Lecture #40 - Acid-base balance 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Real brief - what are two ways kidney can help with buffering?

A
  1. May reabsorb more bicarbonate or secrete more bicarbonate
  2. Secrete H+
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2
Q
  1. What is the ECF (blood) pH and what range?
  2. What are the parameters for acidosis or alkalosis
  3. Plasma pH below what and above what is lethal?
A

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3
Q

So why bother with regulating pH? (4)

A

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4
Q

What are the two ways body keeps pH normal?

A

👌🏼

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5
Q

Name me four ways to gain H+ and four ways to lose H+

A

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6
Q

Generation of H+ fro CO2 - how?

A

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7
Q

Production of nonvolatile acids from the metabolism of proteins and other organic molecules - how?

A

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8
Q

Gain H+ from diarrhoea and urine - how?

A

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9
Q

How to lose H+ in vomitus?

A

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10
Q

What happens in hyperventilation?

A

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11
Q

What are the 3 ways to carry CO2 to lungs and how does each work?

A

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12
Q

What are the two main problems with pH regulation? Like where does the H+ mainly come from?

How do we not let #1 become a problem? What do we do to H+ that get released from CO2 so it doesn’t affect pH? What are the problems with hyper and hypoventilation?

For #2 - how do we deal with the excess ions released from non volatile acids.

  • what are examples of volatile acids
  • what do the ions need to be (2)
  • what are the three main buffers but there is also what? ‘whole body buffering’
  • how to get rid of H_?
  • then what does the kidney do?-
A

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13
Q

What are the three ways the kidney handles bicarbonate?

A

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14
Q

1 - Reabs of filtered HCO3-

  • where is it mostly reabs?
  • where can it also be secreted?
  • explain how it works
A

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15
Q

2 Replacement of HCO3- consumed due to excretion of non-volatile acids - two ways

For both: “Additional bicarbonate added to plasma: equivalent _____ ____ and _____ excreted in urine”

  1. HPO4(2-)
    - how does this work?
    - what do we lose?
    - where does the CO2 come from for this?
  2. Glutamine
    - when and where is this synthesised
    - how does this generate new bicarb?

Go check out slide 26

A

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16
Q

In respiratory alkalosis, what does kidney do to bicarbonate?

A

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17
Q

What is the Henderson-Hasselbach equation for this?

A

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18
Q

Respiratory disturbances:

  • explain how respiratory acidosis occurs
  • explain how respiratory alkalosis occurs
A

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19
Q

Metabolic disturbances

  • metabolic alkalosis - what are two reasons and examples? What actually happens?
  • metabolic acidosis - what are three reasons and examples? What actually happens?
A

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20
Q

What is the ratio of bicarb so CO2?

So what is compensation?

A

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21
Q

Go read the rest

A

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