Week 3: clinical disorders of acid base balance Flashcards
Review primary disorders of metabolic/respiratory acidosis and metabolic/respiratory alkalosis.
Metabolic acidosis: decreased HCO3-, decreased pCO2 compensation
Metabolic alkalosis: increased HCO3-, increased pCO2 compensation.
Respiratory acidosis: increased pCO2, increased HCO3- compensation
Respiratory alkalosis: decreased pCO2, decreased HCO3- compensation
What are three ways of calculated compensation for metabolic acidosis?
- Each 1 mEq/L decrease in HCO3- should have 1.2 mmHg decrease of pCO2
- pCO2=1.5xHCO3- + 8 (+/-)2
- pCO2= last 2 digits of pH
How can you tell if its a mixed metabolic and respiratory disorder?
-If there is deviation from the expected result (the expected magnitude and direction of compensation of the primary disturbance), then it is a mixed disorder.
What are 4 general causes of metabolic acidosis? What falls under each general cause.
- Ingestion of acid
- ethylene glycol
- metahnol
- toluene
- salicylic acid - Endogenous generation of acid
- lactic acidosis
- ketoacidosis: DM or EtOH
- Rhabdomyolysis - Defective acid excretion
- Renal failure
- distal renal tubular acidosis (problem in handling of acid load, NH4+ genesis) - Loss of alkali
- diarrhea
- proximal RTA (problem in PT handling HCO3- reabsorption)
How do you calculate serum anion gap? Why is this significant?
- Serum anion gap is a conceptual gap since not all anions and cations are measured
- Serum anion gap=unmeasured anions-unmeasured cations = Na-(Cl+HCO3)
- normal 8-12 (due to albumin)
- unmeasured anions: albumin, PO4, SO4, lactate, pyruvate
- unmeasured cations: K, Ca, Mg, immunoglobulins*
What is the ddx for high anion gap metabolic acidosis?
MUDPILES -methanol -uremia -diabetic ketoacidosis -paraldehyde -iron and isoniazid -lactic acidosis -ethylene glycol and ethanol -salicylates ALSO -rhabdomyolysis and toluene abuse
What causes anion-gap acidosis?
- For example: in lactic acidosis, lactic acid generates H+ and Lactate-
- the H+ is buffered by bicarbonate, and lactate is the unmeasured anion produced
How do you calculate serum osmolal gap? What is it used for?
Osmolal gap=measured Sosm-Calculated Sosm
- Calculated Sosm: 2Na+glucose/18+ BUN/2.8
- normal is <10 mOsm/kg
- use the serum osmolal gap when you suspect toxic ingestion
What are common ddx in serum osmolal gap acidosis?
- Ethanol, ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, methanol toxic ingestion causes high osmolal gap and + anion gap
- isopropanol causes high osmolal gap and negative anion gap
- salicylates cause normal osmolal gap and +anion gap acidosis
What are main causes of non gap metabolic acidosis?
-RTA and diarrhea
What are types of renal tubular acidosis?
- Proximal Type 2: defective handling of HCO3- reabsorption. Has decreased serum K+, urine pH>5.5, high urine NH4+ and HCO3-.
- Distal Type I “Classic distal”: Decreased H+ secretion. low serum K+, urine pH>5.5, low urine NH4+ and HCO3-
- Distal Type 4 Hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronism: lack of response to aldosterone or hypoaldosteronism. inadequate ammoniogenesis. high serum K+, Urine pH<5.5, low urine NH4+ and HCO3-
What are causes of RTA?
- Proximal Type 2
- most common: multiple myeloma and heavy metals
- Cystinosis
- Wilson’s
- ifosfamide - Distal Type 1
- most common: autoimmune-SLE and Sjogrens
- cirrhosis
- medullary sponge
- amphotericin - Distal Type 4
- DM
- sickle cell
- obstructive nephropathy
- HIV
What are the general causes of metabolic alkalosis? Also specific causes?
- Ingestion of alkali
- antacids
- citrated blood (from blood transfusion, citrate is added to blood to prevent clotting) - Loss of Acid-GI loss
- vomiting
- NG suction - Loss of Acid- Renal loss
- diuretics “contraction alkalosis”
- Bartter/Gitelman
- hyperaldosteronism - Cellular Shift
- decrease in K+: K+ exits cell and H+ enters cell
What is the ddx of hyperaldosteronism?
Hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis and HTN
- High aldosterone high renin
- Renal artery stenosis (decreased perfusion–>increase renin)
- reninoma-rare - High aldosterone low renin
- Primary hyperaldosteronism
- glucocorticoid-remediable aldosteronism (GRA) - Low aldosterone
- Cushings
- Liddles
- Licorice
- Syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME)
What is required in the maintenance of alkalosis?
- impairment of renal excretion of excess bicarbonate even if origin of alkalosis was not renal
1. effective circulating volume depletion: - increased PT HCO3 reabsorption
- increased distal Na reabsorption
2. Renal failure