Acid Base Disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

When acid/base balance is disrupted, compensation must occur. What are the two rules that accompany this compensation process?

A
  1. Compensation will never get me to exactly normal
  2. compensation must be made by the other system

Ex: if metabolism is compromized and my pH changes as a result, the respiratory system must compensate

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2
Q

What happens if there is an increase in H ions (decreased pH) in the blood?

A

Increase ventilation and blow off CO2

this reduces PaCO2 and brings pH back up

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3
Q

If there is a decrease in H in the blood (increased pH) what happens?

A

Decrease ventilation and retain CO2

this will increase PaCO2 and bring pH down

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4
Q

What are the steps to determine if someone has respiratory or metabolic acidosis or alkalosis?

A
  1. look at pH: less than or more than 7.4
  2. Look at CO2 and HCO3
  • Respiratory: CO2 and pH change in opposite directions
  • Metabolic: Bicarb and pH change in same direction
  1. MATH
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5
Q

Why do we ask of compensation is “adequate”

A
  1. respiratory response will be very quick and occur before the condition can be considered chronic
  2. the respiratory system can only influence a small part of the total HCO3, so it never gets the pHa as close to normal as might be expected
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6
Q

What can change HCO3 ?`

A

kidneys because they can kick HCO3 into urine or H into urine (can’t happen if kidneys are broken)

GI tract secretes HCO3 or H. Can lose HCO3 if V/D

TUMs (too much bicarb?)

Making your own Acids (lactic acid, ketoacid)

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7
Q

How do we know if acidosis is from making our own (metabolic acidosis?)

A

Calculate Anion Gap

Na-(Cl+HCO3)

positives and negatives should always balance themselves out (should be <12)

Keep in mind that bicarb can buffer the acid, so pH might not be as acidic as you would think and will lose bicarb, making positives and negatives not balance out

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8
Q

An elevated anion gap indicates unmeasured chemicals such as

A

GOLDMARK or MUDPILES

Methanol

Uremia

DKA, starvation or ETOH ketoacidosis

Paraldehyde

Isoniazid/Iron

Ethylene Glycol or ETOH

Salicylates

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