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asd: Acid-Base and Electrolytes
n/a
49
Medical
Graduate
09/20/2009

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Cards

Term

1. How do you analyze arterial blood gas values?

Definition

3 basic points:

a. pH tells you whether the primary event is acidosis (less than 7.4) or alkalosis (greater than 7.4).  (secondary event is compensation for primary event.)

 

b. CO2 is acidic.  Bicarb is basic.

 

c. Look at CO2 and bicarb, then pH:

i. high CO2 and bicarb:

-acidosis:  respiratory acidosis

-alkalosis: metabolic alkalosis

 

ii. low CO2 and bicarb:

-acidosis: metabolic acidosis

-alkalosis: respiratory alkalosis

Term

2. T or F:  The body does not compensate beyond normal pH.

Definition

True.  There is no "overcorrection".  pH won't pass 7.4 in the other direction when compensating.

Term

3. List the common causes of acidosis.

Definition

Respiratory acidosis: decreased exhale

-COPD, asthma

-respiratory depressant meds: opioids, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, alcohol

 

Metabolic acidosis: acid (MUDPILES)

-methanol

-uremia

-DKA, diarrhea

-paraldehyde (instead carbonic anhydrase inhibitors)

-iron, INH (isoniazid)

-lactic acid  (sepsis, shock, bowel ischemia)

-ethanol, ethylene glycol

-salicylates, aspirin  

Term

4.  List the common causes of alkalosis.

Definition

Respiratory alkalosis: increased breathing

-anxiety/hyperventilation

-aspirin/salicylate overdose

 

Metabolic alkalosis: loss of bicarb

-diuretics (except carbonic anhydrase inhibitors)

-vomiting

-volume contraction

-hyperaldosteronism

-antacid abuse/ milk-alkali syndrome

Term

5. Aspirin overdose: what type of acid-base disturbance?

Definition

Acid-base: metabolic acidosis, respiratory alkalosis

(2 different primary disturbances!)

Term

5b. What sx with aspirin overdose?

Definition

sx: tinnitus, hypoglycemia, vomiting, hx of swallowing several pills

 

Term

5c. What tx for aspirin overdose?

Definition

tx: Bicarbonate alkanilizes urine (speeds excretion)

Term

6. What happens to the blood gas of patients with chronic lung conditions?

Definition

-pH may be alkaline during the day b/c breathing better when awake (esp. w/ sleep apnea)

 

-just after bronchitis or other respiratory disorder (not retaining air as much), metabolic alkalosis that compensates for respiratory acidosis becomes the primary disorder

-elevated pH and bicarbonate

 

-sleep apnea and other chronic lung diseases can cause right-sided heart failure (cor pulmonale)

Term

7. Should you give bicarbonate to a patient with acidosis?

Definition

Almost never.  

 

Try IV fluids and correct the underlying disorder.

 

Note:  If all other measures fail and pH<7.0, can try bicarb.  

Term

8.  The blood gas of a patient with asthma has changed from basic to normal, and the patient is sleeping.  Can they go home?

Definition

No.  Patient is probably crashing.  Will progress to acidosis --> intubate!  Prepare for elective intubation, and continue agressive medical treatment of asthma (beta2 agonists, steroids, O2). 

 

Explanation: Usually, pH is basic in patients with asthma b/c they are eliminating CO2.  If pt. is tired and doesn't blow off CO2 as well, CO2 levels increase and pH decreases towards normal.  

 

 

Term

9.  Signs and sx of hyponatremia.

Definition

Lethargy, Mental status changes/confusion, Coma

Anorexia

Seizures, Cramps

 

Hyponatremia:  "Decreased natural state" = Love: Can't think, can't eat, can't stop shaking.

 

Term

10. Determine cause of hyponatremia?

Definition

1st: look at volume status.

 

Hypovolemic: peeing excessively

-Dehydration, diuretics, diabetes, addison's disease/hypoaldosteronism (high potassium)

 

Euvolemic:  too much water

-SIADH, psychogenic polydipsia, oxytocin use

 

Hypervolemic: Organ failure

-heart failure, nephrotic syndrome, cirrhosis, toxemia, renal failure

Term

11.  How is hyponatremia treated?

Definition

tx:

 

hypovolemic hyponatremia: normal saline

 

euvolemic and hypervolemic hyponatremia: water/fluid restriction

 

Note: hypervolemic hyponatremia may require diuretics.

Term

12.  What medication is used to treat SIADH if water restriction fails?

Definition

Demeclocycline

-induces nephrogenic diabetes insipidus

Term

13.  What happens if hyponatremia is corrected too quickly?

Definition

You may cause brainstem damage via central pontine myelinolysis due to demyelination from fluid loss into the hypernatremic serum.

 

 

Hypertonic saline is used only when a patient has seizures from severe hyponatremia, and only cautiously.

 

Normal saline is a better choice 99% of the time on the boards!

Term

14.  What causes spurious (false) hyponatremia?

Definition

-Hyperglycemia

(once glucose is >200mg/dl, sodium decreases by 1.6mEq/L for each rise of 100mg/dL in glucose)

 

-Hyperprotenemia

 

-Hyperlipidemia

 

"Low salt diet can't compensate for high sugar, high protein, and high fat diet."

Term

15.  What causes hyponatremia in postoperative patients?

Definition

Pain and narcotics (causing SIADH) with overaggresive IV fluids.  

 

Rare cause on USMLE:  adrenal insufficiency

-high K+, low bp

 

Think post-surgery (narcotics and IV fluids) vs. adrenal insufficiency.

Term

16.  What is the classic cause of hyopnatremia in pregnant patients about to deliver?

Definition

Oxytocin (antidiuretic hormone effect)

Term

17.  Signs and sx of hypernatremia.

Definition

Same as hyponatremia:

 

mental status changes/confusion, coma, seizures

hyperreflexia 

 

Falling "out of love": Can't think, can't stop shaking, kicking the person.

Term

18.  What causes hypernatremia?

Definition

Dehydration (free water loss) due to inadequate fluid intake relative to bodily needs.

 

Also diuretics, diabetes insipidus, diarrhea, renal disease and too much hypertonic IV fluid.

 

Impaired kidney concentration:

-sickle cell disease:  may lead to renal damage and isosthenuria (inability to concentrate urine).

-hypokalemia

-hypercalcemia

Term

19.  How is hypernatremia treated?

Definition

Water replacement with normal saline.

 

If stable, can switch to 1/2 normal saline.

 

Do NOT use dextrose in water (D5W) for hypernatremia.

Term

20.  Signs and sx of hypokalemia?

Definition

think opp. of hyperkalemia signs and sx:

 

hypokalemia: EKG  (or cardiac)

-loss of T wave or T-wave flattening, U waves, premature complexes, tachyarrhythmias

 

muscular weakness --> paralysis, ventilation failure

smooth muscle weakness --> ileus, hypotension

Term

21.  What is the effect of pH on serum potassium?

Definition

alkalosis: hypokalemia

= pH increases (bicarb increases), K+ decreases

 

acidosis: hyperkalemia

=pH decreases (bicarb decreases), K+ increases

--> give bicarb

 

"Bicarb will decrease K+."

 

Also correct pH, and potassium will normalize w/o any other effort.

Term

22.  Describe interaction b/t digitalis and potassium.

Definition

Heart is sensitive to hypokalemia in patients on digitalis.  Monitor potassium levels carefully in pts. on digitalis, esp. if also taking diuretics (commonly pts. take both).

Term

23. How should potassium be replaced?

Definition

Correct potassium slowly.

 

Oral replacement preferred.  

 

IV potassium can be given for severe hypokalemia, but :

-don't give more than 20mEq/hr.

-EKG monitor for potential fatal arrhythmia with IV potassium

Term

24.  When hypokalemia persists even after lots of potassium given, what should you do?

Definition

Check the magnesium level.  If low, body cannot retain potassium effectively, so correct low mag level and potassium level can return to nl.

Term

25.  Signs and sx of hyperkalemia?

Definition

hyperkalemia = EKG or cardiac

 

Hyperkalemia is the SCARIER of the two:

-vfib, vtach --> asystole

-don't sit on a peaked T wave (don't sit and don't wait!)

-think: peaked T + widened QRS looks sinusoidal

 

also prolonged PR --> loss of P waves 

 

Weakness and paralysis.

Term

26.  What causes hyperkalemia?

Definition

hyperkalemia: k = kidneys, a = aldosterone

 

Failure of kidneys (acute or chronic renal failure)

Failure of kidneys to respond to aldosterone

(diabetes--> kidney damage--> kidneys not responding properly to aldosterone)

Failure of adrenals to produce enough aldosterone for kidneys to respond to

-Adrenal insufficiency (w/ low sodium and low bp)

-Hypoaldosteronism

 

Severe tissue destruction (release of intracellular K)

 

Medications (stop potassium-sparin diuretics, ACE-Inhibitors, beta blockers, NSAIDs)

Term

27.  What should you suspect if an asymptomatic patient has hyperkalemia?

Definition

Think hemolyzed lab specimen (high intracellular K), and repeat test.

Term

28.  The specimen is not hemolyzed. What is the first treatment?

Definition

1st: EKG to assess cardiotoxicity (peaked T waves, etc.)

 

Best therapy for hyperkalemia: decrease K+ intake, give oral sodium polystyrene resin.

 

K+>6.5 and/or cardiac toxicity apparent: IV therapy

-1st: calcium gluconate (cardioprotective)

-2nd: sodium bicarb and insulin w/ glucose

(alkalosis and insulin shift K+ into cells)

-3rd: beta2 agonists (also drive K+ into cells)

If renal failure (high Cr) or IV therapy not working: dialysis!!

Term

29.  Signs and sx of hypocalcemia?

Definition

Neuro: tetany

-tap facial nerve, contraction (Chveostek's sign)

-bp cuff causes hand mm spasm (Trousseau's sign)

 

EKG:  QT prolonged (calcemia)

 

Other:

-depression

-encephalopathy, dementia

-convulsions/seizures

-laryngospasm

 

Term

30.  What to do if calcium level is low?

Definition

Hypoproteinemia (low albumin) can cause hypocalcemia b/c protein-bound fraction of calcium is decreased.

 

-Ionized (unbound active fraction) calcium is unchanged

so check albumin level and ionized calcium to make sure "true" hypocacelmia

 

-For every 1gm/dL decrease in albumin (below 4gm/dL), determine actual calcium levels by adding 0.8mg/dL to calcium level.

Term

31.  What causes hypocalcemia?

Definition

think: hypocalcemia--> hypoparathyroid

--> Vit. D--> DiGeorge's

 

-DiGeorge's syndrome (tetany 24-48 hrs. after birth, absent thymic shadow on x-ray)

 

-Renal failure (kidney makes vit. D)

 

-Hypoparathyroidism (watch for a postthyroidectomy patient b/c all 4 parathyroids may have been removed)

 

-Vit. D deficiency

 

-Pseudohypoparathyroidism (short fingers, short stature, mental retardation, nl parathyroid hormone w/ end-organ unresponsiveness to parathyroid hormone)

 

-acute pancreatitis

 

-renal tubular acidosis

Term

32.  Describe relationship between low calcium and low magnesium.

Definition

Difficult to correct hypocalcemia until hypomagnesemia is corrected.

Term

33.  How does pH affect calcium levels?

Definition

Same as pH to potassium: bicarb shifts Ca into cells

 

Alkalosis causes sx similar to hypocalcemia through effects on ionized fraction of calcium  (alkalosis causes calcium to shift intracellularly).  

--> correct pH

 

Hyperventilation/anxiety --> decrease CO2 --> alkalosis --> hypocalcemia --> perioral and extremity tingling

-tx: reduce anxiety

Term

34.  Relationship b/t calcium and phosphorus.  When is this important and how to treat.

Definition

Phosphorus and calcium levels go in opp. directions.

 

Chronic renal failure:  raise calcium levels (vit. D and calcium supplements) and restrict phosphorus.

Term

35.  Signs and sx of hypercalcemia?

Definition

Often asymptomatic, usually only found by routine lab tests.

 

If sx:  

 

EKG:  QT-interval shortening

 

Bones (osteopenia, pathologic fractures)

Stones (kidney stones, polyuria)

Groans (abd. pain, anorexia, constipation, ileus, n/v)

Psychiatric overtones (depression, psychosis, delirium/confusion)

 

Note:  abd. pain may be due to PUD or pancreatitis, both of which may have hypercalcemia.

Term

36. What causes hypercalcemia?

Definition

Outpatients: Hyperparathyroidism.

 

Inpatients:  Malignancy.

 

Also Vit. A or D excess, sarcoidosis, thiazide diuretics, familial hypocalciuric hypercalcemia (low urinary calcium, which is rare in hypercalcemia)

 

Hyperoproteinemia (due to decreased bound fraction, no change to unbound/ionized fraction)

Term

37.  Why is asymptomatic hypercalcemia treated?

Definition

Prolonged hypercalcemia can cause nephrocalcinosis and renal failure due to calcium salt deposition in kidneys.

May result in bone disease due to loss of calcium.

Term

38.  How is hypercalcemia treated?

Definition

Fluids, furosemide, phosphorus

1st: IV fluids.

Then: furosemide to cause calcium diuresis

(no thiazides --> increases calcium)

Other: phosphorus (oral), calcitonin, disphosphonates (etidronate), plicamycin, prednisone (esp. for malignancy-induced hypercalcemia).

 

tx: Correct underlying cause of hypercalcemia.

Hyperparathyroidism: surgery!

Term

39.  What usually causes hypomagnesemia?

Definition

Alcoholism.  Magnesium is wasted through the kidneys.

Term

40.  What are the signs and sx of hypomagnesemia?

Definition

Similar to hypocalcemia: prolonged QT, tetany

Term

41.  When will you most often see hypermagnesemia?

Definition

Pregnant patients w/ preeclampsia, treated w/ magnesium sulfate.

Renal failure.

 

Magnesium toxicity:  decreased deep tendon reflexes --> hypotension --> respiratory failure

Term

42.  How is hypermagnesemia treated?

Definition

First: stop any mag. infusion!

Remember ABCs, intubate if necessary.

 

If stable:  start IV fluids, then furosemide to cause mag. diuresis.  

 

Last resort: dialysis.

Term

43.  When is hypophosphatemia seen?  What are signs and sx?

Definition

Image: Loser Fonz is a diabetic alcoholic w/ wasted mm and bleeding out.

 

 

Uncontrolled diabetes and alcoholics.

 

Signs and sx:  

-muscle weakness or loss (rhabdo, esp. in alcoholics)

-encephalopathy

-anemia

-WBC and platelet dysfunction

Term

44. IV fluid of choice in trauma patients?

Definition

Ringer's lactate.  

 

2nd choice: NS.

Term

45.  What is IV choice in nontrauma, hypovolemic pts?

Definition

NS or Ringer's lactate.

Term

46.  What is maintenance fluid of choice for patients who are not eating?

Definition

1/2 NS w/ 5% dextrose in adults

1/4 or 1/3 NS w/ 5% dextrose in children (due to renal difference)

Term

47.  Should anything be added to IV fluid for patients who are not eating?

Definition

Potassium chloride (10 or 20mEq) is added to 1L of IV fluid each day to prevent hypokalemia (assuming baseline K+ is normal).

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