ACID BASE 1 – The Power of HYDROGEN

This is the first tutorial in a new series on acid base balance. This is not a beginners course – although I will attempt to cover everything the bedside clinician should know, particularly in the ICU. I have been teaching and writing about acid base for more than 25 years and I find it disappointing how many clinicians fail to understand even the basics of physical chemistry that underpin this topic.

This course is built on the foundation of physical and electrochemistry (all acid base reactions occur in water, all ionizing processes must be accounted for electrical neutrality must always hold.

The first tutorial is titled “The Power of Hydrogen” and it looks at the chemistry of water, the tendency for water to dissociate into moieties that display hydrogen ions and hydroxyl ions, and how temperature impacts that dissociation equilibrium. It is imperative that you understand that there are effectively no free protons (hydrogen ions) in the extracellular fluid. When we measure [H+] or its corollary, pH, we are measuring hydrogen ion ACTIVITY not hydrogen ion concentration. I explain the origin of pH and how pH varies with temperature despite the aqueous solution remaining chemically neutral. I explain the history of acid base, starting with O’Shaughnessy and then moving on to Arrhenius and Bronsted and Lowry. It is easier to understand acid base if one utilizes the Arrhenius theory, but the concepts are fully consistent with the BL approach, because water is amphiprotic (it can act as a “proton donor” or “proton acceptor.”

I explain how blood gas machines measure pH and why pH (and PCO2) should almost always be measured at 37 degrees Celsius. At the end of the tutorial I explain the terms acidosis and alkalosis, respiratory and metabolic. @ccmtutorials http://www.ccmtutorials.org

Volume Pressure Loops – they are on every ventilator and anesthetic machine – look at them

This tutorial looks at the pressure waveform in patients undergoing anesthesia or mechanically ventilated in ICU. All modern ventilators will provide a pressure time waveform and display volume pressure (often called “pressure volume” loops).

This tutorial commences with a discussion about pressure-flow loops – to demonstrate the relationship between flow and airway pressure. I then discuss and describe normal airway pressure versus time waveforms.

Subsequently I explore normal and abnormal dynamic volume pressure loops. I briefly discuss static VP-curves and why they are important in ARDS. Finally I demonstrate how you can measure real plateau pressure and static compliance by pushing one button and performing an inspiratory hold.

@ccmtutorials http://www.ccmtutorials.org

Identifying and Quantifying Hypoxemia

The next part of the course is all about hypoxic respiratory failure. To treat hypoxemia you must understand it. The purpose of this sequence of tutorials is to lead up to discussions on CPAP and PEEP and provide a platform for understanding Pressure Controlled Modes of Ventilation. The first tutorial looks at oxyhemoglobin saturation, why the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve is essential knowledge for the practicing clinician, how pulse oximeters work and how to quantify hypoxemia (A-aO2 gradient and PaO2/FiO2 ratio).