Title: Metabolic Alkalosis
1Metabolic Alkalosis
- Mazen Kherallah, MD, FCCP, FCCM, FACP
- Michigan State University
- Society of Critical Care Medicine
2Metabolic AlkalosisDefinition
- Elevated HCO3-
- Decline in H in the ECF
3Metabolic Alkalosis
?HCO3/?ECF Volume
4Causes of Metabolic AlkalosisCauses associated
with contracted ECF volume
- Low urine Cl
- Loss of gastric secretions vomiting, nasogastric
suction - Remote use of diuretics
- Delivery of nonreabsorbable anion plus Na
Carbenicilline - Posthypercapnia
- Loss NaCl in GI congenital Cl loss, villous
adenoma - Persistent high urine Cl
- Bartters-like syndromes
- Current diuretic use
5Causes of Metabolic AlkalosisCauses associated
with normal or expanded ECF volume
- Large reduction in GFR plus a source of HCO3
- Alkali ingestion
- Enhanced mineralocorticoid activity
- primary aldosteronism
- Secondary hyperaldosteronism renal artery
stenosis, malignant hypertension, renin producing
tumor, low effective arterial blood volume with
an alkali load - Endogenous or exogenous mineralocorticoid,
licorice ingestion, ACTH secretion
6Metabolic Alkalosis
- Extracellular elevation of HCO3-
- Absolute by addition of HCO3- to the ECF
- Relative by the loss of ECF volume
- Intracellular events
- Hypokalemia Kaliuresis
- Intracellular acidosis replacement of K by H
7Addition of HCO3- to the ECF
- With the constraints of electroneutrality, there
are only two ways to add a specific anion HCO3-
to a compartment - Loss of an anion such as Cl-
- Retention of a cation such as Na
8Addition of HCO3- to the ECF Loss of Cl-
AnionGain of HCO3- in Plasma
Vomiting or nasogastric suction
Cl- loss in urine
9Addition of HCO3- to the ECF Retention of
NaHCO3Gain of HCO3- in Plasma
- When Na is retained in the ECF, its volume is
expanded - If GFR is normal this extra Na and bicarbonate
will be excreted via the kidney - GFR should be low (permission of the kidneys) to
retain extra Na and HCO3
10Mechanisms for Renal Retention of HCO3-
11Contraction of the ECF VolumeIncreased HCO3-
- The ECF volume is contracted secondary to removal
of NaCl and water - The HCO3- is increased and the content is
unchanged - Same HCO3- are distributed in smaller volume
- Metabolic alkalosis contraction alkalosis
12Contraction of the ECF VolumeDiuretic Ingestion
- Diuretic ingestion causes NaCl loss in the urine
and ECF volume contraction - Increased production and excretion of NH4
consequent to hypokalemia, thus new HCO3
formation
13Causes Associated with ECF Volume Contraction
141. Vomiting or Nasogastric Suction
- Loss of HCl
- Generation of HCO3
- Excretion of NaHCO3 in the urine
- ECF contraction
- Renin will increase angiotensin II and
aldosterone - Excretion of K kaliuresis
15How many liters of emesis must be lost in order
to raise the HCO3- in plasma by 10 mmol/L in
70-kg adult?
- Extracellular HCO3- is 25 mmol/L and
intracellular is 10 mmol/L - 10 X 15 150 mmol extracellular
- 3.5 X 30 100 mmol intracellular
- Total HCO3 added is 250
- 1 liter of gastric fluid contains 100 mmol of H
and 100 mmol of Cl- - 2.5 liters is needed to be lost before HCO3 is
raised to 35
162. Diuretics
- Diuretics blocks Na and Cl channels
- More Na is delivered to DCT
- Na exchange with K under the effect of
aldosterone - Kaliuresis and hypokalemia ensues
- Depleted ECF and high aldosterone leads to
hypokalemia - Hypokalemia augments renal ammoniagenesis
17Ammoniagenesis
18Ammoniagenesis
When K is high in the lumen, fewer NH4 is
reabsorbed because of the competition between NH4
and K. With hypokalemia more NH4 is reabsorbed
and then secreted as NH3 combining with H and
raising the HCO3 in plasma
19Intracellular Acidosis in Metabolic Alkalosis
associated with Hypokalemia
- The depletion of K leads to a shift of cation Na
and H into the cells - This shift exacerbates the degree of HCO3
elevation in the ECF and cause intracellular
acidosis - Hypokalemia must be corrected first
203. Nonreabsorbable Anions
- If a patient has a contracted ECF volume and
takes an Na salt with an anion that cannot be
reabsorbed by the kidney Carbenicillin - There is stimulus for Na reabsorption but it
cannot be reabsorbed. - In CCD the action of aldosterone will lead to
hypokalemia - Hypokalemia will cause more ammoniagenesis and
thus increased plasma HCO3 and metabolic
alkalosis
213. Nonreabsorbable Anions
- Cl in urine should be lt 20
- Na in the urine should be high
- Na K should be gt Cl due to the presence of
unmeasured anion
224. Posthypercapnia
- During chronic hypoventilation and hypercapnia,
plasma HCO3 concentration is increased. - HCO3 is generated in the kidney and excretion of
NH4Cl ensues - When hypercapnia resolves increased HCO3 content
will cause metabolic alkalosis
235. Loss of NaCl via the GI tract
- Congenital chloridorrhea, villous adenoma
- Loss of Na and Cl in stool
- Similar to diuretic induced metabolic alkalosis
- The urine always has Na and Cl
246. Bartter-like Syndromes
- Hypokalemia
- Renal Na and Cl wasting
- Contracted ECF volume
- Metabolic alkalosis
- hypereninemia
- Deficiency of Mg
- Hypertrophy of justaglomerular apparatus
- High rate of Ca excretion
256. Bartter-like Syndromes
- The pathophysiology can be considered as having a
loop diuretic acting 24 hour a day - Defect in Na, K, 2 Cl electroneutral
cotransporter NKCC in the Luminal membrane of
the thick ascending limb of Henle - this causes delivery of Na and Cl to CCD and thus
K excretion - NaCl wasting and a low ECF volume results in high
level of renin
26Causes Associated with Normal or Expanded ECF
Volume
271. Hyperaldosteronism
- Aldosterone causes hypokalemia
- Hypokalemia enhances ammoniagenesis, which
enables renal new CO3 formation - Hypokalemia causes an increased indirect
reabsorption of HCO3 via the rise in proximal
tubular intracellular H - Hypokalemia reduces GFR and thereby maintains the
elevated blood HCO3
282. Alkali Loading
- Under usual circumstances, NaHCO3 loading leads
to only a mild elevation in plasma HCO3 because
most of these HCO3 are excreted - In the presence of Na depletion or in renal
failure, clinically important elevation of plasma
HCO3 occur with NaHCO3 administration
293. Magnesium Depletion
- Mg enhances the NKCC mechanism
- Depleted Mg results in higher Na and Cl excretion
and Hypokalemia with metabolic alkalosis
304. Milk-Alkali Syndrome
- Ingestion of large amount of milk and absorbable
antacids CaCO3 - Patient excrete large amount of Ca and HCO3 in
the urine - Ca deposits more in alkaline urine
- Deposition of Ca leads to renal function
impairment - Thus HCO3 increased in plasma
31Urine Cl
32Reabsorption of Na in CCD
Electroneutral
Electrogenic
Na K
Na K
Na K
Na Cl
Cl Na Cl K Cl K
Na K
Na-K ATPase
CCD
Cl
33Case 1
- Toby, a 26-year old dancer, complains of
weakness. She denies vomiting and the intake of
medications other than vitamins. - Physical examination reveals a thin woman who has
a contracted ECF volume.
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35Questions????
- What acid-base disturbance is present?
- Why is the Na in urine not lower, given the
presence of ECF volume contraction? - Why is Toby hypokalemic?
- What is the basis for the acid-base disturbance?
36Discussion of Case 1
- Metabolic alkalosis with hypokalemia
- Cl is low in urine because of the ECF volume
contraction and reabsorption of NaCl - Na is high in the urine because it is excreted
with an anion other than Cl - The very high urine pH indicated that the other
anion is HCO3 bicarbonaturia - To the degree that the filtered load of HCO3
exceeds the tubular capacity to reabsorb it, HCO3
are excreted - Hypokalemia secondary to high urine delivery to
CCD and high aldosterone secondary to contracted
ECF volume - Body shape disorder and induced vomiting
37Case 2
- Farrah, a beautiful person, is concerned about
her body image so she diets most of the time. Her
food intake is erratic and consists mainly of
vegetables and fruits she consumes little meat
or table salt. She jogs 60 Km per week and is
asymptomatic. - When she volunteered for a clinical research
project, she was surprised to find that she was
hypokalemic. She denied vomiting and the use of
diuretics or laxatives. Her ECF is contracted
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39Urine Cl
40Discussion of case 2
- ECF volume contraction, metabolic alkalosis with
hypokalemia and high aldosterone level - ECF volume contraction with 0 Cl in urine but
high Na - Positive urine net charge indicative of an anion
other than Cl is present - Low pH and high osmolal gap indicates that the
anion is not HCO3 (bicarbonate is 0) - Negative NaCl balance because of poor dietary
intake and nonrenal loss, she has an unusual
organic anion load from her diet
41Case 3
- Solly has episodes of abdominal pain and profuse
diarrhea for months. More recently he has vomited
on occasion and has suffered from episodic
tingling and weakness. He took antacids to
relieve his abdominal pain, but their beneficial
effect was transitory. - Each time his condition reverts to normal without
therapy
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43Discussion of Case 3
- Metabolic alkalosis with hypokalemia
- Bicarbonate gain of non-renal cause secondary to
gastric HCl secretion - Most-likely HCl loss from GI
- Low rate of excretion of HCO3 due to decreased
GFR - ECF volume is not contracted due to Low GFR
- HCl reabsorption led to improvement in metabolic
alkalosis - Zollinger-Ellison syndrome
44Case 4
- Mr. Green is 42 year old and is a chronic
alcoholic. He was brought to the emergency room,
obviously intoxicated. He had been lying in the
park in a pool of vomitus. On physical
examination, he was unkempt and incoherent. He
had a markedly contracted ECF volume, was febrile
(39) and had evidence of pneumonia.
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46Expected Responses to Primary Acid-Base Disorders
47Discussion of Case 4
- Metabolic acidosis with increased anion gap most
likely alcoholic ketoacidosis, and L-lactic
acidosis type B secondary to thiamin deficiency - Metabolic alkalosis with vomiting and hypokalemia
- Respiratory alkalosis from pneumonia
48Case 5
- Emily is 73 year old, she enjoys toast with jam
along with her traditional cup of tea. - On her annual checkup, her physician told her
that her blood pressure is elevated 170/95, and
gave her thiazide diuretic. - She has not been feeling well since she took her
medicine, she feels weak, she becomes lightheaded
when she stands up, and she is less able to
perform at her high intellectual level, she
drinks a lot of water - On P.E. blood pressure 150/90 and orthostatic of
15 mm Hg, her urine volume is 0.5 L per day
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50Is This Bartters Syndrome
- 50 year old paraplegic male has a neurogenic
bladder as a result of MVA. He developed a UTI
and was treated with gentamicin 80 mg q8h for 2
weeks. - There was no special findings on physical
examination, his ECF is not low - Hypokalemia did not improve with 200 mmol per
day. Urine output 2-5 L per day
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52Driven by lumen positive charges
H2O
Na K
Na Ca Mg
Na K
NKCC
ATP
Na 2Cl- K
Ca receptors also binds cations like gentamicin
ROM K-1
Cl-
K
2 Na 2 Cl- H2O
53Case 7
- Alicia is a 47 year old with history of
Hypertension which is controlled with diuretics. - Presented with dizziness and contracted ECF
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