Hyperchloremic acidosis

Medical condition
Hyperchloremic acidosis
SpecialtyEndocrinology, nephrology Edit this on Wikidata

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.

Causes

In general, the cause of a hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis is a loss of base, either a gastrointestinal loss or a renal loss.

  • Gastrointestinal loss of bicarbonate (HCO
    3
    )
    • 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
    • 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

See also

References

  1. ^ "Hyperchloremic Acidosis: Practice Essentials, Etiology, Patient Education". 2017-10-19. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

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. S2CID 24375350.

External links

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External resources


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