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Describe how the lungs and kidneys regulate volatile and fixed acids. Describe how an acid’s equilibrium constant is related to its ionization and strength. State what constitutes open and closed buffer systems. Explain why open and closed buffer systems differ in their ability to buffer fixed and volatile acids. Explain how to use the HendersonHasselbalch equation in hypothetical clinical situations. 2 Describe how the kidneys and lungs compensate for each other when the function of one is abnormal. Explain how renal absorption and excretion of electrolytes affect acid-base balance. Classify and interpret arterial blood acid-base results. Explain how to use arterial acid-base information to decide on a clinical course of action. 3 Explain why acute changes in the blood’s carbon dioxide level affect the blood’s bicarbonate ion concentration. Calculate the anion gap and use it to determine the cause of metabolic acidosis. Describe how standard bicarbonate and base excess measurements are used to identify the nonrespiratory component of acid-base imbalances. State how Stewart’s strong ion difference approach to acid-base regulation differs from the Henderson-Hasselbalch approach. 4 First, a Review: A. To be in balance, the quantities of fluids and electrolytes (molecules that release ions in water) leaving the body should be equal to the amounts taken in. B. Anything that alters the concentrations of electrolytes will also alter the concentration of water, and vice versa. 5 A. Electrolytes that ionize in water and release hydrogen ions are acids; those that combine with hydrogen ions are bases. B. Maintenance of homeostasis depends on the control of acids and bases in body fluids. 6 C. Sources of Hydrogen Ions 1.Most hydrogen ions originate as byproducts of metabolic processes, including the: a. aerobic and anaerobic respiration of glucose, b. incomplete oxidation of fatty acids, c. oxidation of amino acids containing sulfur, and the d. breakdown of phosphoproteins and nucleic acids. 7 Fig18.06 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Aerobic respiration of glucose Anaerobic respiration of glucose Incomplete oxidation of fatty acids Oxidation of sulfur-containing amino acids Hydrolysis of phosphoproteins and nucleic acids Carbonic acid Lactic acid Acidic ketone bodies Sulfuric acid Phosphoric acid H+ Internal environment 8 Even small hydrogen ion [H+] concentration changes can cause vital metabolic processes to fail; Normal metabolism continuously generates [H+]; [H+] regulation is of utmost biologic importance. Various physiologic mechanisms work together to keep the [H+] of body fluids in a range compatible with life. 9 Acid-base balance is what keeps [H+] in normal range ◦ For best results, keeps pH 7.35–7.45 Tissue metabolism produces massive amounts of CO2, which is hydrolyzed into volatile acid H2CO3 Reaction is catalyzed in RBCs by carbonic anhydrase Aerobic Metabolism CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ + HCO3– (within RBC: H+ + Hb HHb) The hemoglobin in the erythrocyte (RBC) immediately buffers the H+, causing no change in the pH: Isohydric buffering 10 ◦ Lungs eliminate CO2; falling CO2 reverses Reaction: Ventilation ↑ CO2 + H2O H2CO3 H+ + HCO3– ↑ HHb → H+ + HCO3– 11 Fig16.22 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Tissue cell Tissue PCO2 = 40 mm Hg Cellular CO2 CO2 dissolved in plasma PCO2 = 40 mm Hg Blood flow from systemic arteriole CO2 + H2O CO2 combined with hemoglobin to form carbaminohemoglobin HCO3− + H2CO3 H+ H+ combines with hemoglobin HCO3− Plasma Red blood cell PCO2 = 45 mm Hg Blood flow to systemic venule Capillary wall 12 Buffer solution characteristics ◦ A solution that resists changes in pH when an acid or a base is added ◦ Composed of a weak acid and its conjugate base (i.e., carbonic acid/bicarbonate: in blood exists in reversible combination as NaHCO3 and H2CO3 Add strong acid HCl + NaHCO3 → NaCl + H2CO3; buffered with only small acidic pH change Add base NaOH + H2CO3 → NaHCO3 + H2O; buffered with only slight alkaline pH change 13 Bicarbonate & NonBicarbonate buffer systems ◦ Bicarbonate: composed of HCO3– and H2CO3 Open system as H2CO3 is hydrolyzed to CO2 Ventilation continuously removes CO2 preventing equilibration, driving reaction to the right: HCO3– + H+ → H2CO3 → H2O + CO2 Removes vast amounts of acid from body per day 14 Fig18.07 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Cells increase production of CO2 CO2 reacts with H2O to produce H2CO3 H2CO3 releases H+ Respiratory center is stimulated Rate and depth of breathing increase More CO2 is eliminated through lungs 15 Bicarbonate & Nonbicarbonate buffer systems (cont.) ◦ NonBicarbonate: composed of phosphate & proteins Closed system: All the components remain in the system; no gas to remove acid by ventilation Hbuffer/buffer– represents acid & conjugate base H+ + buffer– ↔ Hbuf reach equilibrium, buffering stops Both systems are important to buffering fixed & volatile acids (a volatile acid is one that is in equilibrium with a dissolved gas.) 16 . 17 Describes [H+] as ratio of [H2CO3]/ [HCO3–] ◦ pH is logarithmic expression of [H+]. ◦ 6.1 is the log of the H2CO3 equilibrium constant ◦ (PaCO2 × 0.03) is in equilibrium with, & directly proportional to blood [H2CO3] Blood gas analyzers measure pH & PaCO2; then use H-H equation to calculate HCO3– 18 The ratio between the plasma [HCO3-] and dissolved CO2 determines the blood pH, according to the H-H equation. A 20:1 [HCO3-]/dissolved CO2 ratio always yields a normal arterial pH of 7.40 19 What is the role of proteins in the acid-base regulation process? a. b. c. d. produces fixed (nonvolatile) acids produces volatile acids isohydric buffering produces carbonic acid 20 . a. Catabolism of proteins produces fixed (nonvolatile) acids 21 Bicarbonate buffer system ◦ HCO3– can continue to buffer H+ as long as ventilation is adequate to exhale CO2: Ventilation H+ + HCO3– → H2CO3 → H2O + CO2 In hypoventilation, H2CO3 accumulates; only the NonBicarbonate system can serve as buffer 22 NonBicarbonate buffer system: ◦ Hemoglobin is the most important buffer in this system, because it’s the most abundant; ◦ Can buffer any fixed or volatile acid; ◦ As closed system, products of buffering accumulate & buffering may slow or or reach equilibrium: (H+ + Buf- ↔ HBuf). ◦ HCO3– and buf– exist in same blood system Ventilation Open: H+ + HCO3– → H2CO3 → H2O + CO2 Closed: Fixed acid → H+ + Buf- ↔ HBuf 23 Open System Bicarbonate: oPlasma oErythrocyte Closed System NonBicarbonate: o Hemoglobin o Organic Phosphates o Nonorganic Phosphates o Plasma Proteins . Classification of Whole Blood Buffers 24 Which one of the following blood buffers systems is classified as a bicarbonate buffer (open buffer system)? a. b. c. d. Hemoglobin Erythrocyte (RBC) Organic phosphates Plasma proteins 25 b. Erythrocyte (RBC) 26 Definitions: 1. 2. 3. Excretion: Elimination of substances from the body; Secretion: The process by which substances are actively transported; Reabsorption: Active or passive transport of substances back into the circulation. 27 Buffers are temporary measure; if acids were not excreted, life-threatening acidosis would follow. Lungs: ◦ Excrete CO2, which is in equilibrium with H2CO3 ◦ Crucial: body produces huge amounts of CO2 during aerobic metabolism (CO2 + H2O → H2CO3) ◦ In addition, through HCO3– , fixed acids are eliminated indirectly as byproducts CO2 & H2O (Remove ~24,000 mmol/L CO2 removed daily) 28 Kidneys ◦ Physically remove H+ from body ◦ Excrete <100 mEq fixed acid per day ◦ Also control excretion or retention of HCO3– ◦ If blood is acidic, then more H+ are excreted & all HCO3– is retained. ◦ If blood is alkaline, then more HCO3– are excreted & all H+ is retained. ◦ While lungs can alter [CO2] in seconds, kidneys require hours/days to change HCO3– & affect pH 29 Basic kidney function ◦ Renal glomerulus filters the blood by passing water, electrolytes, and nonproteins through semipermeable membrane. Filtrate is modified as it flows through renal tubules ◦ HCO3– is filtered through membrane, while CO2 diffuses into tubule cell, where it’s hydrolyzed into H+, which is then secreted into renal tubule H+ secretion increases in the face of acidosis therefore, hypoventilation or Ketoacidosis increases secretion 30 Basic kidney function (cont.) ◦ Reabsorption of HCO3– For every H+ secreted, an HCO3– is reabsorbed Reacts in filtrate, forming H2CO3 which dissociates into H2O & CO2 CO2 immediately diffuses into cell, is hydrolyzed, & H+ is secreted into filtrate, HCO3– diffuses into blood Thus, HCO3– has effectively been moved from filtrate to blood in exchange for H+ If there is excess HCO3– that does not react with H+, it will be excreted in urine 31 32 33 Basic kidney function (cont.) ◦ Role of urinary buffers in excretion of excess H+ Once H+ has reacted with all available HCO3–, excess reacts with phosphate & ammonia If all urinary buffers are consumed, further H+ filtration ends when pH falls to 4.5 Activation of ammonia buffer system enhances Cl– loss & HCO3– gain 34 The lungs regulate the volatile acid content (CO2) of the blood, while the kidneys regulate the fixed acid concentration of the blood In the OPEN bicarbonate buffer system, H+ is buffered to form the volatile acid H2CO3, which is exhaled as CO2 into the atmosphere. In the CLOSED nonbicarbonate buffer system, H+ is buffered to formed fixed acids which accumulate in the body. 35 Normal acid-base balance ◦ Kidneys maintain HCO3– of 22-26 mEq/L ◦ Lungs maintain CO2 of 35-45 mm Hg ◦ These produce pH of 35-45 (H-H equation) pH = 6.1 + log (24/(40 × 0.03) → pH = 7.40 ◦ Note pH determined by ratio of HCO3– to dissolved CO2 Ratio of 20:1 will provide normal pH (7.40) Increased ratio results in alkalemia Decreased ratio results in acidemia 36 Primary respiratory disturbances ◦ PaCO2 is controlled by the lung, changes in pH caused by PaCO2 are considered respiratory disturbances Hyperventilation lowers PaCO2, which raises pH; referred to as respiratory alkalosis Hypoventilation (PaCO2) decreases the pH; called respiratory acidosis 37 38 39 Primary metabolic disturbances ◦ Involve gain or loss of fixed acids or HCO3– ◦ Both appear as changes in HCO3– as changes in fixed acids will alter amount of HCO3– used in buffering 40 Fig18.12 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Kidney failure to excrete acids Excessive production of acidic ketones as in diabetes mellitus Accumulation of nonrespiratory acids Metabolic acidosis Excessive loss of bases Prolonged diarrhea with loss of alkaline intestinal secretions Prolonged vomiting with loss of intestinal secretions 41 Primary metabolic disturbances (cont.) ◦ Decrease in HCO3– results in metabolic acidosis ◦ Increase in HCO3– results in metabolic alkalosis Compensation: Restoring pH to normal ◦ Any primary disturbance immediately triggers compensatory response Any respiratory disorder will be compensated for by kidneys (process takes hours to days) Any metabolic disorder will be compensated for by lungs (rapid process, occurs within minutes) 42 Compensation: Restoring pH to normal (cont.) ◦ Respiratory acidosis (hypoventilation) Renal retention HCO3– raises pH toward normal ◦ Respiratory alkalosis Renal elimination HCO3– lowers pH toward normal ◦ Metabolic acidosis Hyperventilation ↓CO2, raising pH toward normal ◦ Metabolic alkalosis Hypoventilation ↑CO2, lowering pH toward normal 43 44 The CO2 hydration reaction’s effect on [HCO3–] ◦ Large portion of CO2 is transported as HCO3– ◦ As CO2 increases, it also increases HCO3– ◦ In general, effect is increase of ~1 mEq/L HCO3– for every 10 mm Hg increase in PaCO2 An increase in CO2 of 30 would increase HCO3– by ~3 mEq/L 45 To maintain a normal pH range of 7.35–7.45, the ratio of HCO3– to dissolved CO2 should be: a. b. c. d. 10:1 15:1 20:1 30:1 46 c. 20:1 47 48 49 Respiratory acidosis (alveolar hypoventilation): ◦ Any process that raises PaCO2 > 45 mm Hg & lowers pH below 7.35 Increased PaCO2 produces more carbonic . acid . ◦ Causes: Anything that results in VA that fails to eliminate CO2 equal to VCO2 50 51 Respiratory acidosis (cont.) ◦ Compensation is by renal Reabsorption of HCO3– Partial compensation: pH improved but not normal . Full compensation: pH restored to normal ◦ Correction (goal is to improve VA) May include: Improved bronchial hygiene & lung expansion Non-invasive positive pressure ventilation, endotracheal intubation & mechanical ventilation If chronic condition with renal compensation, lowering PaCO2 may be detrimental for patient 52 Respiratory alkalosis (alveolar hyperventilation): ◦ Lowers arterial PaCO2 decreases carbonic acid, thus increasing pH ◦ Causes (see Box 13-4 in Egan) . Any process that increases . VA so that CO2 is eliminated at rate higher than VCO2. Most common cause is hypoxemia Anxiety, fever, pain ◦ Clinical signs: early Paresthesia; if severe, may have hyperactive reflexes, tetanic convulsions, dizziness 53 Fig18.13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. • Anxiety • Fever • Poisoning • High altitude Hyperventilation Excessive loss of CO2 Decrease in concentration of H2CO3 Decrease in concentration of H+ Respiratory alkalosis 54 Respiratory alkalosis (cont.) ◦ Compensation is by renal excretion of HCO3– Partial compensation returns pH toward normal Full compensation returns pH to high normal range ◦ Correction Involves removing stimulus for hyperventilation i.e., hypoxemia: give oxygen therapy 55 56 Alveolar hyperventilation superimposed on compensated respiratory acidosis (chronic ventilatory failure): ◦ Typical ABG for chronic ventilatory failure: pH 7.38, PaCO2 58 mm Hg, HCO3– 33 mEq/L Severe hypoxia stimulates increased VA, lowers . PaCO2, potentially raising pH on alkalotic side i.e. pH 7.44, PaCO2 50 mm Hg, HCO3– 33 mEq/L Appears to be compensated metabolic acidosis Only medical history & knowledge of situation allow correct interpretation of this ABG 57