Title: Acid-Base and Electrolyte Pearls
1 Acid-Base and Electrolyte Pearls
- Luis S. Gonzalez III, Pharm.D., BCPS
- Memorial Medical Center
2In the last year, pick your most frequently
watched television program.
- Cash Cab
- Deal or No Deal
- Dancing With the Stars
- American Idol
- Myth Busters
- Flavor of Love/Rock of Love
- Hogan Knows Best
- Wall Street Week
- 30 Minute Meals
- Monday Night Football
- None of the above.
3What popular computer program turned 21 this year?
- Access
- Outlook
- SPSS
- Word
- PowerPoint
- Excel
4Electrolyte Disorders
- Luis S. Gonzalez III, Pharm.D., BCPS
- Memorial Medical Center
5Objectives
- Discuss the pathophysiology of common electrolyte
disorders. - Develop an appropriate management plan for common
electrolyte disorders.
6Case
- 59 year-old-female with NSC lung CA develops NV
after chemotherapy. On presentation to the
clinic, she has flat neck veins, dry mucous
membranes, and reduced skin turgor. - Plasma Na 112 meq/L, Plasma OSM 243
mosmol/kg - Urine Na 5 meq/L, Urine OSM 498 mosmol/kg
7Case (Continued)
- What is the appropriate therapy at this time?
- fluid restriction
- 3 NaCl IV at a rate of 50 ml/hr
- 0.9 NaCl IV at a rate of 150 ml/hr
- 0.45 NaCl IV at a rate of 100 ml/hr
8Assess Volume Status
- Hypovolemia
- History
- Symptoms (related to a decrease in tissue
perfusion) lassitude easy fatigability thirst
muscle cramps postural dizziness abdominal
and/or chest pain lethargy and confusion - PE Skin, axila, and mucous membranes
(interstitial volume) BP initially low with
upright posture to low regardless of posture
(depends on patients NORMAL BP)
9Assess Volume Status
- Hypervolemia
- History
- Symptoms pulmonary edema (SOB, orthopnea)
peripheral edema and ascites (swollen legs,
difficulty walking, increased abdominal girth) - PE tachypneic diaphoresis rales pitting edema
in dependent areas abdominal distension and
fluid wave on percussion
10Generation of Hyper(Na gt 145meq/L) or
Hyponatremia(Na lt 135meq/L)
- Nae____ __Ke
- Total Body Water
11Pseudohyponatremia
- Low plasma Na concentration with NORMAL Posm
- Severe hyperlipidemia (1 liter of plasma 930ml
of water 70ml plasma proteins and lipids) - Severe hyperproteinemia
- Low plasma Na concentration with ELEVATED Posm
- Hyperglycemia (Na Glucose/42)
- Administration of hypertonic mannitol
- IVIG administration with maltose accumulation in
RF
12Hypotonic Hyponatremia
- Hypovolemic
- Renal losses hypoaldosteronism, excessive
diuresis (thiazidesgtgtloop, mannitol, urea,
glucose), cerebral salt wasting - Nonrenal losses blood GI and Skin
13Hypotonic Hyponatremia
- Isovolemic
- Syndrome of Inappropriate Antidiuretic Hormone
(SIADH) - Increased hypothalmic production Neuro/psych
disorders drugs (chemo, psych meds, etc.)
pulmonary disease post-op patient - Ectopic ADH production various carcinomas
- Potentiation of ADH effect (carbamazepine)
- Exogenous ADH administration
- Adrenal insufficiency
- Hypothyroidism
14Hypotonic Hyponatremia
- Hypervolemic
- Conditions associated with effective circulating
volume depletion congestive heart failure and
cirrhosis - Conditions associated with true volume expansion
renal failure and nephrotic syndrome
15Evaluation of Hyponatremia
- History, PE, Plasma Osmo, basic metabolic panel,
Urine Osmo, Urine Na - Plasma Osmolality
- Normal or elevated pseudohyponatremia
- Urine Osmolality
- lt100 mosml/kg primary polydipsia
- Urine Sodium
- lt 25 meq/L effective circulating volume
depletion - gt 40 meq/L SIADH, renal failure, diuretics,
adrena insuffciency, hypothyroidism
16Treatment of Hyponatremia
- 2 basic principles (1) raising plasma Na at a
safe rate (2) treating cause - Give Na to patients who are volume-depleted and
restrict water intake in patients who are
normovolemic or edematous - Neurologic symptoms (nausea, malaise, HA,
lethargy, obtundation, seizures, coma) and/or Na
lt 110 meq/L 3 NaCl (15-80ml/hr)1-2ml/kg/hour,
Na Q1-2 hours, stop after rise of 8-12meq in 24
hours, 18meq in 48 hours
17Be Careful!
- Overly rapid correction of Na may result in a
condition known as central pontine myelinolysis
(CPM) or osmotic demyelination syndrome - Within 1-4 days development of para/quadriparesis,
dysarthria, dsyphagia, coma. Confirmed by
neuroimaging. - Experimental and clinical observation suggest lt
10-12meq/L correction over 1st 24 hours and lt
18meq/L in 48 hours
18Treatment of Hypotonic Hyponatremia
- Hypovolemic isotonic crystalloid solutions (0.9
NaCl, Lactated Ringers solution) bolus
infusion - Isovolemic correct cause, water restriction,
NaCl tablets, loop diuretics, demeclocycline, ?
V2 receptor antagonists - Hypervolemic water restriction(daily fluid
intake must be less than urine output), leave it
alone, anticongestive measures (loop ACEI),
renal replacement therapy, ? V2 receptor
antagonists
19Vasopressin Antagonists
- V2 collecting tubule, V1a pressor action, V1B
secretion of ACTH - Tolvaptan oral V2 antagonist
- Conivaptan (Vaprisol) parenteral V1/V2 receptor
antagonist - NEJM 11/16 two multicenter, randomized,
placebo-controlled, double-blind trials of oral
tolvaptan for 30 days - Chronic HF, cirrhosis, SIADH
- Hypernatremia, hypotension, dizziness, syncope
- Agents may require frequent visits, serum Na and
daily body weight measurements
20Conivaptan
- FDA approval of IV form 12/29/05
- Indications eu- and hypervolemic hyponatremia
- Drug Interactions CYP3A4 inhibitor and substrate
(contraindicated with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors), - ADEs infusion site reactions
- Dosing 20 mg IV LD, 20-40 mg/day IV CI
- Cost 3632.65/10 vials, 20 mg/vial
21Case
- 59 year-old-female with NSC lung CA develops NV
after chemotherapy. On presentation to the
clinic, she has flat neck veins, dry mucous
membranes, and reduced skin turgor. - Plasma Na 112 meq/L, Plasma OSM 243
mosmol/kg - Urine Na 5 meq/L, Urine OSM 498 mosmol/kg
22Case (continued)
- What is the appropriate therapy at this time?
- fluid restriction
- 3 NaCl IV at a rate of 50 ml/hr
- 0.9 NaCl IV at a rate of 150 ml/hr
- 0.45 NaCl IV at a rate of 100 ml/hr
23Case (Continued)
- After the appropriate therapy, the next day her
plasma Na is 122meq/L. Her urine Na and
osmolality are 80 meq/L and 520 mosmol/kg
respectively. - A. Both hypovolemia and SIADH contributed to the
hyponatremia and the patient is euvolemic. - B. Hypovolemia caused the hyponatremia and the
patient is euvolemic. - C. Hypovolemia caused the hyponatemia and the
patient is still hypovolemic.
24Case (Continued)
- Distinguish between the possibilities.
- Hypovolemia and SIADH caused the hyponatremia and
the patient is euvolemic (U Na 80 meq/L, U osm
520 mosmol/kg) - Hypovolemia caused the hyponatremia and the
patient is still volume depleted ( U Na 15
meq/L, U osm 500 mosmol/kg) - Hypovolemia caused the hyponatremia and the
patient is euvolemic (U Na 25 meq/L, U osm 80
mosmol/kg)
25Generation of Hyper(Na gt 145meq/L) or
Hyponatremia(Na lt 135meq/L)
- Nae____ __Ke
- Total Body Water
26Etiology of Hypernatremia
- hypovolemic
- Hypotonic fluid loss
- Renal causes loop or osmotic diuretics
postobstructive diuresis polyuric ATN - GI vomiting NG drainage diarrhea
- Cutaneous causes burns excessive sweating
- Isovolemic
- Pure water loss
- Insensible loss fever hyperthermia
- Central or nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
- hypervolemic
- Administration of hypertonic sodium-containing
fluids - Ingestion of sodium
27Clinical Management Issues
- Outpatients with hypernatremia are either very
young or very old - Signs/symptoms thrist, lethargy, muscle
hyperreflexia, seizures, coma - 2 basic principles (1) address underlying cause
(2) correct hypertonicity - Acute vs chronic
- Acute reduce Na by 1 meq/hr
- Chronic max reduction of 0.5 meq/hr, 10 meq/day
28Treatment of Hypernatremia
- Hypovolemic
- Isotonic saline unsuitable unless there is
substantial hemodynamic compromise - 0.45 sodium chloride
- Isovolemic
- 5 dextrose in water with close monitoring for
hyperglycemia - Central diabetes insipidus desmopressin
- Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus address cause if
possible Li (HCTZ, amilioride) - Hypervolemia
- No apparent renal failure loop 5 dextrose in
water - Renal failure renal replacement therapy
29Case
- 80-year-old man presents with change in mental
status, fever, tachypnea, dry mucous membranes,
and BP of 150/90 mm Hg. His plasma Na
concentration is 172 meq/L. His other medical
problems include Alzheimers dementia and HTN. - Meds donepizil, memantine, lisinopril
30Case (Continued)
- What is the appropriate therapy at this time?
- 0.9 sodium chloride IV at 100 ml/hr
- 0.45 sodium chloride at IV 100 ml/hr
- 500 ml 6 hetastarch IV bolus
- D 5 in water IV at 150 ml/hr
31Potassium Disorders
- Total body K stores are roughly 3000-4000 meq
(50-55 meq/kg body weight) with 90-98
sequestered within cells - K homeostasis maintains cellular function and
neuromuscular transmission - Net effect of hyper or hypo K depends on
maintenance of (K)c/(K)e ratio
32Hypokalemia
- Increased entry into cells
- Alkalosis, insulin, elevated b-adrenergic
activity - Increased GI losses
- Vomiting, NG suction
- Increased urinary losses
- Diuretics, metabolic acidoses, mineralocorticoid
excess, penicillin derivatives, ampho B,
Hypomagnesemia - Renal replacement therapies
33Diagnosis
- History vomiting diarrhea diuretic use
- ECG
- Urinary K excretion lt 25meq/day or lt 15 meq/L
in spot specimen - Acid-base status
- Metabolic acidosis diarrhea ketoacidosis RTA
- Metabolic alkalosis diuretics, vomiting or NG
suctioning
34Hypokalemia
35Treatment
- Consider assessment of the physiologic effects of
K depletion - ECG changes and muscle strength
- K deficits cannot be reliably estimated
- Food sources K phosphate, high-calorie
- Oral crystalline (50-65 meq/level tsp)
slow-release liquid - IV nondextrose-containing solution 60meq/L via
peripheral vein
36Treatment
- Mild K deficit (3-3.5meq/L)
- Treat with oral KCL 60-80meq/day with correction
of underlying cause - Moderate K deficit(2.5-3meq/L)
- Oral KCL 80-120meq/day with correction of cause
- Severe hypokalemia or severe physiologic effects
- Asymptomatic 10-20meq/hour, severe symptoms 40meq
or ?higher/hr - Continuous cardiac monitoring administer through
large vein (e.g. femoral)
37Case
- 63 yo F with cc of diarrhea for past 4-5 days
during which her weight has dropped by 4 kg. Her
PO intake has been limited to fluids and fruits.
PE postural hypotension, flat neck veins. - Labs Na 130meq/l, K 6.7meq/l, Cl 98 meq/l, HCO3
21meq/l, BUN 31mg/dl, Cr. 1.2mg/dl - ECG compared to old reveals no new findings
38Case (continued)
- What is the appropriate therapy at this time?
- Ca gluconate 10 10ml IV over 2-3 min, 10 units
of insulin D50 50ml IV, NaHCO3 50 meq IV, SPS
30 grams PO - Above minus Ca gluconate
- SPS 30 grams PO
- 0.9 NaCl 500 ml IV bolus, then 150 ml/hr
39Hyperkalemia
- Increased intake
- PO and/or IV
- Movement from cells into extracellular fluid
- Pseudohyperkalemia
- Metabolic acidosis
- Insulin deficiency in uncontrolled DM
- B-adrenergic blockade, digoxin overdose
- Decreased urinary excretion
- Renal failure
- Effective circulating volume depletion
- hypoaldosteronism
40Symptoms
- Muscle weakness
- Usually not present until plasma K exceeds 8
meq/L - Muscle weakness begins in the lower extremities
and ascends to the trunk and upper extremities - Cardiac Arrhythmias
- Causes changes in atrial and ventricular
repolarization
41Diagnosis
- History medications, ?DM, dietary sources
- PE muscle weakness, volume status
- Labs ECG, basic metabolic panel, pH
- 3 groups of conditions
- Increased intake
- Release from the cells
- Reduced urinary excretion
42Hyperkalemia
43Treatment
- Monitor K, muscle strength, and ECG
- Antagonism of membrane action
- Calcium gluconate 10 10ml IV over 2-3min
- Increase K shift into cells
- Regular insulin 10 units IV plus dextrose 50
50ml IV - Sodium bicarbonate 50 meq IV
- B2 adrenergic agonists
- Removal of excess K
- Diuretics
- Sodium polystyrene sulfonate
- Renal replacement therapy
44Acid-Base Disorders
- Luis S. Gonzalez III, Pharm.D., BCPS
- Memorial Medical Center
45Case
- A 45-year-old man presents to the DEM with a 3
day history of vomiting. His past medical history
is significant for polycystic kidney disease
causing chronic renal failure. - PE BP 80/50, decreased skin turgor, flat neck
veins - Na 145 meq/L, Cl 100 meq/L, HCO3 24 meq/L, pH
7.40, PCO2 40 mmHg
46Case (Continued)
- What is the acid-base abnormality?
- no acid-base abnormality present
- Metabolic acidosis
- Metabolic alkalosis
- Metabolic alkalosis and anion gap metabolic
acidosis
47Definitions
- Metabolic acidosis low pH and low bicarbonate
concentration - Metabolic alkalosis high pH and high
bicarbonate concentration - Respiratory acidosis low pH and high PCO2
- Respiratory alkalosis high pH and low PCO
- pH 7.40 (7.37-7.43), PCO2 40 mmHg (36-44), HCO3
24 meq/L (22-26) - H 24 x PCO2/HCO3
48Renal and Respiratory Compensation
Primary Disorder Compensatory response
Metabolic acidosis 1.2mmHg ?PCO2 for 1meq ? in HCO3
Metabolic alkalosis 0.7mmHg ? PCO2 for 1meq ? HCO3
Acute Resp Acidosis 1 meq ? HCO3 for 10mmHg ? in PCO2
Chronic Resp Acidosis 3.5 meq ? HCO3 for 10mmHg ? in PCO2
Acute Resp Alkalosis 2 meq ? HCO3 for 10mmHg ? PCO2
Chronic Resp Alkalosis 4 meq ? HCO3 for every 10mmHg ?in PCO2
49Metabolic Acidosis
- Inability of kidney to excrete acid load OR an
increase in the generation of acid or loss of
HCO3 - Anion Gap (5-11meq/L) Na - Cl HCO3
- Normal value is reduced by 2.5meq/L for every
1gm/dl decline in albumin concentration
50Case
- CC 77 year-old WF with SOB and lethargy
- HPI Decreased PO intake over last several days.
- PMH COPD, diverticulosis, HTN, depression,
duodenal ulcer resection - SHx ½-1 PPD X 50 y, 2-4 glasses of wine
- PE abdomen diffusely tender
- LABS/Investigations ABG 2L NC 7.24-19-148-98.2,
Na 137, K 6.3, Cl 104, C02 8, BUN 69, Cr. 2.1,
WBC 31.9, CT ABD/Pelvis diffuse diverticulosis,
enlargement of sigmoid colon
51Case (Cont)
- What acid-base disturbance is present?
- 1. respiratory acidosis
- 2. respiratory alkalosis
- 3. metabolic acidosis
- 4. metabolic alkalosis
52The Shrinking Anion Gap
53Case (Cont)
- She was was bolused with fluid and treated with D
5 150 meq/L NaHCO3 at a rate of 200ml/hour.
Piperacillin/Tazobactam was started and one dose
of IV gentamicin was given. - She looked well the next day and was feeling much
better. - LABS Na 146, K 3.7, Cl 100, CO2 24, BUN 42, Cr.
1.3
54Case (Cont)
- What acid-base disturbance is present?
- 1. no acid base disturbance
- 2. anion gap metabolic acidosis and metabolic
alkalosis - 3. respiratory alkalosis
- 4. pH please
- 5. metabolic acidosis
55Major Causes of Metabolic Acidosis
- High Anion Gap
- M - methanol
- U uremia
- D Diabetic Ketoacidosis
- P Phenformin/metformin
- I INH/Iron
- L lactic acidosis
- E ethylene glycol
- S salicylates
56Major Causes of Metabolic Acidosis
- Normal anion gap (hyperchloremic)
- Diarrhea
- Renal Tubular Acidoses
- Iatrogenic (Isotonic crystalloid solutions)
57Metabolic Alkalosis
- Gastrointestinal H loss (CO2 H2O ?? H HCO3)
- Vomiting or NG suctioning
- Renal H Loss
- Diuretics
- Mineralocorticoid excess
- Hypokalemia
- Contraction alkalosis
- Diuretics
58Causes of Metabolic Alkalosis
Saline-responsive (urine Cl lt 25 meq/L Saline-resistant (urine Cl gt 40 meq/L)
Vomiting/NG suction Edematous states
diuretics Mineralocorticoid excess
posthypercapnia Severe hypokalemia
59Treatment
- Saline-responsive
- Oral or IV administration of NaCl and water
(0.45 or 0.9 NaCl) - Replete K deficits with KCl
- Can monitor urine pH and Cl
- Saline-resistant
- Edematous states (heart failure, cirrhosis,
nephrotic syndrome) withhold diuretics if
possible, acetazolamide, dialysis - Replete K deficits with KCl
60Respiratory Acidosis
- The main physiologic stimulus to breathing are an
elevation in arterial PCO2 and a reduction in
PO2. - Hypercapnia indicates advanced pulmonary
dysfunction (deadspace) and/or and insult to
ventilatory drive (e.g., opioid use).
61Pathophysiology of Respiratory Acidosis
- Medullary center inhibition
- Acute medications, O2, cardiac arrest
- Chronic obesity, CNS lesions, Met. Alkalosis
- Respiratory muscles and chest wall
- Acute myasthenia, ?? K/PO4, Guillain-Barre
- Chronic muscle weakness, kyphoscoliosis
- Conditions affecting gas exchange
- Acute COPD, ARDS, Pulm. Edema, pneumonia,
asthma, pneumo or hemothorax - Chronic COPD, obesity
- Mechanical ventilation
62Respiratory Acidoses Most Common Causes
- Acute COPD exacerbation severe asthma or
pneumonia pulmonary edema drug OD or cardiac
arrest administration of O2 to chronic CO2
retainer and MV. - Symptoms HA blurred vision restlessness and
anxiety somnolence, arrhythmias, hypotension - Chronic COPD extreme obesity
- Symptoms peripheral edema (cor pulmonale)
- History complete PM and Med History record 02
use Baseline HCO3, CO2 and pH, BIPAP
63Treatment
- Acute Respiratory Acidosis treat underlying
cause - Mechanical ventilation (BiPAP or endotracheal
tube) - NaHCO3 50 meq IV, if pH lt7.15
- Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
- Avoid excessive oxygen and sedatives, weight
reduction for obese, carbohydrate restriction
(200g/d), bronchodilators - Diuretics for cor pulmonale but avoid
superimposed metabolic alkalosis - Acetazolamide 250-375 mg BID, urine pH gt 7, lower
HCO3 to baseline
64Respiratory Alkalosis
- Elevated arterial pH and Hypocapnia
- H 24 X PCO2/HCO3
- Causes
- Hypoxemia pulm disease CHF hypotension severe
anemia - Pulmonary disease pneumonia PE interstitial
fibrosis - Stimulation to Medullary Center psychogenic
hepatic failure gram sepsis salicylates
neurologic disease drug withdrawl - Mechanical ventilation
65Symptoms, Diagnosis, and Treatment
- Symptoms light-headedness altered
consciousness paresthesias of extremities,
cramps, carpopedal spasm arrhythmias - Phosphate reduction to as low as 0.5-1.5mg/dl
- Diagnosis tachypnea, pH, PCO2, HCO3
- Treatment correct underlying disorder
66Stepwise Approach
- Detailed history, clinical assessment
- Obtain ABG and Chem 7. Identify all abnormalities
in pH, PCO2, and HCO3. - Determine which abnormalities are primary and
which are compensatory based on pH. - If the pH is gt 7.40, then a respiratory or
metabolic alkalosis is primary - If the pH is lt 7.40, then a respiratory or
metabolic acidosis is primary - Calculate the anion gap. If gt 20, metabolic
acidosis is always present.
67Stepwise Approach (Continued)
- 5. If anion gap is increased, calculate the
excess anion gap (Anion gap 10). Add this value
to the measured HCO3. - If gt 30, then metabolic alkalosis is present
- If lt 22, then nonanion gap metabolic acidosis is
present - 6. Compare the identified disorders to the
history. Begin patient-specific therapy.
68Calculation of the Potential Bicarbonate
Concentration
69(No Transcript)
70Case Presentations
- Luis S. Gonzalez III, Pharm.D., BCPS
- Memorial Medical Center
71Case 1
- A 70 year-old woman is started on
hydrochlorothiazide 25 mg daily and a
salt-restricted diet for the treatment of
hypertension (160/100) two weeks ago. - VS 130/86, HR 90
- PE decreased skin turgor, flat neck veins
- LABS Na 119 meq/L, K 2.1 meq/L, Cl 71 meq/L,
HCO3 34 meq/L, P osm 252, U Na 4 meq/L.
72Case 1 (Continued)
- Which of the following contributed to the
development of hyponatremia? - Hypokalemia
- retention of water
- Diuretic
- SIADH
- Hypovolemia
- A, B, C, D, E
- A, B, C, E
73Case 1 (Continued)
- Choose the appropriate therapy.
- 0.9 NaCl with 40 meq KCl at IV 100 ml/hr
- oral potassium chloride
- oral potassium citrate
- Dextrose 5/0.225 sodium chloride IV at 100
ml/hour
74Case 2
- An 80 year-old male who resides in a nursing home
was brought to the clinic with a 4 day history of
a viral-like illness. He has been having loose
stools and is confused. - PMHx hypertension and dementia
- Meds PTA furosemide 20 mg daily, amlodipine 10
mg daily. - PE BP 120/80, P 100, decreased skin turgor and
dry mucous membranes - Labs Na 177 meq/L, U Na 5 meq/L, U osmo 600
mosmol/kg
75Case 2 (Continued)
- What caused the development of hypernatremia?
- Furosemide
- insensible losses
- Hyperglycemia
- All of the above
- A B
76Case 3
- What is the most appropriate initial therapy for
the hypernatremia? - Dextrose 5 in water IV at a rate of 250 ml/hr
- 0.9 sodium chloride IV at a rate of 100 ml/ hr
- Dextrose 5/0.225 sodium chloride IV at a rate
of 150 ml/hr - Increase oral water intake
77Case 4
- 59 year-old white male admitted with crushing
substernal chest pressure. He ECG is significant
for ST segment depressions in leads II, III, AVF
and frequent PVCs. - PMhx hypertension, hypercholesterolemia
- Meds HCTZ, atorvastatin, ASA
- PE BP 90/50, S3 gallop, crackles on lung
auscultation - LABS Na 140 meq/L, K 2.8 meq/L, Cl 102 meq/L,
HCO3 15, Creat 1 mg/dl
78Case 4 (Continued)
- What would be the appropriate initial therapy?
- Give oral KCl liquid 40 meq x 2, 4 hours apart
- Dextrose 5/ 0.45 sodium chloride 80 meq
KCl/liter IV, run at 150 ml/hr - KCL 20meq/100ml water IV every hour for 4 doses
- 0.9 sodium chloride 80 meq of KCl/liter IV,
run at 200 ml per hour
79Case 5
- A 55-year-old woman with CRF (creatinine 2.1
mg/dl) is started on a low-sodium diet for
hypertension. 2 weeks later she presents with a
CC of severe weakness. - PE slightly decreased skin turgor, new proximal
muscle weakness - ECG peaked T waves and widening of the QRS
- LABS Na 130 meq/L, K 9.2 meq/L, Cl 98 meq/L,
HCO3 17 meq/L, Creatinine 2.7 mg/dl, pH 7.30
80Case 5 (Continued)
- What would you recommend?
- Sodium polystyrene sulfonate
- Calcium gluconate 10/10ml, IV and repeat after 5
minutes - Insulin, dextrose, Sodium bicarbonate
- all of the above
81Case 6
- An 18-year-old white female is brought to DEM by
mom because she doesnt look well. - PMHx none
- Meds PTA none
- VS BP 110/60, Hr 100, RR 30, T 100
- PE normal
- Labs ABG pH 7.50, PCO2 29 mmHg, HCO3 22 meq/L
82Case 6 (Continued)
- What is the acid-base abnormality?
- Metabolic Acidosis
- Respiratory Acidosis
- Respiratory Alkalosis
- Metabolic Alkalosis
83Case 7
- A 30-year-old male is brought to the DEM with a
decreased level of consciousness. His urine drug
screen is for opioids and his physical exam is
normal except for pinpoint pupils and a
respiratory rate of 6 BPM. - Labs pH 7.25, PCO2 60 mmHg, HCO3 26 meq/L
84Case 7 (Continued)
- What acid-base disorder is present?
- Metabolic acidosis
- Acute Respiratory acidosis
- Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
- Metabolic alkalosis
85Case 8
- A 58-year-old white male presents to the fast
track clinic with a 3 day history of vomiting,
binge drinking, and a cough productive of
purulent sputum. - PMHx chronic alcohol abuse
- PE BP 80/50, Pulse 120, T 102F, RR 32
- Lungs RLL absent breath sounds CV flat neck
veins, decreased skin turgor ABD tender - LABS pH 7.50, PCO2 20 mmHg, Na 145 meq/L, Cl
100 meq/L, HCO3 15 meq/L
86Case 8 (Continued)
- What acid-base abnormalities are present?
- Respiratory Alkalosis, Metabolic Alkalosis,
Respiratory Acidosis - Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic Alkalosis, anion
gap Metabolic Alkalosis - Respiratory Alkalosis, anion gap Metabolic
Acidosis, Metabolic alkalosis - Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic alkalosis
87Case 9
- A 45-year-old male type I diabetic who has had
difficulty controlling his sugar recently
presents to the DEM with a decreased level of
consciousness. - PMHx Type I DM on insulin
- PE BP 100/60 mmHg, RR 8, T 100, HR 100, obtunded
- LABS pH 7.10, PCO2 50 mmHg, Na 145 meq/L, Cl
100 meq/L, HCO3 15, Glucose 425 mg/dl
88Case 9 (Continued)
- What types of acid-base disturbances are present?
- Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic Alkalosis,
Respiratory Alkalosis - Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic Acidosis,
Metabolic Alkalosis - Respiratory Alkalosis, Metabolic Acidosis,
Metabolic Alkalosis - Metabolic Alkalosis, Metabolic Acidosis
89Case 10
- A 58-year-old man with a PMHx of chronic
pancreatitis and diabetes adm. with Hx of severe
vomiting. He had been self medicating with milk
and NaHCO3 for the ABD pain. On adm, he was
semi-comatose, dry with BP 100/60, P 120, marked
orthostasis, no rebound on abd exam. HEME - Labs Na 140 meq/L, K 3.4 meq/L, Cl 69 meq/L ,
HCO3 40 meq/L, S. Cr. 4.6 mg/dl, pH 7.86, pCO2
23 mmHg
90Case 10 (Continued)
- What types of acid-base abnormalities are
present? - A. Respiratory Alkalosis, Metabolic Alkalosis,
Metabolic Acidosis - B. Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic Alkalosis,
Respiratory Alkalosis - C. Respiratory Acidosis, Metabolic Acidosis,
Metabolic Alkalosis - D. Respiratory Alkalosis, Metabolic Alkalosis
91CASH CAB
92pH 7.27 PCO2 70 PO2 35 HCO3 31
- 1. metabolic acidosis, chronic respiratory
acidosis - 2. acute on chronic respiratory acidosis
- 3. acute respiratory acidosis, metabolic alkalosis
- A. Patient with chronic hypercapnia develops
pneumonia - B. Patient with COPD develops persistent diarrhea
- C. Patient with Hx of asthma has 5 days of
vomiting then develops asthma attack