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Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1986
Bicarbonate is a laboratory value of considerable importance in emergency medicine. It is essential in the diagnosis of acid-base disorders, but must be interpreted in the context of a number of other parameters, including electrolytes, arterial blood gases, and renal function.
D, Jehle, F, Harchelroad
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Bicarbonate is a laboratory value of considerable importance in emergency medicine. It is essential in the diagnosis of acid-base disorders, but must be interpreted in the context of a number of other parameters, including electrolytes, arterial blood gases, and renal function.
D, Jehle, F, Harchelroad
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Journal of Applied Physiology, 1989
The effects of sodium bicarbonate and a bicarbonate-carbonate mixture on expired CO2 and the volume of distribution of bicarbonate were studied in eight anesthetized, paralyzed, and ventilated dogs made acidotic with HCl (5 mmol/kg) infused over 90 min.
N B, Kindig +3 more
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The effects of sodium bicarbonate and a bicarbonate-carbonate mixture on expired CO2 and the volume of distribution of bicarbonate were studied in eight anesthetized, paralyzed, and ventilated dogs made acidotic with HCl (5 mmol/kg) infused over 90 min.
N B, Kindig +3 more
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Bicarbonate transport proteins
Biochemistry and Cell Biology, 2002Bicarbonate is not freely permeable to membranes. Yet, bicarbonate must be moved across membranes, as part of CO2 metabolism and to regulate cell pH. Mammalian cells ubiquitously express bicarbonate transport proteins to facilitate the transmembrane bicarbonate flux.
Deborah, Sterling, Joseph R, Casey
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Bicarbonate and the regulation of ventilation
The American Journal of Medicine, 1974Abstract The regulation of ventilation involves a multifactorial control system with several feedback loops transmitting deviations from normal in pH, carbon dioxide tension (pCO 2 ) and oxygen tension (pO 2 ) to the control area. Variations in the size of the bicarbonate pool, caused by ventilatory or metabolic disturbances, can be expected to modify
H O, Heinemann, R M, Goldring
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Fluids, Electrolytes, and Bicarbonate
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1993In an attempt to enhance performance, primarily by delaying the onset of fatigue, a variety of formulations of fluids, electrolytes, and sodium bicarbonate are administered to performance horses. Some current practices of fluid and electrolyte supplementation are well justified; others have no basis to support their use.
H C, Schott, K W, Hinchcliff
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Advantages of Bicarbonate Hemodialysis
Artificial Organs, 1982ABSTRACTSix patients with frequent episodes of symptomatic hypotension during acetate dialysis were treated with bicarbonate dialysis. In all patients blood pressure, heart rate, and arterial acid‐base values were measured every 30 minutes during each of the five treatments with acetate dialysis and bicarbonate dialysis.
H, Hampl +6 more
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Update on the bicarbonate Hypothesis
1993A single chemoreceptor fibre is excited by both hypoxia and hypercapnia. The bicarbonate hypothesis provides an explanation of how CO2 and O2 converge to give impulses in the same chemoreceptor fibre. Many other explanations are conceivable (R.W. Torrance, 1977), but no other has been put out in the same detail as the bicarbonate one.
R W, Torrance +2 more
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