Metabolic acidosis
(Redirected from Metabolic Acidemia)
Clinical Features
- Compensatory respiratory tachypnea
Differential Diagnosis
Anion gap metabolic acidosis
- Lactic acidosis
- Sepsis, shock, liver disease, CO, CN, metformin, methemoglobin
- Short bowel syndrome
- Propylene glycol infusions for lorazepam and phenobarbital
- Renal failure
- Ketoacidosis
- Ingestions
- Acetaminophen toxicity
- Aspirin toxicity
- Increased osm gap
- Normal osm gap
Non-gap
- Hyperkalemia
- Resolving DKA
- Early uremic acidosis
- Early obstructive uropathy
- RTA Type IV
- Hypoaldosteronism
- K-sparing diuretics
- Hypokalemia
- RTA Type I
- RTA Type II
- Acetazolamide
- Acute diarrhea
- (May be assoc with gap if hypoperfusion -> lactic acidosis)
- CKD
- Intestinal, pancreatic, biliary fistula
- Hyperchloremic IVF infusions
- Hyperalimentation
Evaluation
- Osm gap = measured osm - calculated osm (normal 10-15)
- Calculated Osm = 2(Na)+(glucose/18)+(BUN/2.8)+(BAL/5)
- Primary acidosis if pH <7.38
- HCO3 <24 = metabolic acidosis
- Always determine if there is another acid/base process occurring
- Primary respiratory acidosis if pCO2 > pCO2expected
- Primary respiratory alkalosis if pCO2 < pCO2expected
- use Winter's formula: PCO2 (expected) = (1.5 x [HCO3–] + 8) ± 2
- In acute setting PCO2 should fall by 1 mmHg for every 1 mEq fall in HCO3
- Concurrent metabolic alkalosis if delta-delta > 28
- Delta-Delta = (AG - 12) + HCO3
Management
- Treat source
- Correct any respiratory acidosis
- Bicarbonate
- HCO3 dose in mEq = 0.5(wt in kg) x (24 - measured HCO3)
- Each bicarb 0.5mEq/kg causes 1 meq/L rise in HCO3
- Consider for:
- Bicarb <4
- pH <7.20 AND shock/myocardial irritability
- Severe hyperchloremic acidemia
- lower threshold with non-AG acidosis (greater HCO3 loss)
- Lost bicarbonate would take days to replenish
Calculators
Anion Gap
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Sodium (Na⁺) mEq/L | |
| Chloride (Cl⁻) mEq/L | |
| Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) mEq/L | |
| Albumin (g/dL) — optional, for correction | |
| Results | |
| Anion Gap | mEq/L |
| Corrected AG (for albumin) | mEq/L |
| Delta-Delta Ratio (ΔAG / ΔHCO₃) | |
| Interpretation | |
|---|---|
| AG <12 | Normal anion gap — Consider non-AG metabolic acidosis (HARDUPS mnemonic). |
| AG ≥12 | Elevated anion gap — Consider MUDPILES: Methanol, Uremia, DKA, Propylene glycol, Isoniazid/Iron, Lactic acidosis, Ethylene glycol, Salicylates. |
| Delta-Delta Ratio | |
| <1 | Concurrent non-AG metabolic acidosis (mixed). |
| 1–2 | Pure anion gap metabolic acidosis. |
| >2 | Concurrent metabolic alkalosis (or pre-existing elevated HCO₃). |
| References |
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Winters' Formula
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Serum Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) mEq/L | |
| Results | |
| Expected pCO₂ (low end) | mmHg |
| Expected pCO₂ (high end) | mmHg |
| Interpretation | |
|---|---|
| pCO₂ in expected range | Appropriate respiratory compensation — Pure metabolic acidosis with adequate compensation. |
| pCO₂ > expected | Concurrent respiratory acidosis — Inadequate compensation; concurrent respiratory acidosis present. |
| pCO₂ < expected | Concurrent respiratory alkalosis — Overcompensation; concurrent respiratory alkalosis present. |
| References |
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