Intro to Compensation - The pH Jugglers
- Body's response to acid-base disturbances, aiming to normalize pH (7.35-7.45).
- Key players: Lungs (respiratory) & Kidneys (metabolic).
- Timeline of defense:
- Buffers (e.g., Bicarbonate $HCO_3^-$, Phosphate, Proteins): Seconds to minutes. Act immediately.
- Respiratory system: Minutes to hours. Adjusts $CO_2$ via ventilation.
- Renal system: Hours to days (slowest but most potent). Modifies $H^+$ excretion & $HCO_3^-$ reabsorption.
- Principle: If primary issue is metabolic, lungs compensate. If respiratory, kidneys compensate.
- Governed by Henderson-Hasselbalch: $pH \propto \frac{[HCO_3^-]}{PCO_2}$.
⭐ Compensation aims to normalize pH but never overcorrects; i.e., pH won't cross 7.40 to the opposite side of the initial disturbance.
Respiratory Compensation - Lungs' Quick Fix
Lungs rapidly adjust PaCO₂ to counteract metabolic pH disturbances. This is a quick but incomplete fix.
- How it Works:
- Metabolic Acidosis (↓pH): Lungs ↑ventilation (hyperventilate) to "blow off" CO₂, thus ↓PaCO₂.
- Classic sign: Kussmaul breathing (deep, rapid).
- Metabolic Alkalosis (↑pH): Lungs ↓ventilation (hypoventilate) to retain CO₂, thus ↑PaCO₂.
- Metabolic Acidosis (↓pH): Lungs ↑ventilation (hyperventilate) to "blow off" CO₂, thus ↓PaCO₂.
- Speed:
- Starts in minutes.
- Fully active in 12-24 hours.
- Assessment (Metabolic Acidosis):
- Winter's Formula: Expected PaCO₂ = $1.5 \times [\text{HCO}_3^-] + 8 \pm 2$.
- Evaluates if PaCO₂ response is adequate. (Overall ABG: 📌 ROME).
- Limitations:
- Cannot fully correct pH.
- Limited by underlying lung function.
⭐ Respiratory compensation for metabolic acidosis is robust; for every 1 mEq/L decrease in plasma [HCO₃⁻], PaCO₂ decreases by approximately 1.0-1.3 mmHg.
Renal Compensation - Kidneys' Slow Dance
- Slower onset (24-72 hrs for full effect), more powerful & sustained vs. respiratory.
- Mechanisms:
- ↑ H⁺ excretion (as NH₄⁺, titratable acids).
- ↑ HCO₃⁻ reabsorption (PCT).
- ↑ New HCO₃⁻ generation (Type A intercalated cells).
- In Respiratory Acidosis (↑PCO₂):
- Kidneys: ↑H⁺ excretion, ↑HCO₃⁻ reabsorption & generation.
- Chronic: For 10 mmHg ↑PCO₂, HCO₃⁻ ↑ by $3.5-4$ mEq/L (Acute: $1$ mEq/L).
- In Respiratory Alkalosis (↓PCO₂):
- Kidneys: ↓H⁺ excretion, ↑HCO₃⁻ excretion.
- Chronic: For 10 mmHg ↓PCO₂, HCO₃⁻ ↓ by $4-5$ mEq/L (Acute: $2$ mEq/L).
⭐ Kidneys can normalize pH in chronic respiratory acidosis/alkalosis if the primary defect is not too severe and renal function is normal.
Limits & Mixed Disorders - Tangled pH Tales
- Compensation rarely normalizes pH to 7.40. Normal pH with abnormal pCO₂/HCO₃⁻ implies mixed disorder.
- Expected Compensation 📌:
- Metabolic Acidosis: $pCO_2 = (1.5 \times HCO_3^-) + 8 \pm 2$ (Winter's formula)
- Metabolic Alkalosis: $pCO_2 \uparrow \textbf{0.7}$ mmHg for each $1 \text{ mEq/L } \uparrow HCO_3^-$
- Respiratory Acidosis (A/C): $\Delta HCO_3^- \uparrow \textbf{1/3.5}$ mEq/L per $10 \text{ mmHg } \uparrow pCO_2$
- Respiratory Alkalosis (A/C): $\Delta HCO_3^- \downarrow \textbf{2/4}$ mEq/L per $10 \text{ mmHg } \downarrow pCO_2$
- Suspect Mixed Disorder if:
- Actual compensation ≠ Expected compensation.
- pH normal, but pCO₂ & HCO₃⁻ abnormal.
- $\Delta AG / \Delta HCO_3^-$ ratio >2: suggests High Anion Gap Metabolic Acidosis (HAGMA) + Metabolic Alkalosis.
⭐ A pH of 7.40 with abnormal pCO₂ and HCO₃⁻ strongly indicates a mixed disorder.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Respiratory compensation is rapid; metabolic compensation is slower.
- Lungs compensate for metabolic disturbances by altering pCO2.
- Kidneys compensate for respiratory disturbances by altering HCO3-.
- Full compensation normalizes pH; partial moves pH towards normal.
- Metabolic acidosis: Expected pCO2 = 1.5 x [HCO3-] + 8 ± 2 (Winter's formula).
- Resp. Acidosis (Acute/Chronic): For 10 mmHg ↑ pCO2, HCO3- ↑ by 1 / 3.5-4.
- Resp. Alkalosis (Acute/Chronic): For 10 mmHg ↓ pCO2, HCO3- ↓ by 2 / 4-5.
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