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Effects of sodium acetate, bicarbonate and lactate on acid-base status in anaesthetized dogs
Authors:SANDEE M. HARTSFIELD  JOHN C. THURMON  J. E. CORBIN  G. JOHN BENSON  T. AIKEN
Affiliation:Department of Veterinary Clinical Medicine, Anesthesia Section, College of Veterinary Medicine;*Department of Animal Science, College of Agriculture, University of Illinois, Urbana, Ill., U.S.A
Abstract:Equal doses of sodium acetate, bicarbonate and lactate (6.6 mEq/L) infused intravenously over 30 min into three groups of halothane-anaesthetized dogs caused changes in acid-base status. Arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2), pHa, base excess (BE) and standard bicarbonate (SB) increased. Sodium bicarbonate caused the most rapid and greatest changes. The bicarbonate group was significantly different (P less than 0.05) from the other groups at 15 and 30 min after the start of infusion for pHa, BE and SB. The greater effects of bicarbonate are due to its production of alkalinization without a requirement for metabolism; acetate and lactate require oxidation to be effective. The acetate and bicarbonate groups were not statistically different at 45 min after the onset of drug infusion, but both had significantly higher SB and BE mean values than the lactate group. All measurements made after 45 min revealed no significant differences among groups. Thus, after the earlier differences noted above, the three alkalinizers caused similar effects on acid-base status. PaCO2 was elevated in all groups, but there were no differences among groups. Cardiovascular effects caused by infusion of the three drugs were minimal.
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