Biochemistry Flashcards
1
Q
Causes of metabolic acidosis.
UKSLAMS
A
Uraemia. Ketoacidosis. Salicylates. Lactic acidosis. Alcohol. Methanol. Sepsis.
2
Q
Causes of increased anion gap?
ASIDE
A
Acidosis (lactic). Salicylates. Intoxication. Diabetic ketoacidosis. Ethylene glycol.
3
Q
Causes of low anion gap.
A
Hypoalbuminaemia - hepatic or renal disease, malnutrition.
Lithium toxicity.
Multiple myeloma.
4
Q
Causes of hypercalcaemia?
A
- Malignancy (e.g. prostate cancer).
- Primary, tertiary hyperparathyroidism.
- Sarcoidosis.
- Myeloma.
- Vitamin D excess.
5
Q
How is hypercalcaemia managed?
A
- IV 0.9% normal saline.
- Bisphosphonates.
6
Q
What is the mechanism of action of bisphosphonates in hypercalcaemia?
A
Act over 48 hours to prevent bone resorption and inhibit osteoclasts.
7
Q
Describe the electrolyte abnormalities that would support a diagnosis of Vitamin D deficiency.
A
- Hypocalcaemia.
(Vitamin D deficiency causes decreased calcium absorption from intestines and decreased renal reabsorption). - Low serum phosphate.
(Due to secondary hyperparathyroidism > phosphaturia). - Elevated ALP.
(Due to secondary hyperparathyroidism > increased bone turnover). - Low 25-(OH) D3.
- Low or normal magnesium (never high - Mg and Ca2+ levels correlate - unsure why).
8
Q
ECG features of hyperkalaemia?
A
- Peaked T waves.
- PR prolongation.
- QRS widening.
9
Q
ABG showing pH 7.2, PaCO2 8.0, PaO2 18, HCO3 24, base excess of -0.5. What is the abnormality?
Normal ranges:
- pH 7.35 - 7.45.
- PaCO2 4.6-6.0 kPa.
- PaO2 10.5-13.5 kPa.
- HCO3 24-30mmol/l.
- Base excess -2 to +2 mmol/l.
A
Respiratory acidosis.
low pH - acidosis.
- High CO2.
- Base excess and bicarbonate within normal limits.