Title: Acid-Base Disorders
1Acid-Base Disorders
- Sharon Anderson, M.D.
- Division of Nephrology and Hypertension
- May 2003
2General Acid-Base Relationships
- Henderson-Hasselbach equation
-
- pH pK log HCO3 _ /pCO2
- H 24 x pCO2/HCO3_
- ???0.1?pH unit ? 10 nm/L H
3Approach to Acid-Base Disorders
- 1. Consider the clinical setting!
- 2. Is the patient acidemic or alkalemic?
- 3. Is the primary process metabolic or
respiratory? - 4. If metabolic acidosis, gap or non-gap?
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- 6. Is more than one disorder present?
4Simple Acid-Base Disorders
- Primary Compensatory
- Disorder pH H Disorder
Response - Metabolic acidosis ? ??? ??HCO3_ ? pCO2
- Metabolic alkalosis ? ???????HCO3_ ?
pCO2 - Respiratory acidosis ? ???????pCO2 ? HCO3_
- Respiratory alkalosis ? ???????pCO2 ? HCO3_
5Metabolic Acidosis
- Etiology Inability of the kidney to excrete the
dietary H load, or increase in the generation of
H (due to addition of H or loss of HCO3-)
6Metabolic Acidosis Elevated Anion Gap
- AG Na - (Cl- HCO3-) 12 2
- Note Diagnostic utility is best when AG gt 25
- Causes Ketoacidosis
- Lactic acidosis
- Intoxications
- Renal failure
- Rhabdomyolysis
7Anion Gap in Hypoalbuminemia
- The true anion gap is underestimated in
hypoalbuminemia ( fall in unmeasured anions) AG
must be adjusted - Formulas for adjusted AG
- For every 1.0 fall in albumin, increase AG by 2.5
- Consider the patients normal AG to be (2 x
alb) (0.5 x phosphate) - Adjusted AG Observed AG (2.5 x normal alb -
adjusted alb
8Ketosis
- Diabetes
- Starvation
- Alcoholic
- Isopropyl alcohol
- Ketosis with normal AG and HCO3_
9Ketosis Points to Remember
- -- Normal AG and HCO3_ isopropyl alcohol
- -- Beta-hydroxbutyrate not seen by ketotest
- -- Acetoacetate spuriously ? Cr
- -- False positive ketotest
- paraldehyde, disulfiram, captopril
10Lactic Acidosis
- Type A Hypoxic
- Lactatepyruvate gt 101
- Type B Glycolytic
- Lactatepyruvate 101
11Intoxications Causing High AG Acidosis
- Aspirin - high salicylate level also primary
respiratory alkalosis - Methanol - optic papillitis
- Ethylene Glycol - calcium oxalate crystals
- Paraldehyde
12Use of venous vs. arterial pH
- As compared with arterial blood gasses
- pH ? 0.03-0.04
- pCO2 ? 7-8 mmHg
- HCO3 ? 2 mEq/L
13The Delta/Delta ? AG/ ? HC03
- Rationale
- For each unit INCREASE in AG (above normal), HC03
should DECREASE one unit (below normal) - Normal values AG 12, HC03 24
14Use of the Delta/Delta Examples
- AG HCO3 Diagnosis
- 18 (? 6) 18 (? 6) Appropriate pure AG acidosis
- 18 (? 6) 22 (? 2) HCO3 has ? less than
-
predicted, so HCO3 is too high -
mixed AG acidosis AND met alk - 18 (? 6) 12 (? 12) HCO3 has ? more
than -
predicted, so HCO3 is too low -
mixed AG AND non-AG acidosis
15Causes of Low Anion Gap
- Etiology Fall in unmeasured anions
- or rise in unmeasured cations
- Hyperkalemia Lithium intoxication
- Hypercalcemia Multiple myeloma
- Hypermagnesemia
- Artefactual hypernatremia, bromide,
hyperlipidemia
16Osmolar Gap
- Measured serum osmolality gt
- calculated serum osmolality by gt 10 mOsm
- Calc Sosm (2 x Na) BUN/2.8 Glu/18
17Causes of High Osmolar Gap
- Isotonic hyponatremia
- Hyperlipidemia
- Hyperproteinemia
- Mannitol
- Glycine infusion
- Chronic renal failure
- Ingestions
- Ethanol, isopropyl alcohol, ethylene glycol,
mannitol - Contrast Media
18Relationship between AG and Osmolar Gap
- AG Osm gap Comments
- Ethylene glycol
Double gap - Methanol
Double gap - Renal failure
Double gap - Isopropyl alcohol -
- Ethanol -
- Lipids, proteins -
19Causes of Normal AG (Hyperchloremic) Metabolic
Acidosis
- High K Low K
- Adrenal insufficiency Diarrhea
- Interstitial nephritis RTA
- NH4Cl, Arg HCl Ureteral diversion
20Use of the Urine Anion Gap (UAG) in Normal AG
AcidosisBatlle et al. NEJM 318594, 1988
- Urine AG (Na K) - Cl
- Negative UAG Normal, or GI loss of HCO3
- Positive UAG altered distal renal acidification
- Caveats Less accurate in patients with volume
depletion (low urinary Na) and in patients with
increased excretion of unmeasured anions (e.g.
ketoacidosis), where there is increased excretion
of Na and K to maintain electroneutrality)
21Use of the Urinary AG in Normal Gap
AcidosisBatlle et al. NEJM 318594, 1988
- Plasma K UAG U pH Diagnosis
- Normal - lt 5.5 Normal
- Normal-low - gt 5.5 GI HCO3 loss
- High lt 5.5 Aldo deficiency
- High gt 5.5 Distal RTA
- Normal-low gt 5.5 Proximal RTA
22Use of the Urine Osmolal Gap
- When UAG is positive, and it is unclear if
increased cation excretion is responsible, urine
NH4 concentration can be estimated from urine
osmolal gap - Calc Uosm (2 x NaK) urea nitrogen/2.8
glu/18 - The gap between the calculated and measured Uosm
mostly ammonium - In patients with metabolic acidosis, urine
ammonium should be gt 20 mEq/L. Lower value
impaired acidification
23Renal Tubular Acidosis
- Type 1 (distal) Type 2 (proximal) Type 4
- Defect ??distal acid. ??prox HCO3 reab
??aldo - HCO3 May be lt 10 12-20 gt 17
- Urine pH gt 5.3 Variable lt 5.3
- Plasma K Usually low Usually low High
- Response Good Poor Fair
- to HCO3 Rx
24Calculation of Bicarbonate Deficit
- Bicarb deficit HCO3- space x HCO3-
deficit/liter - HCO3- space 0.4 x lean body wt (kg)
- HCO3- deficit/liter desired HCO3- - measured
HCO3-
25Approach to Metabolic Acidosis
Anion Gap
Normal
High
Osmolar Gap
GI Fluid Loss?
No
Yes
Normal
Increased
Diarrhea Ileostomy Enteric fistula
Urine pH
Uremia Lactate Ketoacids Salicylate
Ethylene glycol Methanol
lt 5.5
gt 5.5
Serum K
Distal RTA (Type 1)
High
Low
Type 4 RTA
Proximal RTA (Type 2)
26Metabolic Alkalosis
- Etiology Requires both generation of metabolic
alkalosis (loss of H through GI tract or
kidneys) and maintenance of alkalosis (impairment
in renal HCO3 excretion) - Causes of metabolic alkalosis
- Loss of hydrogen
- Retention of bicarbonate
- Contraction alkalosis
- Maintenance factors Decrease in GFR, increase
in HCO3 reabsorption
27Use of Spot Urine Cl and K
Very Low (lt 10 mEq/L)
Vomiting, NG suction Postdiuretic,
posthypercapneic Villous adenoma,
congenital chloridorrhea, post- alkali
Urine Chloride
gt 20 mEq/L
Low (lt 20 mEq/L)
Urine Potassium
Laxative abuse Other profound K depletion
gt 30 mEq/L
Diuretic phase of diuretic Rx, Bartters,
Gitelmans, primary aldo, Cushings, Liddles,
secondary aldosteronism
28Treatment of Metabolic Alkalosis
- 1. Remove offending culprits.
- 2. Chloride (saline) responsive alkalosis
Replete volume with NaCl. - 3. Chloride non-responsive (saline resistant)
alkalosis - Acetazolamide (CA inhibitor)
- Hydrochloric acid infusion
- Correct hypokalemia if present
29Calculation of Bicarbonate Excess
- Bicarb excess HCO3- space x HCO3- excess/liter
- HCO3- space 0.5 x lean body wt (kg)
- HCO3- excess/liter measured HCO3- - desired
HCO3-
30Respiratory Acidosis
- Causes of Respiratory Acidosis
- Inhibition of medullary respiratory center
- Disorders of respiratory muscles and chest wall
- Upper airway obstruction
- Disorders affecting gas exchange across
pulmonary capillaries - Mechanical ventilation
31Respiratory Alkalosis
- Causes of Respiratory Alkalosis
- Hypoxemia
- Pulmonary disease
- Stimulation of medullary respiratory center
- Mechanical ventilation
32Mixed Acid-Base Disorders Clues
- -- Degree of compensation for primary
- disorder is inappropriate
-
- -- Delta AG/delta HCO3_ too high or too low
- -- Clinical history
33Problem 1
- A 30-yo man with DM presents with a week of
polyuria, polydipsia, fever to 102, nausea, and
abdominal pain. He is orthostatic on admission. - 130 I 94 I 75 I 906 pH 7.14
- 6.1 I 6 I 2.3 pCO2 18
- pO2 102
34Problem 1, cont.
130 I 94 I 75 I 906 7.14/18/102 6.1 I 6 I
2.3
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- DKA (with anion gap acidosis)
- 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH acidemic must be metabolic (low HCO3, low
pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 30 anion gap metabolic acidosis
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- pCO2 should last 2 digits of pH 18 or (1.5 x
HCO3) 8 17 - 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 30 ( 18) HCO3 6 ( 18) thus simple AG
met acidosis -
35Problem 2
- A 30-yo man with DM presents with a week of
polyuria, polydipsia, fever to 102, and vomiting
for four days. - 135 I 89 I 50 I 1181 pH 7.26
- 6.1 I 10 I 2.3 pCO2 23
- pO2 88
36Problem 2, cont.
135 I 89 I 50 I 1181 7.26/23/88 6.1 I 10 I 2.3
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- DKA (AG acidosis) met alk from vomiting
- 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH acidemic must be metabolic (low HCO3, low
pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 36 anion gap metabolic acidosis
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- pCO2 should last 2 digits of pH 26 or (1.5 x
HCO3) 8 23 - 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 36 ( 24) HCO3 10 ( 14) HCO3 is too
high mixed AG metabolic acidosis and metabolic
alkalosis -
37Problem 3
- A 30-yo man with DM presents with a week of
polyuria, polydipsia, fever to 102, and diarrhea. - 138 I 111I 49 I 650 pH 7.26
- 5.5 I 8I 1.4 pCO2 23
- pO2 88
38Problem 3, cont.
138 I 111 I 49 I 650 7.26/23/88 5.51 I 8 I
1.4
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- DKA (AG acidosis) nongap met acidosis from
diarrhea - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH acidemic must be metabolic (low HCO3, low
pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 19 anion gap metabolic acidosis
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- pCO2 should last 2 digits of pH 26 or (1.5 x
HCO3) 8 23 - 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 19 ( 7) HCO3 8 ( 16) HCO3 is too low
mixed AG metabolic acidosis and metabolic
acidosis (nongap) -
39Problem 4
- A 30-yo man with DM presents with a week of
polyuria, polydipsia, fever, cough, and prurulent
sputum. - 140 I 104 I 75 I 1008 pH 6.95
- 7.0 I 7 I 2.6 pCO2 33
- pO2 60
40Problem 4, cont.
140 I 104 I 75 I 1008 6.95/33/60 7.0 I
7 I 2.6
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- DKA (AG acidosis) resp alk or resp acidosis
from hypoxemia/pneumonia - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH acidemic must be metabolic (low HCO3, low
pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 29 anion gap metabolic acidosis
41Problem 4, cont.
140 I 104 I 75 I 1008 6.95/33/60 7.0 I
7 I 2.6
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- pCO2 should last 2 digits of pH 95!! or (1.5
x HCO3) 8 18 pCO2 is too high so he has a
superimposed respiratory acidosis - 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 29 ( 17) HCO3 7 ( 17) so metabolic
acidosis is pure AG acidosis. Thus, mixed AG
metabolic acidosis and respiratory acidosis -
42Problem 5
- A 31-yo woman who is 33 weeks pregnant presents
with a 2-day history of vomiting. - 140 I 104 I 8 I 85 pH 7.64
- 3.0 I 26 I 0.6 pCO2 25
- pO2 93
43Problem 5, cont.
140 I 104 I 8 I 85 7.64/25/93 3.0
I 26 I 0.6
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Pregnancy resp alk Vomiting met alk
- 2. Acidemic or alkalemic?
- pH alkalemic
- 3. Metabolic or respiratory?
- If resp, HCO3 should be low if metabolic, then
pCO2 should be high must have both - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- N/A no acidosis no AG
-
44Problem 5, cont.
140 I 104 I 8 I 85 7.64/25/93 3.0
I 26 I 0.6
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- NO (by eyeball, for reasons listed above)
- 6. Mixed disorder?
- Yes, mixed metabolic and respiratory alkalosis.
No acidosis component. -
45Problem 6
- A 60-yo man has crushing chest pain, SOB and
diaphoresis. He has HTN, for which he takes
HCTZ. Exam shows BP 88/60, bilateral crackles,
S3. EKG shows ischemia CXR pulmonary edema. - 140 I 94 I 45 I 300 pH 7.14
- 5.9 I 20 I 1.9 pCO2 60
- pO2 52
46Problem 6, cont.
140 I 94 I 45 I 300 7.14/60/52 5.9
I 20 I 1.9
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Pulm edema -gt resp alk or resp acidosis shock
-gt metabolic acidosis HCTZ -gt metabolic
alkalosis - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic?
- pH acidemic
- 3. Metabolic or respiratory?
- If resp, HCO3 should be gt 24 in compensation if
metabolic, then pCO2 should lt 40 must have both
respiratory and metabolic acidoses - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 26 anion gap metabolic acidosis
-
47Problem 6, cont.
140 I 94 I 45 I 300 7.14/60/52 5.9
I 20 I 1.9
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- NO (by eyeball, for reasons listed above)
- 6. Mixed disorder? Anything else?
- AG 26 ( 14) HCO3 20 ( 4) so HCO3 is too
high must have a superimposed metabolic
alkalosis. - Thus, triple disorder respiratory acidosis,
anion gap metabolic acidosis, and metabolic
alkalosis
48Problem 7
- A 55-yo woman with a history of a CVA presents to
clinic complaining of shortness of breath. - 140 I 100 I 30 I 115 pH 7.36
- 3.9 I 30 I 1.5 pCO2 38
- pO2 91
49Problem 7, cont.
140 I 100 I 30 I 115 7.36/38/91
3.9 I 30 I 1.5
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Resp alk due to CNS disorder or acute pulmonary
process - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic?
- pH acidemic
- 3. Metabolic or respiratory? 4. If metabolic
acidosis AG? - HCO3 is high (not metabolic acidosis) pCO2 is lt
40 (not respiratory acidosis) AG is normal (10),
so whats going on?? -
50Problem 7, cont.
140 I 100 I 30 I 115 7.36/38/91
3.9 I 30 I 1.5
- LAB ERROR!
- By Henderson-Hasselbach
- H 24 x pCO2/HCO3 24 x (38/30) 30
- pH should be 7.50
51Problem 8
- You are in the ER, and are aware that the lab has
been having intermittent problems with the
chemistry autoanalyzer. A 30-yo diabetic man,
well known to you from previous visits, comes in
with severe nausea and vomiting. His blood
alcohol level is very high. The ER attending
advises you to check his labs and send him home
if they are OK. - 140 I 84I 28 I 160 pH 7.40
- 3.0 I 24I 1.3 pCO2 40
- pO2 88
52Problem 8, cont.
140 I 84 I 28 I 160 7.40/40/88
3.0 I 24 I 1.3
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Vomiting -gt met alk if unconscious, resp
acidosis - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH, pCO2 and HC03 are all normal --gt no apparent
disorder - 4. Lab error? Check H-H equations.
- H 24 x (pCO2/HCO3) 24 x (40/24) 40, so pH
7.40 - 5. Do you send him home?
-
53Problem 8, cont.
140 I 84 I 28 I 160 7.40/40/88
3.0 I 24 I 1.3
- 5. Do you send him home?
- AG 32 anion gap acidosis
- AG 32 ( 20) HCO3 24 ( 0) so HCO3 is too
high must have a superimposed metabolic
alkalosis. - Thus, mixed AG acidosis and metabolic alkalosis
54Problem 9
- A 58-yo man with cirrhosis and Type 2 DM presents
with fever, abdominal pain, SOB, and vomiting. - 159 I 112 I 55 I 160 pH 7.31
- 3.3 I 12 I 2.8 pCO2 19
- pO2 77
55Problem 9, cont.
159 I 112 I 55 I 160 7.31/19/77
3.3 I 12 I 2.8
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Renal dis --gt acidosis dead gut --gt lactic
acidosis vomiting --gt met alk pain --gt resp
alk liver disease --gt resp alk - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH acidemic must be metabolic (low HCO3, low
pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 35 anion gap metabolic acidosis
56Problem 9, cont.
159 I 112 I 55 I 160 7.31/19/77
3.3 I 12 I 2.8
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- pCO2 should last 2 digits of pH 31 not or
(1.5 x HCO3) 8 26 pCO2 is too low so he has
a superimposed respiratory alkalosis - 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 35 ( 23) HCO3 12 ( 12) so HCO3 is too
high, so there must be a metabolic alkalosis. - Thus, triple disorder AG metabolic acidosis,
respiratory alkalosis, and metabolic alkalosis -
57Problem 10
- A 70-yo man presents with vomiting and abdominal
pain, for which he has been taking Rolaids. He
is hypotensive and has a tender abdomen. - 140 I 69 I 40 I 118 pH 7.74
- 3.4 I 40 I 1.5 pCO2 30
- pO2 105
58Problem 10, cont.
140 I 69 I 40 I 118 7.74/30/105
3.4 I 40 I 1.5
- 1. Anticipate the disorder
- Dead gut --gt lactic acidosis vomiting or
Rolaids --gt met alk pain --gt resp alk - 2. Acidemic or alkalemic? 3. Metabolic or
respiratory? - pH alkalemic must be both metabolic (high
HCO3) and respiratory (low pCO2) - 4. If metabolic acidosis gap or non-gap?
- AG 31 anion gap metabolic acidosis
59Problem 10, cont.
140 I 69 I 40 I 118 7.74/30/105
3.4 I 40 I 1.5
- 5. Is compensation appropriate?
- Cannot compute, too many disorders
- 6. Mixed disorder?
- AG 31 ( 19) HCO3 40, not down so HCO3 is
too high, so there must be a metabolic alkalosis. - Thus, triple disorder AG metabolic acidosis,
respiratory alkalosis, and metabolic alkalosis -