Surgical Procedures/Acid Base Disorder

< Surgical Procedures

Information http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Wikibooks:Medical_disclaimer

Acid Base Disorder

In general : H+ = 24 × PCO2/HCO3–
(Usually in clinical practice, H+ concentration is expressed as pH.)

Acidosis-Alkalosis

Respiratory Acidosis-Alkalosis

Disorders that initially alter arterial PCO2 (arterial CO2 concentration) are termed respiratory acidosis-alkalosis.

Metabolic Acidosis-Alkalosis

Disorders initially affecting HCO3– (serum electrolytes) concentration are termed metabolic acidosis-alkalosis.

Metabolic Alkalosis

Causes
  1. Chloride-responsive.
    • The most common causes in the surgical practice include:
      • Diuretic therapy (e.g., contraction alkalosis).
      • Acid loss through GI secretions (e.g., nasogastric suctioning, vomiting).
      • Exogenous administration of HCO3– or HCO3– precursors (e.g., citrate in blood).
  2. Chloride-unresponsive metabolic alkalosis is comparatively less common and includes:
    • Hyperaldosteronism
    • Marked hypokalemia
    • Renal failure
    • Renal tubular Cl– wasting (Bartter’s syndrome)
    • Oedematous states.
Diagnosis:

Measurement of urinary chloride concentration.

Treatment principles in metabolic alkalosis:

Goal of Treatments can be:

  1. Removing and identifying underlying causes, Discontinuing exogenous alkali, repairing Cl–, K+, and volume deficits.
  2. Correction of volume deficits (can be used 0.9% NaCl) and hypokalemia.
  3. H2-receptor antagonists or other acid-suppressing medications can be used after vomiting or nasogastric suctioning.
  4. If Edemea:
    • Acetazolamide (5 mg/kg/day IV or PO) can be used.
      • Eases fluid mobilization while decreasing renal HCO3– reabsorption.
      • Tolerance to this diuretic may develop after 2–3 days.
  5. Ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) can be used in severe alkalemia (HCO3– >40 mmol/liter; rate not exceeding 5 ml/minute).
    • Approximately one-half of the calculated volume of NH4Cl is usually administered and the acid-base status and Cl– concentration is usually rechecked to determine the need of further treatment.
    • Hepatic failure is contraindication for NH4Cl.
  6. HCl more rapidly corrects metabolic alkalosis.
  7. Dialysis:
    • Can be considered in the volume-overloaded situation with renal failure and intractable metabolic alkalosis.
Estimation of the amount of H+ requirement

The amount of H+ to administer may be estimated by the following equation:
H+(mmol) = 0.5 × wt (kg) × [103 – serum Cl– (mmol/liter)]

Estimation of the amount of NH4Cl requirement:

Can be estimated by the following equation: NH4Cl (mmol) = 0.2 × wt (kg) × [103 – serum Cl– (mmol/liter)]

Metabolic Acidosis

(Low pH with low CO2 content)

Causes

Metabolic Acidosis is caused if:

Mnemonics

MUD PILES

1. Methyl Alcohol. 2. Uremia. 3. Diabetic Ketoacidosis 4. Para-Aldehyde poisoning. 5. Ischemia. 6. Lactic acidosis. 7. Ethylene Glycol Alcohol ingestion. 8. Salicylic Poisoning.

Other commonest causes are:
Clinical Feature
  1. Usually in severe cases Kussmaul's respiration can be present.
  2. When H+ >70 mmol/L; then,
    • Cardiac-Out-Put falls.
    • Blood pressure decreases.
    • Frequnet confusion.
    • Drowsiness.
Diagnostic Classsification (Anion Gap)

Anion gap (AG: normal, 3–11 mmol/liter)
AG (mmol/liter) = Na+ (mmol/liter) – [Cl– (mmol/liter) + HCO3– (mmol/liter)]

It is useful diagnostically to classify metabolic acidosis into:

  1. Increased AG metabolic acidosis.
  2. Normal AG metabolic acidosis.
Causes according to Anion Gap:
Increased anion gap Metabolic Acidosis:
  1. Increased acid production:
    1. Ketoacidosis
      1. Diabetic
      2. Alcoholic
      3. Starvation
    2. Lactic acidosis
    3. Toxic ingestion:
      1. Salicylates.
      2. Ethylene glycol.
      3. Methanol.
  2. Renal failure.
Normal anion gap (hyperchloremic) Metabolic Acidosis:
  1. Renal tubular dysfunction
    1. Renal tubular acidosis.
    2. Hypoaldosteronism.
    3. Potassium-sparing diuretics.
  2. Loss of alkali.
    1. Diarrhea.
    2. Ureterosigmoidostomy.
    3. Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors.
  3. Administration of HCl (ammonium chloride, cationic amino acids).
Management/Treatment of metabolic acidosis:
  1. Infusion of NaHCO3, stoped when H+ is normol.
  2. Monitoring H+ and HCO3-
  3. Treatment of underlying causes.


The HCO3– deficit (mmol/liter) can be estimated by the following equation:

HCO3– deficit (mmol/liter) = Body weight (kg) × 0.4 × [desired HCO3– (mmol/liter) – measured HCO3– (mmol/liter)]

(This equation serves only as a rough estimate .)

The goal of HCO3–

Serial arterial blood gases and serum electrolytes should be obtained to assess the response to HCO3– therapy.

Rate of HCO3– replacement:
This article is issued from Wikibooks. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.