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pH Regulation in Body Fluids

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pH & Buffers - Balancing Act Basics

  • pH: Measure of $H^+$ concentration; $pH = -\log[H^+]$. Normal arterial blood: 7.35-7.45.
  • Importance: pH homeostasis is vital for optimal enzyme activity, protein structure, and cellular processes.
  • Major Buffer Systems: First-line defense, rapidly resist pH changes. 📌 Mnemonic: "Big Helpers Protect PH" (Bicarbonate, Hemoglobin, Proteins, Phosphate).
    • Bicarbonate-carbonic acid ($H_2CO_3/HCO_3^-$): Main ECF buffer. $H_2O + CO_2 \leftrightarrow H_2CO_3 \leftrightarrow H^+ + HCO_3^-$.
    • Hemoglobin: Significant buffer in RBCs (imidazole groups of histidine).
    • Proteins (e.g., albumin): Important ICF & plasma buffers (amino/carboxyl groups).
    • Phosphate ($HPO_4^{2-}/H_2PO_4^-$): Key in ICF & renal tubular fluid.
  • Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation: $pH = pKa + \log([\text{base}]/[\text{acid}])$.
    • For bicarbonate system: $pH = 6.1 + \log([\text{HCO}_3^-] / (0.03 \times \text{PCO}_2))$.

⭐ Bicarbonate buffer: most important ECF buffer; high concentration, regulated by lungs/kidneys ($CO_2, HCO_3^-$).

Bicarbonate buffering in proximal tubuleבו

Respiratory Regulation - Lungs' Quick Fix

  • The lungs offer a rapid mechanism for pH control by adjusting alveolar ventilation to alter systemic $PCO_2$ levels. This directly influences the carbonic acid-bicarbonate buffer system: $CO_2 + H_2O \leftrightarrow H_2CO_3 \leftrightarrow H^+ + HCO_3^-$ (enzyme: carbonic anhydrase).

  • Sensing pH Changes (Chemoreceptors):

    • Central (medulla oblongata): Respond to $[H^+]$ in CSF, which is determined by arterial $PCO_2$ (as $CO_2$ diffuses easily across the blood-brain barrier).
    • Peripheral (carotid & aortic bodies): Directly sense changes in arterial $PO_2$ (especially < 60 mmHg), ↑ arterial $PCO_2$, and ↑ arterial $[H^+]$.
  • Ventilatory Responses:

  • Effectiveness: This system initiates a response within minutes and reaches significant effect in hours. It provides powerful but often incomplete compensation for metabolic acid-base disorders.

⭐ The respiratory system can compensate for approximately 50-75% of the pH change caused by metabolic acid-base disturbances. Chemoreceptor and baroreceptor regulation of respiration

Renal Regulation - Kidneys' Fine Tune

Kidneys precisely control pH by excreting $H^+$ and managing $HCO_3^-$. Slower (hours-days) but potent for full correction.

  • Mechanisms:
    • $H^+$ excretion: As titratable acid ($H_2PO_4^-$) or ammonium ($NH_4^+$).
    • $HCO_3^-$ reabsorption/generation.
  • Key Processes:
    • $HCO_3^-$ Reabsorption: Mainly PCT. Uses $Na^+/H^+$ exchanger (NHE3), carbonic anhydrase.
    • $H^+$ Secretion:
      • PCT: NHE3.
      • DCT & CD (intercalated cells): $H^+$-ATPase, $H^+/K^+$-ATPase. Aldosterone stimulates.
    • Fixed Acid Excretion:
      • Phosphate buffer: $HPO_4^{2-} + H^+ \rightarrow H_2PO_4^-$.
      • Ammonia buffer: $NH_3 + H^+ \rightarrow NH_4^+$. (Glutamine metabolism in PCT is $NH_3$ source).
    • New $HCO_3^-$ Generation: Linked to $H^+$ excretion with non-bicarbonate buffers.

Renal mechanisms of acid-base balance

  • Renal Compensation in Acidosis:

⭐ In chronic acidosis, renal ammonia production (from glutamine in PCT) can ↑ up to 10-fold, boosting hydrogen ion excretion as ammonium.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Henderson-Hasselbalch equation is key for pH: pH = pKa + log ([HCO₃⁻]/[0.03 x PCO₂]).
  • Bicarbonate buffer (HCO₃⁻/H₂CO₃) is the main ECF buffer.
  • Phosphate buffer (HPO₄²⁻/H₂PO₄⁻) is crucial in renal tubules & ICF.
  • Proteins, especially hemoglobin, are important ICF buffers.
  • Lungs rapidly regulate PCO₂ (volatile acid) via ventilation.
  • Kidneys slowly manage balance by regulating HCO₃⁻ and H⁺ excretion.
  • Normal arterial pH 7.35-7.45; PCO₂ 35-45 mmHg; HCO₃⁻ 22-26 mEq/L.

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