INTRODUCTION TO
ACID-BASE DISORDERS
Anna Jin, M.D.
Associate Professor of Medicine
Division of Nephrology
Long Beach VA Medical Center
UCI Medical Center
7/27/2016
Core Curriculum Lecture Objectives
Understand the basic concepts in acid-base physiology
Henderson-Hasselback equation
To be able to analyze ABG’s, and identify simple and
mixed acid base disorder (5 steps)
Metabolic acidosis vs. Metabolic alkalosis
Respiratory acidosis vs. Respiratory alkalosis
Calculate anion gap and delta gap
Regulation of pH is essential
Acid base physiology is the
regulation of hydrogen ion
concentration.
What is a normal hydrogen
concentration?
Extreme ranges of pH (<7.2
or > 7.55) are potentially life
threatening.
What is the pH range
compatible with life? Every change of 0.3 pH units represents a
change in H+ by a factor of 2
The disease is more important!
pH changes have dramatic effects on normal cell
function and physiological process.
Disruption of protein structure and enzyme function
Changing distribution of electrolytes (K+, Na+, and Ca++ )
Changes in excitability of nerve and muscle cells
Decreasing effectiveness of medications
It is imperative to rapidly assess the cause of an acid-
base disturbance.
The absolute pH is less important than the etiology.
ABGs
An arterial blood gas (ABG) is a sample of
arterial blood that reports: pH / pO2 / pCO2 / HCO3
pH: 7.4 (H ion concentration)
PaCO2: 40 mmHg. (dissolved CO2 in blood or
ventilatory effectiveness)
HCO3: 24 mEq/L (metabolic effectiveness)
PaO2: 80-100 mmHg (O2 content of blood)
When to order ABG?
Intubated ICU pt. for ventilator management
Respiratory distress
Home O2 criteria
Abnormal serum bicarbonate or H&P suggest severe
acid base disorders
Indication for dialysis
AMS work-up
Critical and unstable patients
Abnormal levels of pH and PCO2 are best indicators of
trouble.
The Henderson-Hasselbalch formula is the
mantra of acid-base physiology
Dissolved CO2 + H2O ↔ H2CO3 ↔ HCO3- + H+
There are 4 primary ways that pH can change
Increase in HCO3,
increases pH.
Metabolic
alkalosis
There are 4 primary ways that pH can change
Increase in HCO3, increases pH
Metabolic alkalosis
Decrease in HCO3,
decreases pH.
Metabolic
acidosis
There are 4 primary ways that pH can change
Increase in HCO3, increases pH
Metabolic alkalosis
Decrease in HCO3, decreases pH
Metabolic acidosis
Increase in pCO2,
decreases pH.
Respiratory
acidosis
There are 4 primary ways that pH can change
Increase in HCO3, increases pH
Metabolic alkalosis
Decrease in HCO3, decreases pH.
Metabolic acidosis
Increase in pCO2, decreases pH
Respiratory acidosis
Decrease in pCO2,
increases pH.
Respiratory alkalosis
Patients with primary acid-base disorders
compensate to restore normal pH.
In primary respiratory In primary metabolic
disorders, the kidney disorders, breathing is
modifies the serum altered to change the
bicarbonate to return pCO2 in order to return
pH toward normal. pH toward normal.
Compensation minimizes changes in pH
Metabolic alkalosis
Increased HCO3, increases pH.
Increased CO2 compensates
to reduce the change in pH.
Compensation minimizes changes in pH
Metabolic acidosis
Decreased HCO3, decreases pH.
Decreased CO2 compensates
to reduce the change in pH.
Compensation minimizes changes in pH
Respiratory acidosis
Increased CO2, decreases pH.
Increased HCO3 compensates
to reduce the change in pH.
Compensation minimizes changes in pH
Respiratory alkalosis
Decreased CO2, increases pH.
Decreased HCO3 compensates
to reduce the change in pH.
Compensation is always in the same direction
as the primary disorder.
Primary Compensation
Metabolic acidosis HCO3 pCO2
Respiratory alkalosis pCO2 HCO3
Respiratory acidosis pCO2 HCO3
Metabolic alkalosis HCO3 pCO2
If all three variables move in the same direction metabolic
if they move in discordant directions respiratory
Primary Compensation pH
Metabolic acidosis HCO3 pCO2
Respiratory alkalosis pCO2 HCO3
Respiratory acidosis pCO2 HCO3
Metabolic alkalosis HCO3 pCO2
ABG and BMP should be obtained at the same time.
Simple metabolic d/o move in the same direction:
Acidosis: all values decreased
Alkalosis: all values increased
Simple respiratory d/o has reverse relationship:
Increase PaC02 and HC02, Decrease pH
Decrease PaC02 and HC02, Increase pH
Compensation NEVER completely normalizes pH from original
disorder.
If pH is normal, mixed acid-base disorder must be present.
“Rules of Five”
The key to ABG interpretation
is following the 5 steps in
order.
“Rules of Five” -- #1
Identify the acidemia or alkalemia
pH < 7.4 = Acidemia
pH > 7.4 = Alkalemia
“Rules of Five” -- #2
Determine if it is respiratory or metabolic
Compare the directional change of the pH and PaCO2
If both change in the same direction (up or down),
the primary disorder is metabolic.
If both change in opposite direction (up and down),
the primary disorder is respiratory.
“Rules of Five” -- #3
Check for correct degree of compensation
Each primary acid base disorder has its own formula
for prediction.
Is the compensation appropriate?
Ifthe magnitude of the compensation deviates from
predicted, it indicates additional primary acid-base
disorder.
“Rules of Five” -- #3
Case 1
43 y/o male came in to clinic for routine visit.
He had labs drawn that morning, and
BMP revealed the following:
Na 135, K 3.5, Cl 112, HCO3 12, BUN 12, Cr 0.7
Alb 4
pH 7.25
ABG was obtained:
pCO2 25
HCO3 10
pO2 90
Case 1
pH: 7.25 low (acidemia)
HCO3: 12 low
PaCO2: 25 low
AG: 11 nl
What is the primary process ?
metabolic acidosis
Is the primary process appropriately compensated?
Expected PaCO2 based on Winter’s equation:
1.5 x 12 + 8 = 26 +/- 2 (same as observed)
Compensatory respiratory alkalosis
Case 2
Now your last pt’s twin brother came in, and he also
had diarrhea throughout the night after having eaten
the same meal. He had the same BMP, but what happened
to his PaCO2?
pH: 7.25 low (acidemia)
HCO3: 12 low
pCO2: 30 low (higher than his twin pCO2 25)
AG: 11 nl
Additional respiratory acidosis superimposed on acute
metabolic acidosis
Furthermore, the twin brother admitted long standing
h/o heavy tobacco use
“Rules of Five” -- #3:
Metabolic compensation for Respiratory Disorders is
slow!
Respiratory Acidosis
For every increase in pCO2 of 10 mmHg, bicarbonate
should increase:
1 mEq/L in acute • 3 mEq/L in chronic
Example: 7.19 / 78 / 80 / 30
pH / pO2 / pCO2 / HCO3
pCO2 Is 40 above normal, so
If the condition is acute, HCO3 should be 28±2
If the condition is chronic, HCO3 should be 36 ±2
Actual HCO3 is 30, which is within the predicted range, for
acute respiratory acidosis and outside of the range for
chronic.
Respiratory Alkalosis
For every decrease in pCO2 of 10 mmHg, bicarbonate
should decrease:
• 2 mEq/L in acute • 4 mEq/L in chronic
• Example: 7.44 / 78 / 25 / 17
pH / pO2 / pCO2 / HCO3
• pCO2 is 15 below normal, so
– If the condition is acute, the HCO3 should be decreased by 3
or 21±2
– If the condition is chronic, the HCO3 should be decreased by
6 or 18 ±2
“Rules of Five” -- #4
ALWAYS Calculate the Anion Gap
Ifthere is an anion gap, there is an anion
gap metabolic acidosis!
Remember to correct for low albumin state
For each drop in albumin by 1mg/dl (from
4mg/dl), add 2.5 to your calculated
Anion Gap
“Rules of Five” -- #4
LAW OF ELECTRONEUTRALITY Why We Don’t Spark!
ALWAYS Calculate the Anion Gap
Anion gap = UA – UC
= Na+ – (Cl- + HCO3-)
Normal AG:12
UC: Ca++, Mg++, IgG
UA: albumin, PO4-, lactate, ketones,
sulfates, IgA
Increased AG occurs with an increase in
anions of organic acids (lactic-acids,
keto-acids)
What is the anion?
Metabolic acidosis is further evaluated by determining the
anion associated with the increased H+ cation.
These can be differentiated by measuring the anion gap.
Loss of HCO3- (GI vs. renal) with
Anion gap = Na+ – (Cl- + HCO3-) increased Cl- RTA vs. Diarrhea
Metabolic Acidosis
Elevated AG: Over production of organic acids (MUD PILES)
M - Methanol
U - Uremia (uncleared organic acids)
D - DKA or starvation ketoacidosis
P - Propylene Glycol (additive in IV benzo’s)
*paraldehyde: rarely seen -- previous use for EtOH detox
I - Ingestions (Isopropyl alcohol/Cocaine/MDMA or Ecstasy)
*INH: rare, unless seizure present /Iron toxicity rare
L - Lactate (sepsis or ischemia)
E - EtOH ketoacidosis / Ethylene Glycol
S - Salicylates
Normal AG: Loss of HCO3- (GI vs. renal)
Diarrhea vs. RTA
“Rules of Five” -- #5: delta delta
“Rules of Five” -- #5
(for AG metabolic acidosis)
Calculate Delta Delta:
In a simple anion gap acidosis, the magnitude of
increase in anion gap (∆ gap) should be similar to the fall
in serum bicarbonate (∆ bicarbonate).
Δ Anion Gap = Δ HCO3
Δ Anion Gap = current AG – normal AG (12)
Δ HCO3 = baseline HCO3 – measured HCO3
Baseline HCO3 = measured HCO3 + Δ Anion Gap
HCO3 > 28 = Concurrent “hidden” met alkalosis
HCO3 < 24 = Concurrent “hidden” non-gap met acidosis
Determine the primary Acid-Base disorder
Metabolic Metabolic Respiratory Respiratory
acidosis alkalosis acidosis alkalosis
Determine if the compensation is appropriate
Winter’s ⅓ the Δ HCO3 1:10 acute 2:10 acute
formula 3:10 chronic 4:10 chronic
Determine the anion gap
Non-Anion gap Anion gap
Determine the urinary anion gap Determine the osmolar gap
Positive gap Negative gap
Osmolar gap Non-osmolar gap
(RTA) (GI, IVF)
Determine the bicarbonate before
Pre-existing met. alkalosis Pre-existing NAGMA No pre-existing acid-base disorders
Case 3
38 yo male c/o lightheadedness and lethargy for 3-4
days. He had ‘stomach flu’ for 1 wk., and reports
multiple episodes of vomiting and poor PO intake.
On exam, he was found to have BP 90/60, P 129, RR 30.
Labs revealed Na 140, K 6.5, Cl 97, HCO3 5 (? AG)
Case 3
• pH: 7.1 (low, acidemia)
• pCO2: 15 low
• HCO3: 5 low
• Primary process: metabolic acidosis (Anion Gap: 38)
• Winter’s equation (expected pCO2): 16 (same as observed)
• Delta change HCO3: (38-12= 26)+ 5 (observed) = 31 (an
elevated HCO3)
• Answer:
• anion gap metabolic acidosis (primary)
• metabolic alkalosis (second primary)
• compensatory respiratory alkalosis
Case 4
32 yo hispanic female with a 1 week history of bloody diarrhea. She
comes to the ER with SOB, weakness and a feeling of doom.
PE: T 38.7o BP 90/40, P 100
Abd: diffusely tender with hyperative bowel sounds and
OB+ stools
Labs: Na 140, K 3.7, Cl 115, HCO3 5 (? AG)
pH 7.11
pCO2 16
HCO3 6
Case 4
• pH: 7.11 (low, acidemia)
• pCO2: 16 low
• HCO3: 5 low
• Primary process: metabolic acidosis (Anion Gap 20)
• Winter’s equation (expected pCO2): 16 (same as observed)
• Delta change HCO3: (20-12)+5 (observed) = 13 (a low HCO3)
• Answer:
• anion gap metabolic acidosis (primary)
• non-anion gap metabolic acidosis (second primary)
• compensatory respiratory alkalosis
Case 5
A 21 y/o female is brought to the ER at ~3am,
stuporous and tachypneic. History is remarkable for
h/o depression and SI’s. An ABG and electrolytes
have been drawn by the nurse.
Labs: Na 140, K 3, CL 106, HCO3 10 (? AG)
pH=7.53
PaCO2=12
Case 5
pH: 7.53 (high, alkalemia)
pCO2: 12 low
HCO3: 10 low
Primary process: respiratory alkalosis (acute)
Is metabolic compensation appropriate?
PaCO2 ↓ed by ~30 mm Hg; HCO3 should fall by 6 mmole/l;
HCO3 ↓ is too great, so superimposed metabolic acidosis
Anion Gap: 24 (anion gap met. Acidosis)
Combined primary respiratory alkalosis and
metabolic acidosis seen in sepsis, or salicylate
intoxication
Thank You!
Core Curriculum Lecture Objectives
1. What is the pH? acidemia vs. alkalemia
2. Which is the primary process explaining pH?
3. Is the primary process appropriately compensated?
If compensatory responses do not lie within the accepted
range, by definition a combined disorder exists.
4. ALWAYS calculate AG regardless, and remember to
correct for hypoalbuminemia.
5. Is there an additional metabolic disorder ? (Delta Delta)
Corrected HCO3- = (Pt’s AG – 12 )+ pt’s HCO3-
>28 = Concurrent Met Alkalosis
<24 = Non-gap Met Acidosis
References
1. Rose, B. D. Clinical physiology of acid-base and
electrolytedisorders. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
1994.
2. Narins RG and Emmett M (1980) Simple and mixed
acid-base disorders: a practical approach.
Medicine (Baltimore) 59: 161-187
3. Corey HE (2003) Stewart and beyond: new models
of acid-base balance. Kidney Int 64: 777-787
4. Emmett M and Narins RG (1977) Clinical use of the
anion gap. Medicine (Baltimore) 56: 38-54
5. Oh MS and Carroll HJ (1977) The anion gap. N
Engl J Med 297: 814-817