‘Rules of 5’ for acid-base problem-solving
1 Determine the arterial pH status | |||
pH < 7.40 is acidemic, pH > 7.44 is alkalemic But a normal pH does not rule out an acid-base disorder | |||
2 If the arterial pH is abnormal, determine whether the primary process is respiratory, metabolic, or both | |||
pH | ![]() | Bicarbonate | |
Respiratory acidosis | Low | High | — |
Metabolic acidosis | Low | – | Low |
Mixed respiratory and metabolic acidosis | Low | High | Low |
Respiratory alkalosis | High | Low | — |
Metabolic alkalosis | High | – | High |
Mixed respiratory and metabolic alkalosis | High | Low | High |
3 Calculate the anion gap | |||
Anion gap = sodium – (chloride + bicarbonate) | |||
If serum albumin is low, add 2.5 mmol/L to the anion gap for every 1 g the serum albumin is below normal | |||
An anion gap > 10 mmol/L is elevated | |||
4 Check the degree of compensation (respiratory or metabolic) | |||
![]() | |||
Nominal normal levels: bicarbonate 25 mmol/L and ![]() | |||
In respiratory acidosis, for every 10-mm Hg increase in ![]() | |||
In metabolic acidosis, for every 1-mmol/L decrease in bicarbonate, ![]() | |||
In respiratory alkalosis, for every 10-mm Hg decrease in ![]() | |||
In metabolic alkalosis, for every 1-mmol/L increase in bicarbonate, ![]() | |||
5 If the patient has metabolic acidosis with an elevated anion gap, check whether the bicarbonate level has decreased as much as the anion gap has increased | |||
In metabolic acidosis, the anion gap should increase by the same amount that bicarbonate decreases; a difference in these two changes is called a delta gap |
= partial pressure of carbon dioxide
Based on information in reference 1