ABG Flashcards

1
Q

venous blood gas

A

Differences in pH and PCO2 are relatively small
In general the pH is 0.03-0.04 units lower than arterial
In general the PCO2 is 7 or 8mmHg higher than artery
-less accurate and less preferred than arterial

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2
Q

Hend. Hasselbach

A

pH= 6.1 + log (HCO3/0.03*PCO2)

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3
Q

questions

A

Acidic or Basic? 7.35-7.45 Who’s to blame? look at CO2

Is that all?

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4
Q

Normal CO2

A

35-45

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5
Q

to evaluate acid-base disturbance, need

A

simultaneous measurements of electrolytes, albumin, arterial blood gas

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6
Q

ABG directly measures

A

pH and Pco2

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7
Q

if the pH is acidic

A

And the CO2 is elevated (acidic)—blame the lungs (respiratory)
But if the CO2 is decreased (basic)—blame the body (metabolic)

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8
Q

The body can have a basic single acid base disturbance…or…

A

the more frequent double acid base disturbance, or the complex triple acid base disturbance

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9
Q

for ever multiple of 10 the co2 is elevated or decreased (from normal: 40) the pH should change by..

A

0.08 times (from 7.40) that multiple
Example: pH of 7.24 with a CO2 of 60
*single A-B disturbance

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10
Q

it is physically impossible to have a…

A

respiratory acidosis w/ resp. alkalosis but CAN have an anion gap metab. acidosis w/ metab. alkalosis

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11
Q

measurement of cations/anions in plasma

A

[Na] + Unmeasured cations = HCO3 + Cl + Unmeasured anions

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12
Q

anion gap =

A

Na – (HCO3 + Cl)

Normal Anion gap is from 12 +/- 4

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13
Q

major unmeasured cations

A

Ca (2 mEq/L), Mg (2 mEq/L), gamma-globulins, and K (4 mEq/L)

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14
Q

major unmeasured anions

A

albumin (2 mEq/L per g/dL), PO4 (2 mEq/L), sulfate (1 mEq/L), lactate (1–2 mEq/L), and other organic anions (3–4 mEq/L).

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15
Q

anion gap: misleading data from..

A

hypoalbuminemia (for every 1g change in albumin, the AG should have a 2meq change (inc. if albumin low, dec. if high)
hyper or hyponatremia
certain antibiotics

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16
Q

causes of increased anion gap: metabolic anion

A
Diabetic, alcoholic, starvation ketoacidosis
lactic acidosis (Type A (tissue ischemia), Type B (altered cell metabolism), D-Lactic acidosis)
CKD
5-oxoproline acidosis from acetaminophen toxicity
17
Q

causes of inc. anion gap: drug or chemical anion

A
Salicylate intoxication
Sodium carbenicillin therapy
Methanol (formic acid)
Ethylene glycol (oxalic acid)
Cyanide
Isoniazid
Propofol
Propylene glycol
Valproic acid
Paraldehyde
18
Q

causes of anion gap: metabolic acidosis (MUDPILES)

A
Methanol
Uremia
DKA (and etOH, starvation ketoacidosis)
Paracetamol (acetaminophen) (Paraldehyde)
Iron, Isoniazide, Inborn errors of metabolism
Lactic acidosis
Ethanol, Ethylene Glycol
Salicylate/ASA
19
Q

lactic acidosis

A

from pyruvate in anaerobic glycolysis, normal 1mEq
-Metab of lactate mostly: liver gluconeogenesis (30% by kidneys)
Type A (hypoxic): dec. perfusion (shock, CO poisoning)
Type B (metab/toxins): DM, KD, leukemia, lymphoma, salicylates, metformin, INH, propofol, etc.

20
Q

DKA

A

acetoacetate/B-hydroxybutyrate cause INC. metab. gap, also have comb. lactic acidosis from tissue HYPOperfusion and inc. anaerobic metab.

21
Q

DKA may dev. this during recovery phase

A

hyperchloremic non-anion gap metab. acidosis from saline resuscitation
*important to monitor anion gap–>when to turn off insulin drip (guides tx)

22
Q

alcoholic ketoacidosis

A

lots of variation:

  • primarily: Beta hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate excess
  • Lactic acidosis since alcohol increases production of lactate especially when accompanied by thiamine deficiency (if v. high >6 consider pancreatitis, sepsis, post-seizure (concomitant)
  • metab. alkalosis from vomiting and vol. contraction
  • resp. alkalosis from w/drawal and pain
23
Q

decreased anion gap

A

Hypoalbuminemia (decreased unmeasured anion)
Plasma cell dyscrasias
Monoclonal protein (cationic paraprotein) (accompanied by chloride and bicarbonate)
Bromide intoxication

24
Q

normal anion gap acidosis

A
loss of HCO3
renal loss of HCO2
renal tubular dysfunction
hypoaldosteronism
Chloride retention
admin. of HCl equiv or NH4Cl
argining and lysine in parenteral nutrition
25
Q

normal anion gap acidosis: loss of HCO3

A

Diarrhea
Ureteral diversion
Proximal colostomy
Ileostomy (pancreatic fluid loss

26
Q

normal anion gap acidosis: renal loss of HCO3

A

Proximal Renal tubular acidosis

Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors

27
Q

normal anion gap acidosis: renal tubular dysfunction

A

ATN
Chronic tubulointerstitial disease
Distal RTA type 1
Distal RTA type 4

28
Q

normal anion gap acidosis: hypoaldosteronism

A

Addison’s disease

K+ sparing diuretic

29
Q

strong ion difference, what if >30?

A

[SID] = [Na+] + [K+] + [Ca2+] + [MG2+] - [CL-] - [Other Strong Anions]
*Na and Cl are biggest contributors (calculate: Na-Cl)
if >30: metabolic alkalosis

30
Q

contraction alkalosis

A

decreasing volume increases SID (inc. Na+ relative to Cl-)

31
Q

causes of respiratory alkalosis

A

see slide- think of what makes you breathe rapidly

32
Q

causes of respiratory acidosis

A

see slide- consider airway obstruction, laryngospasm, mucus plug, anesthesia, resp. depression (meds), high carb diet, sedatives

33
Q

typical patterns seen in disease states

A

Combined Metabolic Acidosis and Respiratory Acidosis (Cardiogenic Shock- not breathing as much and hyper perfusion)
Combined Metabolic Acidosis and Respiratory Alkalosis (Sepsis, Salicylate poisoning)
Respiratory Acidosis with metabolic alkalosis (Chronic COPD-body compensating for resp. acidosis w/ the metab. alk)