Medicine:Hyperchloremic acidosis
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| Hyperchloremic acidosis |
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Hyperchloremic acidosis is a form of metabolic acidosis associated with a normal anion gap, a decrease in plasma bicarbonate concentration, and an increase in plasma chloride concentration[1] (see anion gap for a fuller explanation). Although plasma anion gap is normal, this condition is often associated with an increased urine anion gap, due to the kidney's inability to secrete ammonia.[citation needed]
Causes
In general, the cause of a hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis is a loss of base, either a gastrointestinal loss or a renal loss[citation needed].
- Gastrointestinal loss of bicarbonate (HCO−3) [citation needed]
- Severe diarrhea (vomiting will tend to cause hypochloraemic alkalosis)
- Pancreatic fistula with loss of bicarbonate rich pancreatic fluid
- Nasojejunal tube losses in the context of small bowel obstruction and loss of alkaline proximal small bowel secretions
- Chronic laxative abuse
- Renal causes[citation needed]
- Proximal renal tubular acidosis with failure of HCO−3 resorption
- Distal renal tubular acidosis with failure of H+ secretion
- Long-term use of a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor such as acetazolamide
- Other causes[citation needed]
- Ingestion of ammonium chloride, hydrochloric acid, or other acidifying salts
- The treatment and recovery phases of diabetic ketoacidosis
- Volume resuscitation with 0.9% normal saline provides a chloride load, so that infusing more than 3–4L can cause acidosis
- Hyperalimentation (i.e., total parenteral nutrition)
See also
- Anion gap
- Metabolic acidosis
- Pseudohypoaldosteronism
References
Further reading
- Kellum JA (February 2002). "Fluid resuscitation and hyperchloremic acidosis in experimental sepsis: improved short-term survival and acid-base balance with Hextend compared with saline". Crit. Care Med. 30 (2): 300–5. doi:10.1097/00003246-200202000-00006. PMID 11889298.
External links
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