Acid Base Calculations for the ASA

Here are the calculations that I used in my presentation at ASA 2025.

pH versus  PaCO2 

An increase of 10 mmHg in PaCO2 results in a pH drop of about 0.08

Respiratory Acidosis PaCO2  vs HCO3

In Acute Respiratory Acidosis (e.g. patient hypoventilating in the OR) the Bicarbonate Increases by 1mmol/L for every 10mmHg Increase in PaCO2

In Chronic Hypercarbia (COPD) the Bicarbonate ↑ by 4mmol/L for every 10mmHg Increase in PaCO2 and Cl falls by an equivalent amount

Modern Anion Gap = [Na+ + K+] – [Cl + HCO3 + La+ βOH] = Albumin + PO42- + UMA mEq/L

[Albumin]= [Albumin g/L] × (0.123 × pH−0.631)

Albumin Charge is simplified to 2.5 (albumin in g/dl) = Alb in mEq/L

Change in Albumin is (44 – Albumin) / 4

To determine the effectiveness of respiratory compensation use the Winters formula:

(Bicarbonate Version) Expected PaCO2 in Acute Metabolic Acidosis is
1.5 x [HCO3] + 8 (in mmHg)

(Base Deficit Version) Expected PaCO2 in Acute Metabolic Acidosis is
Normal PaCO2 – BD (in mmHg)

The Base Excess Gap (Fencl Story with my modification)

Identify the BE on the ABG

Calculate the SID for Na+-Cl+H2O by [Na+ – Cl – 35] BDNaCl

Calculate the SID for La and β-OH (1mmol = 1mEq) BDLβOH

Calculate the Impact of Albumin (44 – Alb g/L)/4 BEALB

Add these together BENaCl BDLβOH BEALB

Subtract from BE on the Blood Gas

The result is UMA in mEq/L

Finally, the Strong Ion Gap (arguably the gold standard)

The calculation for the strong ion gap (SIG) is:

Strong Ion Gap (SIG) = SIDa-SIDe

SIDa (apparent SID) = ([Na+] + [K+] + [Mg2+] + [Ca2+]) – ([Cl] + [Lactate] + [βOH])

SIDe (effective SID) = [HCO3] + [charge on albumin] + [charge on Pi]

The degree of ionization for weak acids is pH dependent, so one must calculate for this:

[charge on albumin] = [albumin] (in g/L) x (0.123 x pH – 0.631)

[charge on Pi] = [Pi] (in mg/dL) /10 x pH – 0.47

The SIG quantifies UMA

Carbon Dioxide in Acid Base – Three Tutorials

As part of my fundamentals of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Series I have posted 3 tutorials on the Role of CO2 /HCO3 in Acid Base Balance. These are entirely new tutorials (not part of the previous acid base series – that I have not finished yet! There is some overlap and updated facts and figures) and I have put a lot of work into getting the message of why the respiratory system is so important in acid base. Tutorial 1 is the basics of acid base. Tutorial 2 discusses respiratory acidosis, acute and chronic, and respiratory alkalosis. Tutorial 3 discusses respiratory compensation for acute metabolic acidosis.
Although I cover the respiratory component in great depth, I also explain what metabolic acidosis is, what causes it and briefly discuss the anion gap, expected bicarbonate, base deficit and base deficit gap. I guarantee that you will learn something.