00:00
Now let’s deal with acidosis and alkalosis
and how we deal with pH in the body.
00:10
The plasma pH or I’m going to call
the extracellular fluid pH is 7,4.
00:17
But how do you get this 7,4 value?
Cos again, it’s just an aggregate of
all the acids produced throughout the body.
00:26
And then, all the acids that you’ve got
to rid of and all the acids you buffered.
00:30
So, let’s go through one by one, where this come
from and then deal with what happens to them.
00:37
The biggest thing is metabolism.
00:41
During metabolism you create acids.
00:45
Most of the acids you produce
are Volatile or from CO2.
00:51
So, in this case, about 15,000 mM of acid
is produced per day by carbon dioxide.
01:00
This is your Volatile acid. This is a huge
amount of acid through aerobic metabolism.
01:06
What do I mean by aerobic metabolism?
Remember, when you go through glycolysis
into the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex
through the Kreb’s cycle on
an electron transport chain,
there were CO2s that were kicked off
along the way as you produced the ATP.
01:23
Interestingly, there is also a little bit
of acid that’s produced form non-volatile acids.
01:30
Only about 40 mM. So, we think about this
15,000 Volatile, 40 mM were in non-volatile.
01:41
What do you do with these Volatile acids?
It’s very easy, you just take CO2
to the lungs and you breathe it out.
01:51
And that 15,000 mM gone.
01:55
You don’t have to deal with it anymore.
01:57
Simply, by breathing out you’ve
gotten rid almost all of your acid.
02:04
You can’t though breathe off that 40 mM.
02:08
With these non- volatile acids will not be able
to produce CO2, go to the lungs, get breathe off.
02:15
We have to do something else with them.
02:18
Okay, let’s talk through how else we can get acid.
02:22
You have a little bit of exchange
of acids and bases in your GI tract.
02:28
So, maybe about 30 mM per day
of acids comes from the GUT.
02:35
You combine that with the 40 mM
that’s produced during or anaerobic metabolism.
02:42
And that gives you a sum total of around 70 mM.
02:49
You have to deal with that 70 mM.
02:52
The only organ system you have to deal
with the 70 mM is the kidneys.
02:59
You have to work through
what to do with that.
03:04
They kidneys do two things for you.
03:07
One is it reabsorbs bicarb.
03:10
Remember, bicarb is our primary
buffer in the extracellular fluid.
03:15
So, you could see a filtered load of bicarb,
might be somewhere around 4220
amount of bicarb filtered per day.
03:28
You reabsorb all of it during the course
of the day so you don’t lose bicarb.
03:35
You don’t want to lose your buffer, keep the
buffers around. But now you still have this 70 mM.
03:42
You have to do something with that.
03:44
It just so happens that as you buffer the 70 mM
of hydrogen ions, you produce 70 mM of new bicarb.
03:55
So, every time you get rid of a hydrogen ion,
and you urinated out, you make a new bicarb.
04:02
So, this is where we’re going to deal with today,
is how the kidneys deal with those
70 mM of non- volatile acids.
04:11
But let’s also revisit how this process works.
04:17
As you put all the pieces together,
know that the GI system is involved
but it gives you only a minor
amount of the non- volatile acids.
04:28
Metabolism gives you the most non-volatile acids.
04:31
And then, the 15,000 mM of Volatile acid,
the lungs just take care of.
04:38
So, we don’t have to deal
with that in a great extent
because it’s so much as being taking care
of from the respiratory system.
04:45
You urinate out 70 mM of hydrogen ion, which is
the sum total from metabolism in the GUT.
04:55
When thinking about non- volatile acids, let’s
revisit how the body typically deals with acid.
05:02
It handles these non- volatile acids
at the level of the kidney.
05:07
So, we need to talk through
the kidneys specific mechanisms
by which it deals with
this non- volatile acids.
05:14
So, the kidneys doing two things for us;
reabsorbing bicarb, and making new bicarb while
it’s kicking out an acid, non-volatile acid.