Acid-base Balance and Blood Gas Analysis Flashcards
What is Base excess?
Base excess (BE) is usually defined as the amount of strong acid (hydrochloric acid for BE greater than zero) or strong base (sodium hydroxide for BE less than zero) required to return 1 L of whole blood exposed in vitro to a Pco2 of 40 mm Hg to a pH of 7.4
What is a buffer system?
A buffer is defined as a substance within a solution that can prevent extreme changes in pH. A buffer system is composed of a base molecule and its weak conjugate acid. The base molecules of the buffer system bind excess hydrogen ions, and the weak acid protonates excess base molecules
The most important buffer systems in blood, in order of importance, are
(1) bicarbonate buffer system (H2CO3/HCO3 )
(2) hemoglobin buffer system (HbH/Hb )
(3) other protein buffer systems (PrH/Pr )
(4) phosphate buffer system (H2PO4 / HPO42−)
(5) ammonia buffer system (NH3/NH4+).
There is a very wide variation in individual Paco2/ventilation response curves, but minute ventilation generally increases … for every 1 mm Hg increase in Paco2
1 to 4 L/min
What is the maximum pH in which is possible a respiratory compensation (patient breathing room air) in a case of metabolic alkalosis?
The stimulus from central and peripheral chemoreceptors to either increase or decrease alveolar ventilation diminishes as the pH approaches 7.4 such that complete correction or overcorrection is not possible. The pulmonary response to metabolic alkalosis is usually less than the response to metabolic acidosis. The reason is because progressive hypoventilation results in hypoxemia when breathing room air. Hypoxemia activates oxygen-sensitive chemoreceptors and limits the compen- satory decrease in minute ventilation. Because of this, Paco2 usually does not rise above 55 mm Hg in response to metabolic alkalosis for patients not receiving oxygen supplementation
Which are the mechanisms of the renal response in a case of acid-base disorder?
(1) reabsorption of the filtered HCO3
(2)excretion of titratable acids
(3) ammonia
What is the leukocyte larceny
A delay in analysis of ABG can lead to oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide generation by the metabolically active white blood cells. Usually this error is small and can be reduced by placing the sample on ice. In some leukemia patients with a markedly increased white blood cell count this error can be large and lead to a falsely low Po2 even though the patient’s oxygenation is acceptable. This phenomenon is often referred to as leukocyte larceny
How hypothermia affects the ABG measure?
Decreases in temperature decrease the partial pressure of a gas in solution, even though the total gas content does not change. Both Pco2 and Po2 decrease during hypothermia, but serum bicarbonate is unchanged. This leads to an increase in pH if the blood could be measured at the patient’s temperature.
Unfortunately, all blood gas samples are measured at 37°C, which raises the issue of how to best manage the ABG measurement in hypothermic patients
Causes of respiratory acidosis
1) Increased CO2 production
Malignant hyperthermia Hyperthyroidism
Sepsis
Overfeeding
2) Decreased CO2 elimination
Intrinsic pulmonary disease (pneumonia, ARDS, fibrosis, edema)
Upper airway obstruction (laryngospasm, foreign body, OSA)
Lower airway obstruction (asthma, COPD)
Chest wall restriction (obesity, scoliosis, burns)
CNS depression (anesthetics, opioids, CNS lesions)
Decreased skeletal muscle strength (residual effects of neuromuscular blocking drugs, myopathy, neuropathy)
3) Increased CO2 rebreathing or absorption
Exhausted soda lime
Incompetent one-way valve in breathing circuit
Laparoscopic surgery
Explain the hemoglobin buffer system
The hemoglobin protein serves as an effective buffering system because it contains multiple histidine residues. Histidine is an effective buffer from pH 5.7 to 7.7 (pKa 6.8) because of multiple protonatable sites on the imidazole side chains. Buffering by hemoglobin depends on the bicarbonate system to facilitate the movement of carbon dioxide intracellularly.
At the lungs, the reverse process occurs. Chloride ions move out of the red blood cells as bicarbonate enters for conversion back to carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is released back into plasma and is eliminated by the lungs.
Causes of respiratory alkalosis
1) Increased minute ventilation
Hypoxia (high altitude, low Fio2, severe anemia)
Iatrogenic (mechanical ventilation)
Anxiety and pain
CNS disease (tumor, infection, trauma)
Fever, sepsis
Drugs (salicylates, progesterone, doxapram)
Liver disease
Pregnancy
Restrictive lung disease
Pulmonary embolism
Causes of metabolic acidosis
1) Anion Gap Acidosis
Methanol, ethylene glycol
Uremia
Lactic acidosis (e.g., from CHF, sepsis, cyanide toxicity)
Ethanol
Paraldehyde
Aspirin, INH (isoniazid)
Ketones (e.g., starvation, diabetic ketoacidosis)
2) Non gap Acidosis
Excessive chloride administration (e.g., 0.9% saline infusion)
GI losses (diarrhea, ileostomy, neobladder, pancreatic fistula Renal losses)
RTA
Drugs (acetazolamide)
How albumin blood levels change the anion gap?
each 1.0 g/dL decrease or increase in serum albumin less or more than 4.4 g/dL decreases or increases the actual concentration of unmeasured anions by approximately 2.5 mEq/L
Where is lactate metabolized?
The liver metabolizes approximately 60% of lactate produced, with the kidneys metabolizing 30%. A small amount of lactate is converted back to glucose via gluconeogenesis
Causes of elevated lactate
Type A—Perfusion Related
Distributive: sepsis, anaphylaxis
Cardiogenic/cardiac arrest
Hypovolemia: hemorrhagic
Obstructive: pulmonary embolism, cardiac tamponade
Tissue ischemia: mesenteric ischemia, burns, trauma, compartment syndrome, necrotizing soft tissue infections
Muscle activity: tonic-clonic seizures, increased work of breathing, disorders with acute muscle rigidity (e.g.,
serotonin syndrome, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, malignant hyperthermia)
Type B—Nonperfusion Related
Toxins: cyanide, carbon monoxide, cocaine, alcohol
Medications: metformin, linezolid, HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitors, epinephrine, inhaled β2-agonists, propofol
infusion syndrome Malignancy
Liver failure