Physiology 6 - Acid Base Flashcards
What are hte major sources of H+?
Respiratory Acid (CO2+H2O -> Carbonic acid)
Metabolic Acid (Inorganic e.g. sulphuric acid from Amino acids or organic e.g. fatty acids/lactic acid)
What is the normal arterial pH?
7.4
What is the normal concentration of bicarbonate/
24mmoles/l
What are the major H+ buffer systems of the body?
1) Bicarbonate
2) Plasma proteins
3) Dibasic -> Monobasic phosphate (HPO4 {2-} + H{+} -> H2PO4{-} )
4) Intracellular buffers
5) Bone carbonate
Whats the consequence of using intracellular buffers?
H+ ions moved into the cells must either come with Cl- or be exchanged with K+ to maintain electrical equilibrium.
In acidosis this can cause Hyperkalemia –> Vfib & death
Whats the consequence of using bone carbonate as a buffer?
Occurs mainly in chronic renal failure when H+ can’t be excreted.
Causes bone wasting due to the chronic acid load
How much H+ do you take in a day?
50-100mmoles/day
BY what mechanisms do the kidneys regulate acid/base balance?
1) Reabsorption of Bicarbonate
2) Excretion of H+ as titratable acids
3) Excretion of H+ with ammonium
Explain the process of HCO3- reabsorption?
1) H+ ions actively secreted into proximal tubule (coupled to passive Na+ Reabsorption)
2) H+ & filtered bicarbonate form carbonic acid
3) dissociates to CO2/H2O which are then reabsorped
4) forms carbonic acid again in proximal tubule cell
5) dissociates to H+ & bicarbonate
6) bicarbonate is reabsorped and H+ secreted again for the same purpose
How is H+ excreted as a titrable acid?
Excess (Exceeding Tm) dibasic PO4{2-} ions reach distal tubule.
H+ secreted into distal tubule (coupled to passive Na+ reabsorption) and binds to dibasic phosphate
Making monobasic phosphate (HPO4{-})
Which is then excreted
This process is dependant on blood PaCO2
Also works with uric acid and creatinine
What else is produced when H+ ions are excreted as titratable acids?
New bicarbonate.
Blood CO2 is absorbed into distal tubule cells
+water –> Carbonic acid
Then dissociates to H+ (for secretion) and HCO3- (absorped into blood)
Whats different about ammonium excretion compared to other methods of regulating Acidity?
It is variably active.
Normally it excretes 30-50mmoles H+/day but during a chronic acid load the kidneys can synthesize new proteins over 4–5 days and up that to 250mmoles/day
How does ammonium excretion work in the distal tubule?
Ammonium (NH3) is lipid soluble but ammonia (NH4+) is not.
Distal Tubule:
1) Renal glutaminase deaminates amino acids producing NH3
2) NH3 moves into lumen, combines with H+ –> NH4+ and is excreted
The H+ ions are secreted from the distal tubule cells after being produced from blood CO2 (So this process is also reliant on PaCO2)
How does ammonium excretion work in the proximal tubule?
Almost the same as in the distal.
But H+ and NH3+ combine in the cell and are actively excreted using a NH4+/Na+ exchanger
What else is produced during ammonium excretion?
HCO3- is produced when you make H+ from blood CO2 to secrete. The bicarbonate is then reabsorped into the blood