Acid-Base Handling Flashcards

1
Q

[H+] in extracellular fluid

A

35-45nmol/L

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2
Q

pH range

A

7.35-7.46

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3
Q

Determining pH

A

Log1/[H+]

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4
Q

How is H+ excreted

A

Kidneys

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5
Q

What produces H+ ions

A

Metabolism of proteins, carbohydrates and fats produce carbon dioxide, water and hydrogen ions

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6
Q

What are the buffers in the body (5)

A
Bicarbonate (ECF, glomerular filtrate) 
Haemoglobin (RBCs)
Phosphate (renal tubular fluid, intracellular fluid)
Protein 
Bone
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7
Q

What do buffers do

A

Mop up hydrogen ions

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8
Q

What is the most important buffer in the body

A

Bicarbonate

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9
Q

What is required to maintain homeostasis

A

Kidneys need to excrete hydrogen ions and regenerate bicarbonate

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10
Q

How are bicarbonate ions regenerated

A

Using carbonic acid

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11
Q

What transport system is used to excrete hydrogen ions in the kidney

A

Sodium transport system

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12
Q

How is CO2 excreted

A

Lungs

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13
Q

How is breathing controlled

A

Chemoreceptors in the hypothalamic respiratory centre

In health, any increase in CO2 stimulates respiration thus tending to maintain a stable concentration of CO2.

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14
Q

Causes of metabolic acidosis (3)

A
Increased H+ production (DKA)
Decreased H+ excretion (renal tubular acidosis) 
Bicarbonate loss (intestinal fistula)
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15
Q

High H+

Low HCO3

A

Metabolic acidosis

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16
Q

High H+
Low HCO3
Low CO2

A

Compensated metabolic acidosis

17
Q

High H+
High HCO3
High CO2

A

Respiratory acidosis

18
Q

High H
Very High HOC3
High CO2

A

Chronic respiratory acidosis

19
Q

Causes of respiratory acidosis (3)

A

Decreased ventilation
Poor lung perfusion
Impaired gas exchange
e.g. pneumonia

Chronic respiratory acidosis - COPD

20
Q

Causes of metabolic alkalosis (4)

A

H+ loss (pyloric stenosis)
Hypokalaemia
Ingestion of bicarbonate
Anaerobic exercise

21
Q

Low H+

High HCO3

A

Metabolic alkalosis

22
Q

Low H+
High HCO3
High CO2

A

Compensated metabolic alkalosis

23
Q

Causes of respiratory alkalosis

A

Due to hyperventilation (voluntary, artificial ventilation, stimulation of respiratory centre)

e.g. Panic attack

24
Q

Low H+
Low HOC3
Low CO2

A

Chronic respiratory alkalosis

25
Q

What does H+/pH indicated

A

Overt acidosis/alkalosis

26
Q

What does pCO2 indicated

A

Respiratory disturbance (primary or secondary)

27
Q

What does pO2 indicate

A

Respiratory function and tissue oxygenation

28
Q

How are bicarbonate, pCO2 and pH interrelated

A

{H+} = k x pCO2/[HCO3-]