Acids and Bases Flashcards

1
Q

pH

A

Power of hydrogen

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2
Q

Normal animal plasma levels

A
  • Normal plasma [H+] is ~40nmol
  • Normal plasma pH is 7.38-7.44

pH = -log10[H+] by using norm plasma hydrogen concentration

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3
Q

Importance of pH

A

Enzymes function within an optimal range of pH. If too basic or too acidic, then the protein will denature. Then altered activity results in a change of metabolic regulation and cell viability, which results in cell death

Exception: digestive enzymes are optimal at low pH

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4
Q

Why does H+ fluctuate?

A
  • Carbon dioxide diffuses freely out of cells into the blood. Then it reacts with water in the blood and forms carbonic acid (H2CO3). Since carbonic acid (H2CO3) is a weak acid, it dissociates into hydrogen (H+) and bicarbonate (HCO3-)
  • This is considered a partial dissociation so it moves back and forth between carbonic acid and the hydrogen and bicarbonate
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5
Q

pKa

A

A constant that determines which side the equilibrium shifts in a given environment.

Calculated using the equilibrium constant (Ka) (the ratio in equilibrium) and pKa=-log10(Ka)

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6
Q

pKa of carbonic acid (H2CO3)

A

6.1

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7
Q
  1. pH < pKa
  2. pH> pKa
A
  1. More protonated; more acidic
  2. More deprotonated; more basic
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8
Q

Henderson-Hasselback Equation

A

Used to calculate pH of weak acids such as blood pH

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9
Q

Factors that influence pH

A
  • Metabolism- loss of hydrogen ions and bicarbonate in kidneys and stomach (stomach acid, urine)
  • Respiratory component getting rid of CO2
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10
Q

Type of acid-base disturbances

A
  1. Respiratory disturbance- have an effect on P(CO2)
  2. Metabolic Disturbance- have an effect on bicarbonate
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11
Q

Abnormalities of pH

A
  1. Acidemia
  2. Alkalemia
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12
Q

Processes causing abnormalities of pH

A
  1. Acidosis
  2. Alkalosis
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13
Q

Normal HCO3- (bicarbonate) and PCO2 Ratio

A

The normal ratio between them is 20.

If less than 20, then acidemia. If greater than 20, then alkalemia.

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14
Q

La Chatelliers Principle

A

Disturbance to a system in equilibrium shifts the equilibrium in the direction that counteracts the change.

CO2 + H2O <–> H2CO3 <–> H+ + HCO3-

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15
Q

Respiratory Acidosis

A
  • Caused by hypoventilation
  • Less gas exchange, increase in CO2, causes a right shift towards H+ and HCO3-
  • Higher P, less bicarbonate = acidic = Acidemia
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16
Q

Renal compensation for respiratory acidosis

A
  • Slow process
  • Kidneys increase HCO3- reabsorption. Transporter in kidney cells move bicarbonate into capillaries so it can neutralize H+ ions and increase pH
17
Q

Respiratory Alkalosis

A
  • Caused by hyperventilation
  • Results in increase in gas exchange, so decrease in CO2 causing shift to left
  • Decrease in P, small decrease in HCO3-, so increase in pH = Alkalemia
18
Q

Renal compensation for Respiratory alkalosis

A
  • Slow process
  • Kidneys reduce bicarbonate reabsorption
19
Q

Metabolic Acidosis

A
  • Caused by overproduction of lactic acid from exercise. Causes an increase in H+ ions and a decrease of bicarbonate (due to saturation), so shift to left
  • Acidemia
20
Q

Respiratory compensation for metabolic acidosis

A
  • Hyperventilate. increase gas exchange, decrease CO2. Will cause a shift to left, decreasing H+
  • Conducted through peripheral receptors (carotid and aortic chemoreceptors) which sense changes in O2, CO2, and H+. These sensors sent message to respiratory center of the medulla oblongata which tells motor neurons to get respiratory muscles and lungs to cause the animal to hyperventilate to decrease CO2
21
Q

Metabolic Alkalosis

A
  • Caused by vomiting –> loss of stomach acid (decrease in H+) –> leads to increase in bicarbonate; causes a right shift
22
Q

Respiratory compensation for metabolic alkalosis

A

Chemoreceptors detect a drop in H+ ions, and send signal to supress respiration. This increases P and therefore causes the shift right to increase H+

23
Q

Factors hindering compensation responses

A
  • Renal failure
  • Pulmonary disease
  • Depressant drugs of the respiratory center
24
Q

Mixed disturbances

A

Two or more acid-base disturbance together

Ex. unregulated diabetic animal
- Excess ketone leads to keto (metabolic) acidosis
- Vomiting leads to metabolic alkalosis
- Aspiration of vomit in lung leads to respiratory acidosis

25
Q

Anion Gap

A

Difference in concentration of major cations (Na+ and K+) and anions (Cl- and HCO3-). The gap is due to various organic cations, anions, and proteins

26
Q

Increase in anion gap

A

Indicates metabolic acidosis

Ex. Lactic acid in blood- an increase in H+, would mean that the HCO3- is used up

27
Q

Decrease in anion gap

A

Indicates a cation anomaly (hypercalcemia- overactive thyroid, or hypermagnesemia- renal failure) or metabolic alkalosis (increase in HCO3-)

28
Q

Metabolic acidosis and a normal anion gap

A

Ex. diarrhea causing HCO3- loss

Excess loss of HCO3- causes metabolic acidosis. Kidney compensation increases Cl- reabsorption to maintain a neutral charge. Metabolic acidosis but no change in anion gap