H+ ions combine with bicarbonate, phosphate buffers, and ammonia (creates non-lipid soluble ions that can’t easily cross back into the interstitial space)
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