acid-base balance Flashcards
what ion is vital to life? why?
hydrogen - number of ions in body fluid determines if body is in acidosis, alkolosis, or neutral
body fluid pH: 7.35 - 7.45
how does it buffer
hemoglobin system
- maintains acid-base balance with chloride shift
- chloride shifts in + out of cells in response to O2 levels
- chloride ion into RBC = bicarbonate ion out of RBC
how does it buffer?
plasma protein system
works with liver to vary amount of hydrogen ions in plasma protein structuce (plasma proteins can attract/release hydrogen ions)
how does it buffer?
carbonic acid-bicarbonate system
primary buffer system
- carbonic acid concentration is controlled by lungs (rate + depth of resps change)
- bicarbonate concentration is controlled by kidneys (selectively retain/excrete bicarbonate)
~ lungs correct balance within 10 - 30 seconds
~ kidneys take a few hours to days to correct balance
how does it buffer?
phosphate buffer system
neutralizes excess hydrogen ions (acts like bicarbonate)
how it buffers
potassium
- in acidosis: hydrogen ions move into cells + force potassium out (creates hyperkalemia)
- in alkalosis: hydrogen moves out of cell + potassium moves in (creates hypokalemia)
causes
respiratory acidosis
- asthma: spasms from allergens/irritants = smooth muscle constriction + ineffective gas exchange
- atelectasis: mucus plugs/infectious drainage = alveolar sac collapse + ineffective gas exchange
- brain trauma: excessive pressure on respiratory center or medulla oblongota = depressed resps
- bronchitis: airway obstruction
- CNS depressants (sedatives, opioids, anesthetics): CO2 retention
- emphysema + COPD: loss of elasticity in alveolar sacs restricts air flow out = increased CO2
- hypoventilation
- pneumonia: mucus/lung congestion obstruct airway
- pulmonary edema: fluid accumulation
- pulmonary emboli
PaCO2 will be high
causes
respiratory alkalosis
- fever: increased metabolism overstimulates respiratory system
- hyperventilation blows off CO2
- hypoxia: stimulates respiratory center in brainstem = increases resp rate + decreases CO2 levels
- overventilation with mechanical ventialtors
- pain: overstimulation of resp center
- anxiety/hysteria
PaCO2 will be low
causes
metabolic acidosis
- diabetes mellitus/diabetic ketoacidosis: insufficient insulin = fat metabolism + accumulation of ketones/other acids (depletes bicarbonate)
- excessive ASA ingestion: increases hydrogen ion concentration
- high-fat diet: fat metabolism waste products accumulate too fast (ketone/acid build up)
- insufficient carbohydrate metabolism: not enough oxygen for carb metabolism = lactic acid is production + lactic acidosis
- malnutrition: improper metabolism = fat catabolism, ketones + acids build up
- renal insufficiency/kidney disease: protein metabolism waste products are retained = increased acids
- severe diarrhea: intestine + pancreas secretions are alkaline = loss of bases
HCO3- will be low
causes
metabolic alkalosis
- diuretics: loss of hydrogen ions/chloride = increased bicarbonate in blood
- vomiting or GI suctioning: hydrochloric acid loss
- hyperaldosternoism: too much sodium is reabsorbed = loss of hydrogen ions
- ingestion of sodium bicarbonate
- massive blood transfusion: citrate anticoagulant used to store blood is metabolized to bicarbonate
HCO3- will be high