(Chest. 2000;117:260-267.)
© 2000
American College of Chest Physicians
Sodium Bicarbonate for the Treatment of Lactic Acidosis*
Sean M. Forsythe, MD and
Gregory A. Schmidt, MD, FCCP
*
From the Department of Medicine (Dr. Forsythe) and the Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care (Dr. Schmidt), University of Chicago School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Correspondence to: Gregory A. Schmidt, MD, FCCP, Section of Pulmonary and Critical Care: MC6026, 5841 S. Maryland Ave, Chicago, IL 60637; e-mail: gschmidt{at}medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu
 |
Abstract
|
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Lactic acidosis often challenges the intensivist and is associated
with a strikingly high mortality. Treatment involves discerning and
correcting its underlying cause, ensuring adequate oxygen delivery to
tissues, reducing oxygen demand through sedation and mechanical
ventilation, and (most controversially) attempting to alkalinize the
blood with IV sodium bicarbonate. Here we review the literature to
answer the following questions: Is a low pH bad? Can sodium bicarbonate
raise the pH in vivo? Does increasing the blood pH with
sodium bicarbonate have any salutary effects? Does sodium bicarbonate
have negative side effects? We find that the oft-cited rationale for
bicarbonate use, that it might ameliorate the hemodynamic depression of
metabolic acidemia, has been disproved convincingly. Further, given the
lack of evidence supporting its use, we cannot condone bicarbonate
administration for patients with lactic acidosis, regardless of the
degree of acidemia.
Key Words: acid-base acidosis alkalinizing therapy bicarbonate lactic acidosis sodium bicarbonate
 |
Introduction
|
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Lactic
acidosis, defined as a lactate concentration > 5 mmol/L and a pH
< 7.35, commonly complicates critical illness. Its causes are legion,
including sepsis, cardiogenic shock, severe hypoxemia, hepatic failure,
and intoxication. Many of these share reduced delivery of oxygen to
cells or impaired use of oxygen in mitochondria, yet some are based in
more complex derangements. For example, the lactic acidosis of sepsis
is poorly understood but probably cannot be explained simply by tissue
hypoxia, at least at the level of the whole body. Treatment of lactic
acidosis involves discerning and correcting its underlying cause,
ensuring adequate oxygen delivery to tissues, reducing oxygen demand
through sedation and mechanical ventilation, and (in some ICUs)
attempting to alkalinize the blood with IV sodium bicarbonate. Even
in the face of maximal supportive therapy, lactic acidosis is
associated with a mortality of 60 to 90%.1
2
3
4
Although the use of sodium bicarbonate for the treatment of metabolic
acidosis has been debated most heavily in the past 15 years, its use
was questioned as far back as 1934.5
Nevertheless, it is
still considered standard therapy and recommended in many textbooks and
review articles,6
7
8
despite the lack of relevant clinical
data supporting its effectiveness. Here we review the animal and human
studies that bear on this complex, yet common, clinical conundrum.
We will not address the use of sodium bicarbonate in the
bicarbonate-losing metabolic acidoses, such as those caused by diarrhea
or renal tubular acidosis, in which replacement of lost bicarbonate is
widely accepted. Although we touch on the use of bicarbonate in
diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and some other forms of metabolic acidosis,
our discussion and conclusions largely relate to the single most common
cause of severe lactic acidosis in the modern ICU, that caused by
severe sepsis.4
We find little evidence that sodium
bicarbonate is detrimental in these conditions, but its use fails the
most basic criteria expected of any drugefficacy.
Those who continue to advocate the use of sodium bicarbonate for lactic
acidosis generally use the following chain of reasoning (explicitly or
implicitly):
- A low pH, in and of itself, is harmful (most notably by
impairing cardiovascular function).
- Sodium bicarbonate can increase the pH when infused IV.
- Raising the pH with sodium bicarbonate improves cardiovascular
function or some other relevant outcome.
- Any adverse effects of sodium bicarbonate are outweighed by its
benefits.
We address below each of these points in turn.
 |
Is a Low pH Bad?
|
|---|
Proteins, which underlie the function and structure of human
cells, contain areas of both positive and negative charge and are
thereby sensitive to the pH of the surrounding milieu. One can conceive
of innumerable ways in which excess acid could impair protein function
and, by extension, the function of the whole body. Yet it is overly
simplistic to assume that the clinicians window on acid-base state,
the arterial blood pH, reflects accurately the pH at a (likely more
important) cellular level. For example, a 50% reduction in blood flow
to a tissue causes the arterial-venous
PCO2 difference to double (as long as
CO2 production and excretion remain constant) as
predicted by the Fick principle. This will substantially raise the
tissue PCO2 and lower the local
intracellular pH. At the same time, neither the arterial pH nor
PCO2 changes at all, both failing
completely to reveal the tissue acidosis. Further clouding the value of
the arterial blood pH, there may be different acid-base states in
different cells of a single organ, or within different organs of a
single patient. Mitochondrial pH may be even more crucial than cellular
(cytoplasmic) pH, as these organelles are the site of energy
production. In experiments involving isolated rat hepatocytes, the
mitochondrial membrane pH gradient did not change when extracellular pH
was lowered from 7.40 to 6.9.9
Because adults with acidosis generally also have sepsis, hypoxemia,
intoxication, or hypoperfusion, discerning the physiologic effects of
low pH from those of endotoxemia, hypoxemia, and so on is a challenging
task. In isolated animal heart muscle preparations in which the pH of
the perfusate is lowered, acidosis generally reduces contractile
function,10
sometimes severely.11
Human
ventricular muscle excised during open-heart surgery displays only
modestly reduced contractility in the face of severe
acidosis.12
The cardiac depressant effect may be caused by
inorganic phosphate-mediated impairment of actin-myosin crossbridge
cycling, disruption of energy production,11
13
interference with calcium delivery to myofilaments, or decreased
sensitivity of contractile proteins to calcium.14
In
whole-animal preparations, the effects of acidosis are more difficult
to discern, because of competing effects of acidosis on contractility,
heart rate, vascular tone, and the adrenal and sympathetic systems.
Various investigators have controlled heart rate, preload, and
afterload, finding that acidosis caused contractility to remain
constant,15
decrease marginally,16
or
transiently rise and then fall.17
The increasing experience with permissive hypercapnia for patients with
ARDS or status asthmaticus, in which hypercapnia and acidemia are
tolerated to avoid alveolar overdistention, has changed many
clinicians perspective about the adverse impact of acidemia. In
sedated and ventilated patients with ARDS, rapid intentional
hypoventilation (pH falling from 7.40 to 7.26 in 30 to 60 min) lowered
systemic vascular resistance while cardiac output rose. Mean systemic
arterial pressure and pulmonary vascular resistance were
unchanged.18
Further, in many studies of patients
undergoing permissive hypercapnia, a pH of well below 7.2 was tolerated
well,18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
as it is in young patients with
DKA,26
children with "supercarbia,"27
and
those with grand mal seizures.28
29
30
The feared
consequences of acidemia, projected from the experience with patients
having lactic acidosis (and, usually, concomitant sepsis), failed to
materialize. In normal subjects who rebreathed carbon dioxide, QT
dispersion was increased, which could signal a risk of
arrhythmia.24
With data now available for many patients
permissively hypoventilated, the systemic hemodynamic effects are quite
small even as the pH falls to 7.15, with the typical patient
experiencing no change or small increases in cardiac output and BP.
Rhythm disturbances have not been a problem. Patients whose pH levels
fall far below 7.0 are fewer in number, so firm conclusions cannot be
drawn, but they similarly tolerate their acidemia. The current practice
of permissive hypercapnia does not generally include an attempt to
alkalinize the blood to compensate for respiratory acidosis.
Cardiac contractile response to catecholamines is also impaired by
acidosis, perhaps mediated by a decline in ß-receptors on the cell
surface.13
31
32
Other potentially detrimental
cardiovascular effects of acidosis include reduced resuscitability from
induced ventricular fibrillation, which has been shown in rats but not
in dogs or pigs,33
34
35
impaired load tolerance of the
right ventricle,36
and altered renal blood flow (both
increased and decreased, depending on the degree of
acidemia).37
Diaphragmatic contractility is reduced also
by respiratory acidosis,38
but apparently not by metabolic
acidosis.39
Paradoxically, acidosis may have protective effects in critical
illness. A low pH has been shown to delay the onset of cell death in
isolated hepatocytes exposed to anoxia9
and to chemical
hypoxia.40
Correcting the pH took away the protective
effect and accelerated cell death. In addition, acidosis during
reperfusion limits myocardial infarct size.41
42
In summary, although a very low pH has negative inotropic effects in
isolated hearts, the whole-body response in patients is much less
clearly detrimental. Although clinical shock and metabolic acidosis
often coincide, the striking discordance between the clinical course
and outcome of patients with (usually septic) lactic acidosis compared
with those who have DKA or ventilatory failure suggests that the low pH
itself does not crucially underpin the hemodynamic collapse of these
ill patients. Independent of the acidemia, the lactate ion may be
significant, because lactate buffered to a pH of 7.4 can cause
decreased cardiac contractility in animal models.43
 |
Can Sodium Bicarbonate Raise the pH In Vivo?
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It seems straightforward that adding a base to acidic blood will
raise the pHthe reality is more complex. First, bicarbonate is not
one of the independent determinants of the blood pH. Rather, these
include the difference between the total concentrations of strong
cations and anions (the strong ion difference, [SID]); the total
concentration of weak acids; and the
PaCO2.44
Administration
of exogenous sodium bicarbonate increases the SID (which tends to raise
the pH) because sodium is a strong cation and bicarbonate is not a
strong ion at all, but at the same time it elevates the
PaCO2 (which tends to lower pH). In
patients with lactic acidosis receiving mechanical ventilation, a
modest infusion of sodium bicarbonate (2 mmol/kg for 15 min IV) boosted
PaCO2 from 35 to 40 mm
Hg.2
Second, bicarbonate administration may engender metabolic
reactions that may themselves alter (SID), the total concentration of
weak acids, or PaCO2. For example, in
animals and humans, bicarbonate infusion can augment the production of
lactic acid, a strong anion.45
46
47
48
49
50
Mechanisms to explain
this remain speculative, but include a shift in the
oxyhemoglobin-saturation relationship51
; enhanced
anaerobic glycolysis, perhaps mediated by the pH-sensitive,
rate-limiting enzyme phosphofructokinase; and changes in hepatic blood
flow or lactate uptake.52
In animal models of lactic acidosis, sodium bicarbonate
does not predictably raise the arterial pH. In some studies, pH
remained constant or fell.46
47
Most whole-animal studies,
however, have shown that pH can be raised and even
normalized.16
48
49
53
54
55
Most relevant to clinical
practice, in two studies of patients with lactic acidosis receiving
mechanical ventilation, IV infusion of sodium bicarbonate in
dosages of 2 mmol/kg for 15 min or 1 mmol/kg for 1 to 2 min
raised the pH only 0.14 and 0.05 units, respectively.2
56
Yet, the body has multiple compartments separated by membranes of
differing permeabilities and systems of active transport. Even when
sodium bicarbonate added to the central veins reliably elevates the
arterial pH, its effects on the cerebrospinal fluid and intracellular
spaces may not be concordant. This could happen because carbon dioxide,
produced when bicarbonate reacts with metabolic acids, diffuses readily
across cell membranes and the blood-brain barrier, whereas bicarbonate
cannot. Alternatively, as discussed above, bicarbonate may provoke
reactions within cells, vessels, or organs that lower the local SID or
raise the local PCO2.
Sodium bicarbonate lowered cerebrospinal fluid pH in dogs with
DKA,57
dogs being resuscitated after a ventricular
fibrillation arrest,58
and two patients with DKA, in whom
it was associated with a decrease in mental status.59
Intracellular pH has been measured in cells or animals using nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy, pH-sensitive fluorescent dyes,
intramuscular electrodes, and the distribution of carbon 14-labeled
dimethadione (Table 1
). The results are inconsistent, with intracellular pH rising in one
study,55
not changing in six
studies,11
34
49
53
60
61
falling in nine
studies,46
47
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
and either rising or falling
depending on the buffer used in two investigations.69
70
In various studies, intracellular pH has been shown to fall with
bicarbonate in RBCs,46
muscle,68
liver,47
lymphocytes,66
and
brain.63
We are aware of only one human study involving
determination by magnetic resonance spectroscopy of intracellular pH in
the brain.65
When these normal volunteers were given
sodium bicarbonate IV, brain pH fell significantly.
In summary, sodium bicarbonate can raise the blood pH when given IV. In
contrast, this therapy fails to augment reliably the intracellular pH.
Indeed, intracellular pH falls in most animal models and in most organs
studied, but the effect is variable.
 |
Does Increasing the Blood pH With Sodium Bicarbonate Have any
Salutary Effects?
|
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The most direct question to pose regarding sodium bicarbonate
therapy is whether it improves the problems that prompt its use.
Namely, does it correct hemodynamics, "buy time" for other
interventions, or improve outcome?
In isolated rat or rabbit hearts perfused with acidic solutions,
bicarbonate fails to augment ventricular
contractility.11
71
In whole animals (including various
models of metabolic acidosis), the effects of bicarbonate on
ventricular function are more difficult to tease out from its impact on
systemic vessels. Further, one must take care not to interpret these
studies too simplistically. For example, a fall in BP is not
necessarily detrimental (if cardiac output rises). Nevertheless,
these studies uniformly fail to reveal any hemodynamic benefit for
sodium bicarbonate when compared with iso-osmolar saline
solution.16
45
46
47
48
49
53
55
62
64
72
73
74
When it has
been measured, cardiac output either does not
change48
49
74
or falls.11
46
47
Right
ventricular contractility72
74
and hepatic blood
flow46
47
fall. Perhaps the most careful study of left
ventricular function involved L-lactic acid infusion in anesthetized,
ventilated, ß-blocked, and atrially paced dogs. Before and after
bicarbonate infusion, the left ventricular pressure-volume relationship
was determined with a ventricular Millar catheter and three orthogonal
pairs of ultrasonic crystals imbedded in the ventricular
walls.16
Although sodium bicarbonate increased the
arterial pH and did not increase lactate concentrations, mean arterial
pressure fell, and cardiac output and ventricular contractility (slope
of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship) did not change. The
hemodynamic effects were indistinguishable from those of saline
solution.
There have been two studies of the hemodynamic impact of sodium
bicarbonate in human lactic acidosis.2
56
In both studies,
patients were receiving mechanical ventilation, had a mean blood
lactate between 7 mmol/L and 8 mmol/L, and were receiving continuous
infusions of vasoactive drugs (except one patient in one study).
Although sodium bicarbonate raised pH and serum bicarbonate
concentrations, it did not improve hemodynamics or catecholamine
responsiveness. Specifically, bicarbonate was indistinguishable from
saline with regard to heart rate, central venous pressure, pulmonary
artery pressure, mixed venous oxyhemoglobin saturation, systemic oxygen
delivery, oxygen consumption, arterial BP, pulmonary artery occlusion
(wedge) pressure, and cardiac output.2
56
These findings
suggest that the commonly observed hemodynamic response to bicarbonate
administration in patients treated with vasoactive drug infusions may
simply be one of preload augmentation (rather than enhanced
catecholamine responsiveness). When the most severely acidemic (pH
range 6.9 to 7.2) subset of patients was analyzed separately, these
negative findings persisted.2
This result does not support
the practice of some physicians who withhold bicarbonate from patients
with mild acidemia but feel compelled to give it to those with acidemia
of greater magnitude. Indeed, if there are negative effects of
bicarbonate infusion, there are reasons to expect that this subset of
patients will suffer disproportionately (ie, develop more
profound paradoxical intracellular acidosis).
Outcome is difficult to measure because animal models have a nearly
100% mortality and human trials have generally not been designed to
detect differences in survival or other (nonhemodynamic) measures of
outcome. In both prospective and retrospective studies of patients with
DKA treated with or without sodium bicarbonate, there were no
differences in the neurologic status, incidence of hypokalemia or
hypoglycemia, or rate of correction of acidemia,75
76
but
there was a suggestion of delayed clearance of ketones and lactate in
patients given bicarbonate.77
78
Dichloroacetate (DCA)
infusion, which, like sodium bicarbonate infusion, effectively raises
serum pH in critically ill patients with lactic acidosis (but lowers
lactate concentrations), also has no apparent hemodynamic benefit and
does not improve survival.3
The only study that has shown any positive effect on outcome is in the
setting of canine ventricular fibrillation.79
Dogs
resuscitated from prolonged arrest who were given bicarbonate had
improved return of the circulation, less neurologic deficit, and
greater survival to 24 h. On the other hand, several other studies
in both humans and animals do not support these data. A study in dogs
showed no effect of respiratory or metabolic acidosis on defibrillation
threshold.35
Sodium bicarbonate had no detectable impact
on myocardial cell pH or resuscitability from ventricular fibrillation
in pigs in one study34
and worsened coronary perfusion
pressure and resuscitability in yet another.80
Its use was
associated with poorer outcomes in a retrospective study of human
cardiopulmonary arrest.81
In summary, no controlled study has shown improved hemodynamics
attributable to sodium bicarbonate infusion, regardless of the effect
on pH, and many show worsening of some hemodynamic variable. It is
significant that such negative findings include two studies in
critically ill humans receiving infused catecholamines, the subset of
patients who might be expected to benefit most dramatically.
 |
Does Sodium Bicarbonate Have Negative Side Effects?
|
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The most obvious side effects of sodium bicarbonate are the fluid
and sodium load. This can cause hypervolemia, hyperosmolarity, and
hypernatremia.82
Sodium bicarbonate given as a rapid IV
bolus can cause a transient fall in mean arterial pressure and a
transient rise in intracranial pressure83
that is probably
related to its hypertonicity, and this is alleviated when given as a
slow IV infusion. Sodium bicarbonate has been shown in three studies to
lower PaO2 from 5 to 15 mm Hg in both
acidemic animals and nonacidemic patients with congestive heart
failure.57
84
The mechanism for this is unclear, but the
authors speculated that there might be worsening of intrapulmonary
shunt.
When normal human volunteers were made acidemic with acetazolamide and
then corrected with sodium bicarbonate, the acute correction of the pH
caused increased hemoglobin affinity for oxygen that worsened oxygen
delivery. This effect lasted about 8 h.51
This was
thought to be caused by the immediate nature of the Bohr effect and the
delayed nature of the 2,3-diphosphoglycerate effect on
hemoglobin-oxygen affinity.
Lactate concentrations increased with sodium bicarbonate infusion
(compared with control subjects) in animal studies of hypoxic lactic
acidosis,45
47
49
phenformin-induced lactic
acidosis,46
68
hemorrhagic shock,48
and
DKA.55
57
This finding has also been reported in cases of
chronic lactic acidosis associated with malignancies.85
It
is possible that lactate rises in these settings because of impaired
oxygen delivery to tissues. Even if enhanced lactate production does
not signal cellular hypoxia, bicarbonate-induced hyperlactatemia may be
detrimental inasmuch as lactate itself has potentially detrimental
actions, as discussed earlier.
Serum ionized calcium concentration is reduced by sodium bicarbonate
infusion. In a randomized, controlled study of ICU patients with lactic
acidosis, sodium bicarbonate lowered ionized calcium from 0.95 to 0.87
mmol/L.2
In an animal study of cardiac arrest, sodium
bicarbonate decreased ionized calcium, although this had no apparent
detrimental effects.79
Because left ventricular
contractility has been shown to vary directly with ionized calcium
concentration,86
any beneficial effects of pH correction
may be masked by hypocalcemic ventricular depression.
A single study in patients with lactic acidosis treated with sodium
bicarbonate failed to reveal any significant changes in venous lactate
concentration, hemoglobin affinity for oxygen, total body oxygen
consumption, oxygen extraction ratio, transcutaneous oxygen pressure,
serum sodium concentration, or osmolality.56
However, the
dose of bicarbonate (1 mmol/kg) was small. Another study of three
patients treated with sodium bicarbonate (mean dose, 90 mEq) during
cardiac arrest revealed a rise in osmolality from 308 to 343
mosm/kg.58
In summary, many potentially detrimental effects of bicarbonate
administration have been identified, but their clinical relevance has
not been established.
 |
Other Alkalinizing Therapies: Carbicarb, Dichloroacetate,
Tris-Hydroxymethyl Aminomethane, and Dialysis
|
|---|
Carbicarb is an equimolar mixture of sodium carbonate and sodium
bicarbonate. Compared with sodium bicarbonate, Carbicarb raises the SID
(thereby the pH) far more45
48
49
54
62
and boosts the
PCO2 far less48
49
64
when given IV to animals with metabolic acidosis. To the extent that
the failure of sodium bicarbonate to effect hemodynamic improvement is
caused by the generation of carbon dioxide, Carbicarb might be
superior. Carbicarb more consistently increases intracellular
pH,49
62
64
and although it improved hemodynamics in two
studies,11
49
it did not in three
others.48
62
64
DCA is a compound that probably works by stimulating the pyruvate
dehydrogenase complex, the rate-limiting enzyme that regulates the
entry of pyruvate into the tricarboxylic acid cycle, thus promoting the
clearance of accumulated lactate. In addition, DCA increases myocardial
glucose utilization and contractility.87
Although several
animal and clinical trials showed that DCA could raise pH and
bicarbonate concentration while lowering lactate concentrations, with
little apparent toxicity,52
88
89
a large, multicenter,
placebo-controlled trial in patients with lactic acidosis failed to
confirm improved hemodynamics or outcome.3
This drug is
not available commercially. Tris-hydroxymethyl aminomethane is a weak
alkali that penetrates cells easily. Its potential to raise blood and
intracellular pH without producing carbon dioxide has been confirmed in
animal models of metabolic acidosis. Tris-hydroxymethyl aminomethane
also improved myocardial contraction and relaxation in an isolated
rabbit heart preparation.71
Although tris-hydroxymethyl
aminomethane is commercially available, complications of hyperkalemia,
hypoglycemia, extravasation-related necrosis, and neonatal hepatic
necrosis are likely to limit its use.
There have been many case studies that report the use of dialysis to
control the volume and sodium loads that accompany sodium bicarbonate
infusion. In most of these reports, sodium bicarbonate alone did not
improve the pH or lactate concentrations, but bicarbonate-buffered
peritoneal dialysis did. Perhaps importantly, peritoneal dialysis was
very effective at removing lactate. The returned dialysate contained
between 2.6 mEq/L and 14 mEq/L of lactate in one study,90
and the calculated lactate clearance by peritoneal dialysis averaged 21
mL/min in another.91
The impact of bicarbonate infusion
plus dialysis on cardiovascular function and outcome has not been
studied systematically, nor has the relevance of the bicarbonate
component of this potential treatment been examined.
 |
Conclusion
|
|---|
Sodium bicarbonate is clearly effective in raising the arterial pH
in critically ill patients with lactic acidosis. The impact on
intracellular pH is unknown in such patients, but extrapolation from
extensive animal studies suggests that it is negative. Despite the
correction of arterial acidemia, sodium bicarbonate, like DCA, has no
favorable cardiovascular effects, even for patients with severe
acidemia and receiving continuous infusions of catecholamines. Although
hemodynamic improvement is not the only mechanism by which bicarbonate
might be beneficial, animal studies have failed to yield alternatives.
Even theoretical arguments in favor of sodium bicarbonate
administration rely on a naïve representation of acid-base
physiology, ignoring the complex compartmentalization of pH, the
second-level effects of bicarbonate infusion, the impact of carbon
dioxide generation, or the negative consequences of hyperlactatemia. We
believe most clinicians who continue to use bicarbonate for patients
with severe lactic acidosis do so largely because of their inclination
to action: How can I "fail" to give bicarbonate when no alternative
therapy is available and the mortality of this condition is so high?
The oft-cited rationale for bicarbonate use, that it might ameliorate
the hemodynamic depression of metabolic acidemia, has been disproved
convincingly. Any future role for bicarbonate in these patients depends
on the formulation of new hypotheses of efficacy followed by animal and
clinical studies to seek to confirm any proposed benefit. Given the
current lack of evidence supporting its use, we cannot condone
bicarbonate administration for patients with lactic acidosis. We extend
this to those with pH < 7.2 on vasoactive drugs, inasmuch as
bicarbonate has no measurable beneficial effects even in these sickest
patients. Indeed, we do not give or advise bicarbonate infusion
regardless of the pH.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Abbreviations:
DCA = dichloroacetate; DKA = diabetic ketoacidosis;
SID = strong ion difference
Received for publication July 8, 1999.
Accepted for publication July 15, 1999.
 |
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