Respiratory Physiology - Acid Base Balance Flashcards
Acid definition
A molecule that releases hydrogen ions in solution
Base definition
A molecule that can accept a hydrogen ion
Buffer definition
A substance that can reversibly bind hydrogen ions
Examples of buffers in the blood
Most important system is bicarbonate system, followed by protein then phosphate system least important of the three
Equilibrium dissociation constant equation
K is dissociation constant at equilibrium
Solubility = 0.03 mmol/L/mmHg
Different units from previous solubility number for CO2
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
Rearranging and taking logs of equilibrium constant equation gives Henderson-Hasselbalch equation
Henderson-Hasselbalch equation interpretation
If bicarb and PCO2 remain constant, pH remains constant
If Bicarb goes up, pH goes up
If PCO2 goes up, pH goes down
pK value for bicarbonate system in normal physiology
6.1
Diagram illustrating relationship between PCO2, bicarbonate and pH
Davenport diagram
Buffer line for carbonic acid on Davenport diagram
Represents effects on carbonic acid (slash bicarbonate) in normal sample of blood when exposed to increasing / decreasing PCO2
Effect on buffer line with increasing Hb
Steeper buffer line
More Hb gives more buffer to changes in PCO2
4 types of acid base disturbances
Respiratory acidosis
Respiratory alkalosis
Metabolic acidosis
Metabolic alkalosis
Why does bicarbonate increase with respiratory acidosis?
Move up the buffer line
Carbonic acid dissociates to H+ and HCO3-
Effect of drop in pH as move
Move up the isopleth for the given PCO2 as kidney reabsorbs bicarbonate to improve pH and physiology associated