Electrolyte Tests
by Tom Brody
Definition
Electrolytes are positively and negatively charged molecules, called
ions, that are found within cells, between cells, in the bloodstream,
and in other fluids throughout the body. Electrolytes with a positive
charge include sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium; the negative
ions are chloride, bicarbonate, and phosphate. The concentrations of these
ions in the bloodstream remain fairly constant throughout the day in a
healthy person. Changes in the concentration of one or more of these ions
can occur during various acute and chronic disease states and can lead
to serious consequences.
Purpose
Tests that measure the concentration of electrolytes are useful in the
emergency room and to obtain clues for the diagnosis of specific diseases.
Electrolyte tests are used for diagnosing dietary deficiencies, excess
loss of nutrients due to urination, vomiting, and diarrhea, or abnormal
shifts in the location of an electrolyte within the body. When an abnormal
electrolyte value is detected, the physician may either act to immediately
correct the imbalance directly (in the case of an emergency) or run further
tests to determine the underlying cause of the abnormal electrolyte value.
Electrolyte disturbances can occur with malfunctioning of the kidney (renal
failure), infections that produce severe and continual diarrhea or vomiting,
drugs that cause loss of electrolytes in the urine (diuretics), poisoning
due to accidental consumption of electrolytes, or diseases involving hormones
that regulate electrolyte concentrations.
Precautions
Electrolyte tests are performed from routine blood tests. The techniques
are simple, automated, and fairly uniform throughout the United States.
During the preparation of blood plasma or serum, health workers must take
care not to break the red blood cells, especially when testing for serum
potassium. Because the concentration of potassium within red blood cells
is much higher than in the surrounding plasma or serum, broken cells would
cause falsely elevated potassium levels.
Description
Electrolyte tests are typically conducted on blood plasma or serum,
urine, and diarrheal fluids. Electrolytes can be classified in at least
five different ways. One way is that some electrolytes tend to exist mostly
inside cells, or are intracellular, while others tend to be outside cells,
or are extracellular. Potassium, phosphate, and magnesium occur at much
greater levels inside the cell than outside, while sodium and chloride
occur at much greater levels extracellularly. A second classification
distinguishes those electrolytes that participate directly in the transmission
of nerve impulses and those that do not. Sodium, potassium, and calcium
are the important electrolytes involved in nerve impulses, and disorders
affecting them are most closely associated with neurological disorders.
A third classification focuses on electrolytes that are able to form a
tight union, or complex, with one another. Calcium and phosphate have
the greatest tendency to form complexes with each other. Disorders that
cause an increase in either plasma calcium or phosphate can result in
the deposit of calcium-phosphate crystals in the soft tissues of the body.
A fourth classification concerns those electrolytes that influence the
acidity or alkalinity of the bloodstream, also known as the pH. The pH
of the bloodstream is normally in the range of 7.35-7.45. A decrease below
this range is called acidosis, while a pH above this range is called alkalosis.
The electrolytes most closely associated with the pH of the bloodstream
are bicarbonate, chloride, and phosphate.
Preparation
All electrolyte tests can be performed on plasma or serum. Plasma is
prepared by withdrawing a blood sample and placing it in a test tube containing
a chemical that prevents blood from clotting (an anticoagulant). Serum
is prepared by withdrawing a blood sample, placing it in a test tube,
and allowing it to clot. The blood spontaneously clots within a minute
of withdrawing the blood from a vein. The serum or plasma is then rapidly
spun with a centrifuge in order to remove the blood cells or clot.
Normal results
Electrolyte concentrations are similar whether measured in serum or
plasma. Values can be expressed in terms of weight per unit volume (mg/deciliter;
mg/dL) or in the number of molecules in a volume, or molarity (moles or
millimoles/liter; M or mM). The range of normal values sometimes varies
slightly between different age groups, for males and females, and between
different analytical laboratories.
The normal level of serum sodium is in the range of 136-145 MM. The
normal levels of serum potassium are 3.5-5.0 MM. Note that sodium occurs
at a much higher concentration than potassium. The normal concentration
of total serum calcium (bound calcium plus free calcium) is in the range
of 8.8-10.4 mg/dl About 40% of the total calcium in the plasma is loosely
bound to proteins; this calcium is referred to as bound calcium. The normal
range of free calcium is 4.8-5.2 mg/dl The normal concentration of serum
magnesium is in the range of 2.0-3.0 mg/dl
The normal concentration range of chloride is 350-375 mg/dl or 98-106
MM. The normal level of phosphate, as expressed as the concentration of
phosphorus, is 2.0-4.3 mg/dl Bicarbonate is an electrolyte that is freely
and spontaneously interconvertable with carbonic acid and carbon dioxide.
The normal concentration of carbonic acid (H2CO3)
is about 1.35 MM. The normal concentration of bicarbonate (HCO3-)
is about 27 MM. The concentration of total carbon dioxide is the sum of
carbonic acid and bicarbonate; this sum is normally in the range of 26-28
MM. The ratio of bicarbonate/carbonic acid is more significant than the
actual concentrations of these two forms of carbon dioxide. Its normal
value is 27/1.35 (equivalent to 20/1).
Abnormal results
Positively charged electrolytes
High serum sodium levels (hypernatremia) occur at sodium concentrations
over 145 mm, with severe hypernatremia over 152 MM. Hypernatremia is usually
caused by diseases that cause excessive urination. In these cases, water
is lost, but sodium is still retained in the body. The symptoms include
confusion and can lead to convulsions and coma. Low serum sodium levels
(hyponatremia) are below 130 mm, with severe hyponatremia at or below
125 MM. Hyponatremia often occurs with severe diarrhea, with losses of
both water and sodium, but with sodium loss exceeding water loss. Hyponatremia
provokes clinical problems only if serum sodium falls below 125 mm, especially
if this has occurred rapidly. The symptoms can be as mild as tiredness
but may lead to convulsions and coma.
High serum potassium (hyperkalemia) occurs at potassium levels above
5.0 mm; it is considered severe over 8.0 MM. Hyperkalemia is relatively
uncommon, but sometimes occurs in patients with kidney failure who take
potassium supplements. Hyperkalemia can result in abnormal beating of
the heart (cardiac arrhythmias). Low serum potassium (hypokalemia) occurs
when serum potassium falls below 3.0 MM. It can result from low dietary
potassium, as during starvation or in patients with anorexia nervosa;
from excessive losses via the kidneys, as caused by diuretic drugs; or
by diseases of the adrenal or pituitary glands. Mild hypokalemia causes
muscle weakness, while severe hypokalemia can cause paralysis, the inability
to breathe, and cardiac arrhythmias.
High levels of calcium ions (hypercalcemia) occur at free calcium ion
concentrations over 5.2 mg/dl or total serum calcium above 10.4 mg/dl
Hypercalcemia usually occurs when the body dissolves bone at an abnormally
fast rate, increasing both serum calcium and serum phosphate. Sudden hypercalcemia
can cause vomiting and coma, while prolonged and moderate hypercalcemia
results in the deposit of calcium phosphate crystals in the kidneys and
eye. Hypocalcemia occurs when serum free calcium ions fall below 4.4 mg/dl,
or when total serum calcium falls below 8.8 mg/dl Hypocalcemia can result
from hypoparathyroidism (low parathyroid hormone), from failure to produce
1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, from low levels of plasma magnesium, and from
phosphate poisoning (the phosphate enters the bloodstream and forms a
complex with the free serum calcium). Hypocalcemia can cause depression
and muscle spasms.
Hypermagnesemia occurs at serum magnesium levels over 25 mm (60 mg/dl).
Hypermagnesemia is rare but can occur with the excessive consumption of
magnesium salts. Hypomagnesemia occurs when serum magnesium levels fall
below 0.8 mm, and can result from poor nutrition. Chronic alcoholism is
the most common cause of hypomagnesemia, in part because of poor diet.
Magnesium levels below 0.5 mm (1.2 mg/dl) cause serum calcium levels to
decline. Some of the symptoms of hypomagnesemia, including twitching and
convulsions, actually result from the concurrent hypocalcemia. Hypomagnesemia
can also result in hypokalemia and thereby cause cardiac arrhythmias.
Negatively charged electrolytes
Serum chloride levels sometimes increase to abnormal levels as an undesirable
side effect of medical treatment with sodium chloride or ammonium chloride.
The toxicity of chloride results not from the chloride itself, but from
the fact that the chloride occurs as the acid, hydrogen chloride (more
commonly known as hydrochloric acid, or HCl). An overdose of chloride
may cause the accumulation of hydrochloric acid in the bloodstream, with
consequent acidosis. Renal tubular acidosis, one of many kidney diseases,
involves the failure to release acid into the urine. The acidosis produces
weakness, headache, nausea, and cardiac arrest. Low plasma chloride leads
to the opposite situation: a decline in the acid content of the bloodstream.
This is known as alkalization of the bloodstream, or alkalosis. Hydrochloric
acid, originally from extracellular fluids, can be lost by vomiting. At
its most severe, alkalosis results in paralysis (tetany).
Hyperphosphatemia occurs at serum phosphate levels above 5 mg/dl It
can result from the failure of the kidneys to excrete phosphate into the
urine, causing phosphate to accumulate in the bloodstream. Hyperphosphatemia
can also be caused by the impaired action of parathyroid hormone and by
phosphate poisoning. Severe hyperphosphatemia can cause paralysis, convulsions,
and cardiac arrest. These symptoms result because the phosphate, occurring
in elevated levels, complexes with free serum calcium, resulting in hypocalcemia.
Tests for heart function (an electrocardiogram) and parathyroid hormone
levels are used in the diagnosis of hyperphosphatemia. Hypophosphatemia
occurs if serum phosphorus falls to 2.0 mg/dl or lower. It often results
from a shift of inorganic phosphate from the bloodstream to various organs
and tissues. This shift can be caused by a rise in pH (alkalization) of
the bloodstream, which can occur during hyperventilation, a reaction in
various disease states. A shift in phosphate to intracellular tissues
may draw calcium away from the bloodstream via the formation of insoluble
calcium phosphate crystals within cells, with consequent hypocalcemia.
Thus, tests for abnormalities in phosphate metabolism also involve tests
for serum calcium.
Bicarbonate metabolism involves several compounds. When dietary starches,
sugars, and fats are broken down for energy production, carbon dioxide
is created. Much of this carbon dioxide (CO2) spontaneously
converts to carbonic acid (H2CO3), and some of the
carbonic acid spontaneously converts to bicarbonate (HCO3-)
plus a hydrogen ion (H+). Eventually, almost every molecule
of carbon dioxide produced in the body, whether in the form of carbon
dioxide, carbonic acid, or bicarbonate, must convert back to carbon dioxide
in order to leave via the lungs during normal breathing.
If one holds one's breath, carbon dioxide cannot escape from the
lungs, but continues to be generated within the body. This results in
an increase in production of carbonic acid. A portion of the carbonic
acid breaks apart (dissociates), causing an increase in hydrogen ions
in the plasma, with a resulting acidosis. Tests for serum bicarbonate
levels are accompanied by tests for acidosis (pH test). Conversely, when
one breathes too rapidly (hyperventilation), the carbon dioxide is drawn
off from the bloodstream and expelled in the breath at an increased rate.
This results in an increase in the rate of combination of bicarbonate
with hydrogen ions, resulting in alkalosis. Acidosis and alkalosis can
be produced by means other than by altering the rate of breathing. The
carbonic acid and bicarbonate in the bloodstream minimize (or buffer)
any trend to acidosis or alkalosis. Tests for bicarbonate are generally
accompanied by tests for blood pH and possibly tests for kidney malfunction,
abnormal hormone function, or gastrointestinal disorders.
Further Reading For Your Information
Books
- Klahr, S. "Acid-base and fluid and electrolyte disorders."
In Textbook of Primary Care Medicine, edited by J. Noble. St.
Louis, MO: Mosby, 1996.
- Knochel, J.P. "Disorders of phosphorus metabolism." In Harrison's
Principles of Internal Medicine, edited by K.J. Isselbacher, et
al. Engelwood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1995.
- Levinsky, N.G. "Fluids and electrolytes." In Harrison's
Principles of Internal Medicine, edited by K.J. Isselbacher, et
al. Engelwood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1995.
Periodicals
- Fried, L.F., and P.M. Palevsky. "Hyponatremia and hypernatremia."
Medical Clinics of North America 81 (1997): 585-609.
- Sutters, M., C.L. Gaboury, and W.M. Bennett. "Severe hyperphosphatemia
and hypocalcemia: a dilemma in patient management." Journal
of the American Society of Nephrology 7 (1996): 2056-2061.
Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine, Gale Research, 1999.
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_0/g2601/0004/2601000469/p1/article.jhtml?term=magnesium+chloride+MgCl
|