assessment of acid-based balance part 2 W3 Flashcards

1
Q

practical aspects of blood gas samples?

A

usually collect from radial artery
painful, risk of damage (can compromise blood sup to hand)
collect from femoral artery in arrest situation

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2
Q

interpretation of ABGs

A

is the patient adequately oxygenated?
what is their pH/H+?
is there pCO2 or bicarbonate disturbance

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3
Q

base excess?

A

concentration of hydrogen ions required to return pH to reference range if if pCO2 were in reference range (~5.3kPa)

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4
Q

when should base excess be deranged, and when is it positive/negative?

A

should only be deranged in a metabolic disorder
negative in metabolic acidosis
positive in metabolic alkalosis

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5
Q

what is standardised bicarbonate?

A

what we would expect the bicarbonate to be if pCO2 were in reference range (~5.3kPa)

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6
Q

standardised bicarbonate values in resp/met disorder?

A

in ref range in purely resp disorder.
should be same as actual bicarbonate concentration in metabolic disorder.

inboth respirartory and metabolic, quite different from actual bicarbonate

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7
Q

case: 19 yr-old female. confused, restless, tachypnoeic.
high H+, slightly high O2, low bicarbonate.

A

not hypoxic
acidaemia
respiratory alkalosis - compensation from body (partial)
metabolic acidosis (low bicarb, high H+) - primary disorder

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8
Q

metabolic acidosis - causes of increased acid formation? (different to last slide in last lecture idk why)

A

ketoacidosis (diabetic, starvation, alcoholic)
lactic acidosis (tissue hypoxia)
poisoning (salicylate, methanol)
inherited metabolic disorders (early infancy)

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9
Q

metabolic acidosis - causes of reduced excretion? (also different?)

A

renal failure (AKI, CKD, AKI ON CKD)
renal tubular acidosis (types 1 and 4)

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10
Q

metabolic acidosis - causes of loss of bicarbonate?

A

gastrointestinal (diarrhoea, high-output small bowel fistula)
renal (renal tubular acidosis type 2)

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11
Q

what is the anion gap used for

A

narrowing differential of metabolic acidosis

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12
Q

what is the anion gap?

A

theoretical: difference between most abundant cations and anions

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13
Q

which causes of metabolic acidosis have a normal anion gap?

A

severe diarrhoea
high intestinal fistula output
renal tubular acidosis

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14
Q

which causes of metabolic acidosis have an elevated anion gap?

A

DKA
lactic acidosis
salicylate (aspirin) overdose
ethylene glycol / methanol poisoning
renal failure

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15
Q

what type of acidosis is found with a normal anion gap? what does this mean?

A

hyperchloremic acidosis - bicarbonate ions are replaced with chloride ions

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16
Q

what is occurring in acidosis with elevated anion gap?

A

bicarbonate ions are replaced with anions corresponding to lactate, keto-acids etc

17
Q

clinical effects of metabolic acidosis?

A

cardiovascular - negative inotropic effect (if severe)

O2 delivery - acutely, H+ causes R-shift of oxyHb dissociation curve (facilitates O2 delivery). after several hrs, H+ reduces 2,3-DPG causing L-shift of curve (impairs O2 delivery)

nervous system - impaired consciousness (little correlation with H+)

potassium homeostasis - leakage from cells causing high plasma K+, may also be lost renally

bone - choric acidosis then buffering by bone, leads to decalcification

18
Q

case - male, 55, cough, wheeze, breathless
low O2 and high CO2

A

primary disorder - resp acidosis
compensation - metabolic alkalosis. know its chronic as kidneys take a while to compensate.

not vice versa because of resp symptoms.

19
Q

causes of acute respiratory acidosis?

A

airway obstruction, cardioresp arrest
infective exacerbation of COPD
neuro - opiate toxicity, GB syndrome, MA

20
Q

causes of chronic respiratory acidosis?

A

COPD
obstructive - obesity
restrictive - pulmonary fibrosis
neuro - MND, myopathy

21
Q

effects of respiratory acidosis?

A

hypercapnia (high CO2):
-shortness of breath
-raised respiratory rate
-neuro effects (anxiety, coma, headache, extensor plantares, myoclonus)
-systemic vasodilatation