Osmol gap
In clinical chemistry, the osmol gap is the difference between measured blood serum osmolality and calculated serum osmolality.
Calculation
The osmol gap is typically calculated with the following formula :In non-SI laboratory units:
Calculated osmolality = 2 x + / 18 + / 2.8 +
A normal osmol gap is < 10 mOsm/kg.
Explanation of units
Since laboratories measure serum solutes in terms of freezing point depression, the reported units are properly units of osmolality. When a measure of serum solutes is calculated, it is often done in units of osmolarity. While it is possible to convert between osmolality and osmolarity, thereby deriving a more mathematically correct osmol gap calculation, in actual clinical practice this is not done. This is because the difference in absolute value of these two measurements that can be attributed to the difference in units will be negligible in a clinical setting. For this reason, the terms are often used interchangeably, though some object to equating the terms. Because the calculated osmol gap can therefore be a conflation of both terms, neither term may be semantically correct. To avoid ambiguity, the terms "osmolal" and "osmolar" can be used when the units of molality or molarity are consistent throughout the calculation. When this is not the case, the term "osmol gap" can be used when units are mixed to provide a clinical estimate.Causes
Osmol gaps are used as a screening tool to identify toxins.Causes of an elevated osmol gap are numerous.
Generally there are 4 main causes:
- alcohols
- sugars
- lipids
- proteins
Alcohols
- ethanol intoxication
- methanol ingestion
- ethylene glycol ingestion
- isopropyl alcohol ingestion
- propylene glycol toxicity
- acetone ingestion
- mannitol
- sorbitol
- Hypertriglyceridemia
- Hypergammaglobinemia
Theory