Electrolytes Lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What ion does chloride normally change with?

A

Typically changes with Na+ (but is able to change independently of Na+)

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2
Q

A change in [Cl-] will be met by an equal and opposite change in _______

A

[HCO3-]

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3
Q

What are the two main ways that hypochloraemia arises (= increase in [HCO3-])

A
  1. Cl- is sequestered/lost 2. Cl- is diluted
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4
Q

What are the three main ways that hyperchloraemia arises?

A
  1. Excessive Cl- is resorbed 2. Excessive Cl- “intake” 3. Cl- mistake
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5
Q

What is the formula for corrected chloride?

A

Corrects for changes in water

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6
Q

What is an acid?

A

Proton donor (HA)

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7
Q

What is a base?

A

Base = proton acceptor (A-)

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8
Q

What is the pKa?

A

pH where 50% of an acid is dissociated in an aqueous solution - depicts strength of the acid - lower pKa = a stronger acid

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9
Q

What is a volatile acid?

A

CO2 (can form H2CO3)

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10
Q

What are non-volatile acids?

A

Noncarbonic acids = all acids other than H2CO3

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11
Q

What is a buffer?

A

Weak acid - pKa within 1 unit of blood pH - scavenge H+ or OH- (tight regulation is essential)

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12
Q

What are the main buffers in the body?

A

The main buffer = carbonic acid

Others: Hemoglobin, Albumin, Phosphate, Bone

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13
Q

What are the three steps that are involved in assesing the acid base status?

A
  1. Asses the pH
  2. Asses respiratory contribution (pCO2)
  3. Assess the metabolic contribution (pHCO3-)
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14
Q

How does hypoventilation affect acid-base balance?

A

Hypoventilation results in acidosis

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15
Q

How does hyperventilation affect the acid base status?

A

Hyperventilation = alkalosis

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16
Q

What is base excess and how can it be interpreted?

A

Base Excess:

mmol/L of strong acid or base required to return plasma to normal pH

Negative BE - metabolic BE - metabolic acidosis

Postive BE - metabolic alkalosis

17
Q

What are the causes of metabolic acidosis?

A
  1. Bicarbonate buffers an acids - high anion gap caused by unmeasured anions - L.U.K.E - Lactic acid, Uremic acids, Ketoacids, Ethylene glycol metabolites
  2. Bicarbonate is lost from the body - diarrhea, renal tubular acidosis
  3. Bicarbonate dilutes by Cl- containing solution
  4. Compensation for primary respiratory acidosis
18
Q

What are the causes of metabolic alkalosis?

A
  1. Gastric acid loss/sequestration
  2. Loop diuretics
  3. Bicarb administration
  4. Compensation for primary respiratory acidosis
19
Q

What are the cause of respiratory acidosis?

A
  1. Hypoventilation
  2. Rebreathing
  3. Compensation from primary metabolic alkalosis
20
Q
A
21
Q

What are the causes of respiratory alkalosis?

A
  • Excitement
  • Excercise
  • Pain
  • Pulmonary parenchymal disease
  • Fever, SIRS/species
  • Hypotension
  • Compensation for primary metabolic acidosis