0521779407-C02 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:53
Chronic Respiratory Acidosis 351
Chronic Respiratory Acidosis............................
F. JOHN GENNARI, MD
history & physical
■CO 2 retention for >3–4 days
■May be asymptomatic
■Exertional dyspnea
■Right-sided heart failure (cor pulmonale)
■Cardiac arrhythmias
■Confusion, fine tremor
■Abnormal chest examination, peripheral edema, papilledema when
severe
tests
Laboratory
■Arterial blood gases are diagnostic – PCO2 >45 mmHg, pH <7.40 (see
below for rule of thumb for [HCO3−])
Imaging
■Chest X-ray, CT of chest if necessary
differential diagnosis
■Conditions to Distinguish from Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
➣Metabolic alkalosis
➣Mixed disorders
Acute on chronic respiratory acidosis
Acute respiratory acidosis plus metabolic alkalosis
■Rule of Thumb:
➣Expected [HCO3−] in chronic respiratory acidosis:
➣[HCO3−](expected)=24 mEq/L+0.4 (PCO2−40, mmHg)
Observed [HCO3−] should be within 4 mEq/L of the expected
value in uncomplicated chronic respiratory acidosis.
■Causes of Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
➣Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (most common cause)
➣CNS depression
➣Sleep apnea
➣Obesity-hypoventilation syndrome
➣Neuromuscular impairment (see under acute respiratory acido-
sis)
➣Restrictive lung diseases