Respiratory alkalosis
Respiratory alkalosis is a medical condition in which increased respiration elevates the blood pH beyond the normal range with a concurrent reduction in arterial levels of carbon dioxide. This condition is one of the four primary disturbances of acid–base homeostasis.
Respiratory compensation is also a condition where increased respiration reduces carbon dioxide sometimes to level below the normal range. In this case it is a physiological response to low pH from metabolic processes and not the primary disorder.
Signs and symptoms
Signs and symptoms of respiratory alkalosis are as follows:Causes
Respiratory alkalosis may be produced as a result of the following causes:Mechanism
The mechanism of respiratory alkalosis generally occurs when some stimulus makes a person hyperventilate. The increased breathing produces increased alveolar respiration, expelling CO2 from the circulation. This alters the dynamic chemical equilibrium of carbon dioxide in the circulatory system. Circulating hydrogen ions and bicarbonate are shifted through the carbonic acid intermediate to make more CO2 via the enzyme carbonic anhydrase according to the following reaction:This causes decreased circulating hydrogen ion concentration, and increased pH.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of respiratory alkalosis is done via a test that measures the oxygen and carbon dioxide levels, a chest x-ray, and a pulmonary function test of the individual.The Davenport diagram is named after Horace W Davenport a teacher and physiologist which allows theoreticians and teachers to graphically describe acid base chemistry. It is not used by clinicians who prefer a practical rather than a theoretical approach
Classification
There are two types of respiratory alkalosis: chronic and acute as a result of the 3–5 day delay in kidney compensation of the abnormality.Acute respiratory alkalosis occurs rapidly, and has a high pH because the response of the kidneys is slow.Chronic respiratory alkalosis is a more long-standing condition, here one finds the kidneys have time to decrease the bicarbonate level.pH
- Acidemia is serum pH < 7.35.
- Alkalemia is serum pH > 7.45.
An alkalosis is a physiologic process that decreases hydrogen ion concentration.