Hyperchloremia
From WikiLectures
Hyperchloremia is defined as Cl- > 105 mmol/l.
Pathogenesis[edit | edit source]
Hyperchloremia almost always accompanies sodium loss, water and bicarbonate and is associated with metabolic acidosis (MAC). The opposite may be iatrogenic-induced hyperchloraemia with over-infusion of 1/1 saline.
Etiology[edit | edit source]
- increased chloride intake (most often together with sodium in infusion therapy NaCl);
- decreased chloride excretion usually together with decreased sodium excretion (cardiac insufficiency, renal insufficiency);
- hyperchloremic acidosis without change in the overall chloride balance.
The finding of hyperchloraemic acidosis must always indicate the possibility of renal tubular acidosis and also occurs in diarrhea with hypernatremia and hypokalaemia (water loss predominates).
Clinical picture[edit | edit source]
An excess of chlorides does not have its own clinical manifestations.
Therapy[edit | edit source]
Hyperchloremia is corrected by treating the underlying disorder, and the condition rarely requires a reduction in chlorine intake and an increase in excretion by diuretics.
Links[edit | edit source]
Source[edit | edit source]
- HAVRÁNEK, Jiří: Dysbalance of chlorine . (managed)