Renal Physiology Lecture 3: Acid-Base Disturbances Flashcards
directions for acid-base disturbances
- above 7.7 → alkalosis
- below 7 → acidosis
Causes for acid-base disturbances
- Metabolic
- Acids or bases not derived from carbon dioxide
- Respiratory
- Due to hypo or hyperventilation
Buffer system when plasma pH is altered
If plasma pH is altered, buffer system has already failed
What compensates of pH disturbances if cause is metabolic vs. respiratory?
- respiratory → only kidneys can compensate
- metabolic → respiratory and renal can contribute
Respiratory acidosis
Renal compensation: hydrogen is excreted, bicarbonate reabsorbed.
- Hypoventilation increases carbon dioxide accumulation
- Drug or alcohol effects
- Increased airway resistance
- Impaired alveolar gas exchange → pneumonia
- Muscular dystrophy
- COPD → most common
Metabolic acidosis
Respiratory compensation eliminates excess carbon dioxide (hyperventilation). Renal compensation: hydrogen excretion and bicarbonate reabsorption.
- Dietary & metabolic input of hydrogen ion exceeds excretion
- Lactic acidosis → anaerobic metabolism
- Ketoacidosis
- Ethylene glycol ingestion → antifreeze
- Loss of bicarbonate
Respiratory Alkalosis
Renal compensation: excretion of bicarbonate to further reduce buffer load and increase hydrogen ion concentration to restore pH
- Hyperventilation
- i.e. excessive mechanical ventilator
- anxiety
- Carbon dioxide falls
Respiratory acidosis
Respiratory compensation: hypoventilation restores carbon dioxide. Renal compensation: bicarbonate excretion and hydrogen reabsorption.
- Excessive vomiting of acidic stomach contents
- Excessive ingestion of antacids (contain HCO3-)
- Low hydrogen ion concentration