Acid Base Disorders Flashcards
Serum CO2
23-30
Less than 23 acidosis
Greater than 30 alkalosis
Indirect measure of HCO3 in the venous blood
Arterial pH
7.35-7.45
Value inversely proportional to the # of H+ ions in the blood
7.4 is normal
7.35 acidic low pH high H+
7.45 alkalotic high pH low H+
PaCO2
35-45
Partial pressure of arterial CO2 measure of ventilation
High CO2 —> acidosis
Low CO2 —> alkalosis
Fast RR (hyperventilation) —> more CO2 loss CO2 (acid) —> alkalosis (35)
Low RR (hypoventilation) —> less CO2 loss (retention) —> acidosis (45)
Low pH, low RR, high CO2 —> suppresses brain fx —> coma
HCO3 (bicarb)
21-28
Secreted by the kidneys
Increase in HCO3 increase in pH
Direct relation to pH
PaO2
80-100
Partial pressure of arterial O2
Amount of O2 in the blood
O2 sat
92-100%
Percentage of Hbg that is saturated with O2
Cells have enough O2 to function normally
Base Excess-Deficit
-2 – +2
Calculated from pH, PCO2 and Hct
Amount of anions available for buffering
-2 (metabolic acidosis)
+2 (metabolic alkalosis or compensation for respiratory acidosis)
A-a gradient
Normal is <10mmHg
Measures the difference between the (A) alveolar (lungs) to (a) arterial O2
Increases 1mmHg for each decade lived
Elevated value means that there is an issue with O2 diffusing across the alveolar membrane.
Ex: pulmonary edema, pulmonary fibrosis, and ARDS
Complications of acidosis
Decreased cardiac output
Decreased contractility
Catecholamine resistant hypotension (pressors don’t work at a level of acidosis)
Hyperkalemia
Anion gap
4-12 mmol/L
High anion gap —> lactic acidosis, ketoacidosis, acute or chronic renal failure
Low anion gap —> GI losses (N/V/D), large volume of saline administration, medications such as NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors and trimethoprim
Metabolic Acidosis
Reduction of serum bicarb with a low pH
Caused by increased acid production, loss of bicarb, diminished renal excretion of H+
Hypoxia —>lactic acid
Ketogenesis (fat for energy) —> DKA Ketones
Medications that treat AIDS and aspirin
HCO3 loss due to severe diarrhea or type 2 tubular acidosis
Metabolic Alkalosis
Serum pH greater than 7.4 and bicarb of greater than 28
Excessive HCO3 or deficiency in H+ ions
Seen with hypokalemia and hypocalcemia
Hypoventilation and elevated pCO2 (shallow breathing)
Gastric loss N/V/D or diuretic use (pee H+ out)
Respiratory Acidosis S/S
Excessive PaCO2 a decrease in pH
Decreased alveolar ventilation shallow breaths
Increased blood calcium, increased potassium, vasodilation CO2 toxicity, tremors, disorientation, restlessness, muscle twitching, and seizures.
Medullary respiratory center depression
Opiates, barbs, anesthesia, PCO2 retention, head injury
Impaired respiratory muscles
GBS, polio, MS, ALS
Airway obstruction
Aspiration, OSA, laryngospasm, asthma
Impaired gas exchange
ARDS, COPD, PNA, pulmonary edema
Respiratory Alkalosis S/S
Deficiency in PaCO2 high pH
Increased alveolar ventilation
Hyperventilation/anxiety
High pH can cause: CNS and PNS problems, dizziness, confusion, paresthesias, seizures, and coma.
Commonly caused by: hypoxemia, Pulmonary Embolism, CHF, high altitudes, fever, gram negative sepsis, severe anemia, hepatic failure, salicylate OD, drugs such as catecholamines, nicotine, progesterone, or mechanical ventilation.