Fluids, Electrolytes, Acid-Base Disorders, and Nutrition Support
An alternative method (and perhaps a simpler approach) to the delta ratio is to calculate the βexcess gapβ
compared with the AG (West J Med 1991;155:146-51).
Excess gap = AG β 14.
The excess gap is then added to the measured serum bicarbonate concentration.
If the sum is less than a normal serum bicarbonate concentration (e.g., 28β30 mEq/L), a mixed AG
and non-AG acidosis is present.
If the sum is greater than a normal HCO3 concentration, the patient likely has an AG acidosis and
concurrent metabolic alkalosis.
Evaluation of respiratory compensation: See Table 20.
Treatment
Aggressive interventional therapy unnecessary until pH less than 7.20β7.25
Treat primary etiology! This should be the focus of treating the acid-base disorder.
Intravenous sources of alkali β Done conservatively in conjunction with treating primary disorder
whenever possible. The intent is not to normalize the pH but to improve the pH (definitely avoid
overcorrection).
Sodium bicarbonate β Most commonly used
ii.
Sodium acetate β Available in PN solutions and compounded intravenous fluids
iii.
Sodium citrate β Used orally for patients with chronic kidney injury
| d. | Total bicarbonate dose (mEq) = 0.5 x Wt (kg) x (24 - HCO3) |
|---|
Give one-third to one-half of the calculated total dose (or 1β2 mEq/kg) for several hours to
achieve a pH of around 7.25 (avoid boluses if possible).
ii.
Once the pH is around 7.25 or greater, slower correction without increasing bicarbonate more
than 4β6 mEq/L to avoid exceeding the target pH
iii.
Serial ABGs (e.g., every 6 hours); watch rate of decrease in serum potassium and calcium
iv.
Use of sodium bicarbonate injection is controversial in patients with lactic acidosis (Curr Opin
metabolic acidemia in a multicenter, intention-to-treat trial in which patients were randomized
to sodium bicarbonate therapy or placebo. Most patients had an elevated serum lactate at
enrollment. The primary outcome (composite of death by day 28 and presence of at least one
organ failure at day 7) was not statistically significant. However, in the prespecified stratum of
patients with AKI, the primary outcome was decreased in the treatment group (37% vs. 54%,
p=0.0283).
Adverse effects of excess sodium bicarbonate:
Hypernatremia, hyperosmolality, volume overload
ii.
Hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia
iii.
Paradoxical worsening of the acidosis (if the fractional increase in Pco2 production exceeds the
fractional bicarbonate change)
iv.
Over-alkalinization