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Serum Electrolytes-Part 1

This document provides an overview of electrolytes including sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate. It discusses the functions of each electrolyte, causes and mechanisms of disorders in their homeostasis, specimen collection and reference ranges. Key points covered include the roles of electrolytes in acid-base balance, osmotic regulation and enzyme activation. Methods for analyzing electrolyte levels such as ion-selective electrodes are also mentioned.

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Marwa 2002
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views22 pages

Serum Electrolytes-Part 1

This document provides an overview of electrolytes including sodium, potassium, chloride, and bicarbonate. It discusses the functions of each electrolyte, causes and mechanisms of disorders in their homeostasis, specimen collection and reference ranges. Key points covered include the roles of electrolytes in acid-base balance, osmotic regulation and enzyme activation. Methods for analyzing electrolyte levels such as ion-selective electrodes are also mentioned.

Uploaded by

Marwa 2002
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Clinical Chemistry 2

Spring 2021/2022

Electrolytes
Chapter 16
Part 1

Lecture Presentation by
Dr Mohamed Madkour
College of Health Sciences
University of Sharjah
ELECTROLYTES
Electrolytes: ions capable of carrying an electric charge
Two types

1. Anions have negative charge & move toward


anode.
Examples: Chloride(Cl), Bicarbonate, PO4, Sulfate
2. Cations have positive charge & move toward
cathode.
Exampless: Sodium (Na), Potassium (K), Calcium
(Ca), Magnesium (Mg)
2
ELECTROLYTE FUNCTIONS
 Volume and osmotic regulation (Na, K, Cl)
 Myocardial rhythm and contractility (K, Mg, Ca)

 Cofactors in enzyme activation (Mg, Ca, Zn)

 Regulation of ATPase ion pumps (Na, K)

 Acid-base balance (HCO3, Cl)

 Blood coagulation (Ca, Mg)

 Neuromuscular excitability (Na, Ca)

 Production of ATP from glucose (PO4, MG, Ca

3
ELECTROLYTE PANEL

 Panel
consists of:
sodium (Na)
potassium (K)
chloride (Cl)
and CO2 (in its ion form = HCO3- )

4
THE ELECTROLYTE PANEL
Sodium (Na+)
 Major cation of extracellular fluid
 Most abundant (90 %) extracellular cation
 Easily absorbed from many foods

Functions:
Influence on regulation of body water
 Main contributor to plasma osmolality

Neuromuscular excitability
 extremes in concentration can result in neuromuscular symptoms

Na-K ATP-ase Pump


 pumps Na out and K into cells
 Without this active transport pump, the cells would fill with Na
and subsequent osmotic pressure would rupture the cells 5
DISORDERS OF SODIUM
HOMEOSTASIS
Hyponatremia: < 135 mmol/L
Causes
Increased Na+ loss
a. Aldosterone deficiency (Addison’s disease ( result in
decreased aldosterone)
b. Diabetes mellitus (In acidosis of diabetes, Na is excreted
with ketones
Increased water retention
a. Dilution of serum/plasma Na+
b. Renal failure
c. Nephrotic syndrome
d. Congestive heart failure
6
DISORDERS OF SODIUM
HOMEOSTASIS
Hypernatremia: >145 mmol/L
Causes
1. Excess water loss resulting from
 Sweating, Diarrhea, Burns, Diabetes insipidus

2. Increased intake/retention
• Excessive IV therapy
3. Decreased water intake
• Elderly
• Infants
• Mental impairment

7
SPECIMEN COLLECTION: SODIUM
Specimens:
 Serum (slight hemolysis is OK, but not gross)
 Heparinized plasma
 Timed and random urine
 Sweat
 GI fluids
 Liquid feces (would be only time of excessive loss)
Methods:
Ion-selective electrodes method is most common

Reference ranges:
Serum: 135-145 mEq/L or mmol/L
8
Urine (24 hour collection): 40-220 mEq/L
THE ELECTROLYTE PANEL
Potassium (K+)
 the major cation of intracellular fluid
 Only 2% of potassium is in the plasma

 Potassium concentration inside cells is 20 X greater

than it is outside.
 This is maintained by the Na-K pump

 exchanges 3 Na for 1 K

 Diet
 easily consumed by food products such as bananas

9
THE ELECTROLYTE PANEL

Potassium
Functions
 Critically important in the regulation of neuromuscular
excitability (Decreased potassium levels, decreases excitability
(paralysis and arrhythmias)
 Controls heart muscle contraction
 Regulates ICF volume

 Regulate Hydrogen ion concentration

10
DISORDERS OF POTASSIUM
HOMEOSTASIS
Hypokalemia (< 3.5 mmol/L)
Causes include:
 GI loss (Excessive fluid loss ( diarrhea, vomiting,
diuretics )
 Renal Loss (Nephritis, renal tubular acidosis,

hyperaldosteronism, Cushing’s Syndrome


 Cellular Shift (in alkalosis)

 Decreased intake

11
MECHANISM OF ALKALOSIS-
INDUCED HYPOKALEMIA
 Increased plasma pH (alkalosis)

RBC H+

K+

K+ moves into RBCs to preserve electrical balance, causing plasma


potassium to decrease. 12
DISORDERS OF POTASSIUM
HOMEOSTASIS
Hyperkalemia (>5.1 mmol/L)
Causes include:
Decreased renal excretion
 Renal disease
 Hypoaldosteronism (Addison’s disease)

Cellular shift
Such as acidosis, chemotherapy, leukemia, muscle/cellular injury
Hydrogen ions compete with potassium to get into the cells
Increased intake
Artifactual
Sample hemolysis
Prolonged tourniquet use 13
Excessive fist clenching
SPECIMEN COLLECTION:
POTASSIUM
Samples:
Non-hemolyzed serum

heparinized plasma

24 hr urine collection

Reference Ranges
Serum (adults): 3.5 - 5.0 mEq/L or mmol/L
Newborns: 3.7 - 5.9 mEq/L

Urine (24 hour collection): 25 - 125 mEq/L

14
THE ELECTROLYTE PANEL
 Chloride (Cl-)
 the major anion of extracellular fluid
 Chloride moves passively with Na+ or against HCO -
3
to maintain neutral electrical charge

 Chloride usually follows Na


 if one is abnormal, so is the other

Function
 Maintain body hydration/water balance
 Maintenance of osmolality
 Electrical neutrality
15
DISORDERS OF CHLORIDE
HOMEOSTASIS
 Hypochloremia
 loss of gastric HCl
 salt loosing renal diseases
 metabolic alkalosis
 increased HCO3- & decreased Cl-

 Hyperchloremia
 dehydration (relative increase)
 excessive intake (IV)
 congestive heart failure
 metabolic acidosis
 decreased HCO3- & increased Cl- 16
DETERMINATION: CHLORIDE
 Specimen type
 Serum
 Plasma
 24 hour urine
 CSF
 Sweat
 Sweat Chloride Test

 Used to identify cystic fibrosis patients

Increased salt concentration in sweat

Pilocarpine= chemical used to stimulate sweat

production
REFERENCE RANGES: CHLORIDE
 Serum
 98 -107 mEq/L or mmol/L

 24 hour urine
 110-250 mEq/L
 varies with intake

 CSF
 120 - 132 mEq/L
 Often CSF Cl is decreased when CSF protein is increased,
as often occurs in bacterial meningitis.

18
THE ELECTROLYTE PANEL
 Carbon dioxide/bicarbonate (HCO3-)
 the major anion of intracellular fluid
 2nd most abundant anion of extracellular fluid
 Total plasma CO2= HCO3- + H2CO3- + CO2

 HCO3- (bicarbonate ion)


accounts for 90% of total plasma CO2

 H2CO3 (carbonic acid)

19
BICARBONATE ION
Function:
 CO2 is a waste product of metabolic reactions
 CO2 reacts with water forming carbonic acid.

H2CO3 HCO3- + H+

 HCO continuously produced as a result of cell


-
3
metabolism,
 the ability of the bicarbonate ion to accept a hydrogen ion
makes it an efficient and effective means of buffering body
pH
 dominant buffering system of plasma

20
REGULATION OF BICARBONATE ION

 Bicarbonate is regulated by Kidney: Reabsorbed


by proximal tubules (85%) & by distal tubules
(15%).
 In case of acidosis: Renal excretion is decreased.
 In case of alkalosis : Renal excretion is increased

21
REFERENCE RANGE OF
BICARBONATE ION
 Total Carbon dioxide (venous)
 23-29 mEq/L or mmol/L
 includes bicarb, dissolved & undissociated H2CO3

- carbonic acid (bicarbonate)

 Bicarbonate ion (HCO3–)


 22-26 mEq/L or mmol/L

22

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