Respiratory alkalosis is one of many acid-base disorders found among critically ill patients. It is detected by ABG and electrolyte levels. To diagnose respiratory alkalosis or assess the severity of the condition, the physician must understand clinical acid-base balance. Alkalosis, by definition, is a pathologic state that causes or tends to cause an increase in blood pH. Hence, one can have an alkalosis with normal pH if compensation has occurred; alkalemia is defined as a blood pH above 7.44. The term respiratory in respiratory alkalosis refers to the primary respiratory mechanism responsible for the change.[1]
Hypocapnia (low PCO2) develops whenever CO2 elimination by the lungs exceeds tissue production. One or more of 3 basic mechanisms usually underlie respiratory alkalosis (see image below).
View Image | Schematic presentation of pathophysiology of hyperventilation. |
See the list below:
In respiratory acid-base disturbances, changes in ventilation, and hence PCO2, represent the primary disturbance, and compensation occurs by alterations in plasma bicarbonate.
In chronic respiratory alkalosis, increased urinary bicarbonate excretion resists the pH change caused by hypocapnia. This renal compensation begins within several hours and takes several days for the maximal response.
In acute respiratory alkalosis, an initial small decrease may occur in plasma bicarbonate concentration because of chemical mass action. Hypocapnia leads to increased formation of carbonic acid, to lowered plasma hydrogen ion concentration (alkalemia), and to concomitant reduced plasma bicarbonate concentration. This is quantitatively less profound than renal compensation and is not related to change in bicarbonate excretion.[2]
Formulas for estimating appropriate compensation in simple respiratory alkalosis (limit of compensation is [HCO3-] of approximately 15) include the following:
Patients primarily have clinical manifestations of the disorder causing the respiratory alkalosis; the effects of respiratory alkalosis per se are fewer.
Acute respiratory alkalosis has more intense features than chronic respiratory alkalosis because later renal compensation and cellular adaptation minimize the pH change.
Alkalosis, by promoting the binding of calcium to albumin, can reduce the fraction of ionized calcium in blood, causing tetany. Symptomatic hypocalcemia is more common with respiratory alkalosis than with metabolic alkalosis.
Patients have symptoms of underlying disorders.
Rapid decrease in PCO2 can result in dizziness, mental confusion, and (rarely) seizures,[3] even with a PO2 that is within the reference range. This is probably due to the cerebral vasoconstriction caused by the hypocarbia.
Patients may have tetany due to reduced ionized calcium in blood.
Patients have fever if respiratory alkalosis is the result of an infectious disorder.
Hyperthermia of any origin may, in turn, result in respiratory alkalosis.
Acute respiratory alkalosis may cause mild tachycardia.
The respiratory rate is usually high. In some cases, the hyperventilation is primarily a manifestation of increased tidal volume and the respiratory rate may not be markedly elevated. This is often observed in the respiratory alkalosis compensating diabetic ketoacidosis.
Blood pressure is usually maintained, except when respiratory alkalosis is caused by massive pulmonary embolism or sepsis.
CNS effects are secondary to the reduction in cerebral blood flow (CBF) caused by reduction in PCO2. CBF may decrease by 1-2 mL/100 g/min for each 1 mm Hg fall in PCO2, with maximum reduction in CBF of 40-50% achieved with a PCO2 of 20-25 mm Hg. Reduced CBF may cause altered mentation, dizziness, and sometimes seizures.
The effects of hperoxemia and hypoxemia on CBF velocity in premature neonates appear to depend on gestational age.[4]
Cardiovascular effects of acute hypocapnia are minimal in patients who are awake. Tachycardia may be the only observable manifestation.
Electrolyte imbalance resulting from respiratory alkalosis may very rarely induce dysrhythmias, although only in patients with underlying heart disease.
Any condition associated with a fall in the PaO2 below 55 mm Hg or with decreased oxygen delivery to the tissues increases minute ventilation, causing respiratory alkalosis. Causes include the following:
Interstitial, airway, and parenchymal pulmonary diseases affect PO2 more prominently than PCO2, and hyperventilation usually results in hypocapnia.[5] Inflammation of the irritant receptors in the airways and parenchyma also causes hyperventilation, resulting in respiratory alkalosis. Causes include the following:
Respiratory alkalosis could result from a ventilatory rate or tidal volume that is too high or from the patient triggering excessive additional breaths.
In these cases, the child has normal lung function with an overriding ventilatory stimulus. These disorders usually result in the most severe respiratory alkalosis. Causes include the following:
A simple step-wise approach proves useful for further workup in patients with respiratory alkalosis, such as the following:
Measurement of arterial pH, HCO3-, and PCO2 are crucial. Transcutaneous or end-tidal PCO2 may be used in place of arterial PCO2; however, transcutaneous PCO2 requires normal skin perfusion, and end-tidal pCO2 is useful only in the presence of normal lung function and when no other acid-base disturbance is suspected. Furthermore, the noninvasive tests do not measure the pH.
A detailed history and careful physical examination should indicate an underlying disorder.
Standard nomograms (see image below) help diagnose simple acid-base disorders, despite the following limitations:
View Image | Acid-base nomogram shows confidence bands for simple acid-base disturbances. Conversion factor is 1 torr = 0.13 kPa. |
See the list below:
Hyperventilation syndrome is often considered a diagnosis of exclusion. Physicians must consider other causes before making the diagnosis. However, in the typical patient with a normal alveolar-arterial oxygen gradient with an acute stress, the diagnosis can be made with confidence.
Drug screening may be helpful.
Chest radiography may be indicated.
Ventilation/perfusion imaging, helical chest CT imaging, or CT angiography may be performed if pulmonary embolism is suspected.
CT imaging or MRI of the brain may be indicated if CNS pathology is suspected.
Care in patients with respiratory alkalosis is primarily directed to the underlying etiology.
Respiratory alkalosis is rarely life threatening. Direct measures to correct it are usually unnecessary and often may not work unless the underlying cause is treated.
Respiratory alkalosis encountered during mechanical ventilation may be corrected by reducing the rate or the tidal volume or using sedation and paralysis (if it is caused by patient-triggered ventilator breaths).
Patients with hyperventilation syndrome may be immediately relieved by rebreathing into a small-volume paper bag; then, the physician should address treating the patient's psychological stress.
Drug therapy for respiratory alkalosis is directed toward alleviation of the underlying causative disorder.
The prognosis relates to the underlying pathology.
The major complication of respiratory alkalosis per se is the concomitant hypocalcemia and potential for tetany.