6Disorders of Acid-Base Balance

Maintenance of acid-base homeostasis is a vital function of theliving organism. Deviations of systemic acidity in eitherdirection can impose adverse consequences and when severe can threaten life itself. Acid-base disorders frequently are encountered in the outpatient and especially in the inpatient...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Horacio J. Adrogué, Nicolaos E. Madias
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.664.4550
http://www.kidneyatlas.org/book1/adk1_06.pdf
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Summary:Maintenance of acid-base homeostasis is a vital function of theliving organism. Deviations of systemic acidity in eitherdirection can impose adverse consequences and when severe can threaten life itself. Acid-base disorders frequently are encountered in the outpatient and especially in the inpatient setting. Effective man-agement of acid-base disturbances, commonly a challenging task, rests with accurate diagnosis, sound understanding of the underlying pathophysiology and impact on organ function, and familiarity with treatment and attendant complications [1]. Clinical acid-base disorders are conventionally defined from the vantage point of their impact on the carbonic acid-bicarbonate buffer system. This approach is justified by the abundance of this buffer pair in body fluids; its physiologic preeminence; and the validity of the iso-hydric principle in the living organism, which specifies that all the other buffer systems are in equilibrium with the carbonic acid-bicar-bonate buffer pair. Thus, as indicated by the Henderson equation, [H+] = 24 PaCO2/[HCO 3] (the equilibrium relationship of the car-bonic acid-bicarbonate system), the hydrogen ion concentration of blood ([H+], expressed in nEq/L) at any moment is a function of the prevailing ratio of the arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2, expressed in mm Hg) and the plasma bicarbonate concentration ([HCO-3], expressed in mEq/L). As a corollary, changes in systemic acidity can occur only through changes in the values of its two deter-minants, PaCO2 and the plasma bicarbonate concentration. Those acid-base disorders initiated by a change in PaCO2 are referred to as respiratory disorders; those initiated by a change in plasma bicarbon-ate concentration are known as metabolic disorders. There are four cardinal acid-base disturbances: respiratory acidosis, respiratory alka-losis, metabolic acidosis, and metabolic alkalosis. Each can be encountered alone, as a simple disorder, or can be a part of a mixed-disorder, defined as the simultaneous presence of two or ...