Contraction alkalosis
Contraction alkalosis refers to the increase in blood pH that occurs as a result of fluid losses. The change in pH is especially pronounced with acidic fluid losses caused by problems like vomiting.
Pathophysiology
There are several possible explanations for the process of alkalosis observed after volume contraction.One popular theory is that alkalosis is simply the loss of solvent volume without a proportional loss in bicarbonate concentration or increase in carbon dioxide concentration. This explanation may be especially appropriate for the very short term after volume loss.
Another suggests that the alkalosis is due to renal compensatory mechanisms used to correct volume loss. Extracellular fluid (ECF) volume contraction is associated with decreased blood volume and decreased renal perfusion pressure. Three compensation mechanisms engage as a result:
- renin secretion is increased,
- production of angiotensin II is increased, and
- secretion of aldosterone is increased.
Additionally, increased aldosterone secretion causes increased collecting duct K+ secretion, in turn causing the hypokalemia seen with contraction alkalosis.
Finally, it has been suggested that the term "contraction alkalosis" is actually a misnomer, and that the alkalosis observed during volume contraction is actually attributable entirely to chloride depletion, which leads to a failure of pendrin, a chloride/bicarbonate exchanger in the collecting duct.