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How to monitor concentrations of substances in the blood Cells in the body can only function properly in a suitable environment. This environment is provided by the tissue fluid which bathes the cells. Since tissue fluid is derived from blood, the levels of various substances in the blood are critical. The normal pH range for blood is 7.35 – 7.45. Normally, the pH of arterial blood is about 7.45, and the pH of venous blood is about 7.35. The slightly lower pH of venous blood compared with arterial blood results primarily form carbon dioxide (CO ) entering venous blood as a waste product of cellular metabolism. As carbon dioxide enters the blood, some of it combines with water (H O) and is converted into carbonic acid by carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme found in red blood cells. Q) Why are the pH values for arterial and venous blood different? How blood is buffered to maintain pH within safe limits -Buffers are chemical substances that prevent a sharp change in the pH of a fluid when an acid or base is added to it. -Strong acids and bases, if added to the blood, would ‘dissociate’ almost completely and release large quantities of H or OH ions. -The result would be drastic changes in blood pH. -Survival itself depends on protecting the body from such drastic pH changes. -More acids than bases are usually added to body fluids. This is because catabolism, a process that goes on continually in every cell of the body, produces acids that enter blood as it flows through tissue capillaries. -Almost immediately, one of the salts present in blood – a buffer, that is – reacts with these relatively strong acids to change them to weaker acids. -The weaker acids decrease blood pH only slightly, whereas the stronger acids formed by catabolism would have decreased it greatly if they were not buffered. -Buffers consist of two kinds of substances and are therefore often called buffer pairs. -One of the main blood buffer pairs is ordinary baking soda (sodium bicarbonate, or NaHCO ) and carbonic acid (H CO ). pH Imbalances -Acisosis and alkalosis are the two kinds of pH or acid-base imbalance. In acidosis the blood pH falls as H ion concentration increases (or because of a loss of bases). Only rarely does it fall as low as 7.0 (neutrality) and almost never does it become even slightly acid, because death usually intervenes before the pH drops that much. In alkalosis, which develops less often than acidosis, the blood pH is higher than normal. Alkalosis results from a loss of acids or an accumulation of bases. From a clinical standpoint, disturbances in acid-base balance can be considered dependent on the relative quantities (ratio) of H CO and NaHCO in the blood. Components of this important buffer pair must be maintained at the proper ratio (20 times more NaHCO than H CO ) if acid-base balance is to remain normal. It is fortunate that the body can regulate both chemicals in the NaHCO –H CO buffer system. Blood levels of NaHCO can be regulated by the kidneys and H CO levels by the respiratory system (lungs). Metabolic and Respiratory Disturbances Two types of disturbances, metabolic and respiratory, can alter the proper ratio of these components. Metabolic disturbances affect the bicarbonate (NaHCO ) element of the buffer pair, and respiratory disturbances affect the H CO element, as follows: 1. Metabolic disturbances: a. Metabolic acidosis (bicarbonate deficit). Patients that have metabolic acidosis with a bicarbonate deficit often suffer from renal disease, uncontrolled diabetes, prolonged diahorrea, or have ingested toxic chemicals such as antifreeze (ethylene glycol) or wood alcohol (methanol). b. Metabolic alkalosis (bicarbonate excess). The bicarbonate excess in metabolic alkalosis can result from diuretic therapy, loss of acid-containing gastric fluid caused by vomiting or suction, or from certain diseases such as Cushing syndrome. 2.Respiratory disturbances: a. Respiratory acidosis (H CO excess). The increase in H CO characteristic of respiratory acidosis is caused most often by slow breathing, which results in excess CO in arterial blood. Causes include depression of the respiratory centre by drugs or anaesthesia or by pulmonary diseases such as emphysema and pneumonia. b. Respiratory alkalosis (H CO deficit). Hyperventilation leads to an H CO deficit caused by excessive loss of CO in expired air. The result is respiratory alkalosis. Anxiety (hyperventilation syndrome), overinflation of patients on ventilators, or hepatic coma can all reduce H CO and CO to dangerously low levels. The ratio of NaHCO to H CO levels in the blood is the key to acid-base balance. If the normal ratio (20:1 NaHCO /H CO ) can be maintained, the acid-base balance and pH remain normal despite changes in the absolute amounts of either component of the buffer pair in the blood. As a clinical example, in a person suffering from untreated diabetes, abnormally large amounts of acids enter the blood. The normal 20:1 ratio is altered as the NaHCO component of the buffer pair reacts with the acids. Blood levels of NaHCO decrease rapidly in these patients. The result is a lower ratio of NaHCO to H CO (perhaps 10:1) and lower blood pH. The condition is called uncompensated metabolic acidosis. The body attempts to correct or compensate for the acidosis by altering the ratio of NaHCO to H CO . Acidosis in a diabetic patient is often accompanied by rapid breathing or hyperventilation. This compensatory action of the respiratory system results in a ‘blow-off’ of CO . Decreased blood levels of CO result in lower H CO levels. A new compensated ratio of NaHCO to H CO (perhaps 10:0.5) may result. In such individuals the blood pH returns to normal or near-normal levels. The condition is called compensated metabolic acidosis. Diabetic Ketoacidosis An important part of home care for diabetics involves monitoring the level of glucose in the blood and, especially for patients taking insulin, carefully watching the appearance of ketone bodies in the urine. Accumulation of these acidic substances in the blood results from the excessive metabolism of fats, most often in those people with uncontrolled type 1 diabetes. These individuals have trouble metabolising carbohydrates and instead burn fat as a primary energy source. The accumulation of ketone bodies results in a condition called diabetic ketoacidosis that causes the blood to become dangerously acidic. As blood levels of ketones increases they ‘spill over’ into the urine and can be detected by use of appropriate reagent strips. Activity Vomiting can be a result of pH imbalances. Explain how and why vomiting occurs.