Physiology

Acid–Base Balance and Urine Formation

A Comprehensive Article

Renal System

Your body’s chemical reactions constantly produce acids — from metabolism, CO₂, and even your diet. Yet your blood pH stays between 7.35–7.45 — a very narrow and essential range for life. How? Because the lungs and kidneys work together to keep it that way: Lungs remove volatile acid (CO₂). Kidneys handle fixed acids (H⁺, lactic acid, etc.) and generate new bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻)

🧩 1️⃣ Overview of Acid–Base Regulation

Organ/System Response Speed Mechanism
Buffer systems Immediate Bind/release H⁺ (e.g. HCO₃⁻, phosphate, proteins)
Lungs Minutes Adjust CO₂ (acid) by altering ventilation
Kidneys Hours–Days Reabsorb HCO₃⁻, secrete H⁺, generate new HCO₃⁻
💡 Key Concept: ↑ H⁺ (acidosis) → kidneys excrete H⁺ and conserve HCO₃⁻. ↓ H⁺ (alkalosis) → kidneys retain H⁺ and excrete HCO₃⁻

🧠 2️⃣ How the Kidneys Maintain Acid–Base Balance

The kidneys act as the final line of defense — they don’t just filter blood; they chemically adjust it.

A. Reabsorption of Filtered Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻)

  • Occurs mainly in the Proximal Convoluted Tubule (PCT)
  • For every H⁺ secreted into the lumen, one HCO₃⁻ is reabsorbed into the blood.

Simplified process:

  1. H⁺ combines with filtered HCO₃⁻ → forms H₂CO₃ (carbonic acid)
  2. H₂CO₃ → CO₂ + H₂O (via carbonic anhydrase)
  3. CO₂ diffuses into tubular cell → reforms HCO₃⁻
  4. HCO₃⁻ enters blood → maintains pH
🧩 Net result: HCO₃⁻ is conserved — no loss in urine.

B. Excretion of H⁺ Ions

  • When blood is acidic, kidneys secrete more H⁺.
  • This happens mainly in: Distal convoluted tubule. Collecting duct.

Two main ways to remove H⁺ safely:

  1. Buffered by phosphate → forms H₂PO₄⁻ (titratable acid)
  2. Buffered by ammonia (NH₃) → forms ammonium (NH₄⁺)
💡 Ammonia buffer is especially important during chronic acidosis.
🧩 Net result: H⁺ leaves in urine; new HCO₃⁻ is added to blood.

C. Generation of New Bicarbonate

Every time an H⁺ is excreted (as NH₄⁺ or H₂PO₄⁻), the kidney creates a new bicarbonate molecule that enters the bloodstream. This is how the kidneys “replace” the bicarbonate that was used up buffering acids.

⚗️ 3️⃣ Acid–Base Disorders (High-Yield Clinical Section)

Disorder Primary Problem Compensation Examples
Metabolic acidosis ↓ HCO₃⁻ ↓ CO₂ (hyperventilation) DKA, renal failure, diarrhea
Metabolic alkalosis ↑ HCO₃⁻ ↑ CO₂ (hypoventilation) Vomiting, diuretics
Respiratory acidosis ↑ CO₂ ↑ HCO₃⁻ (renal retention) COPD, hypoventilation
Respiratory alkalosis ↓ CO₂ ↓ HCO₃⁻ (renal excretion) Hyperventilation, anxiety
💡 Mnemonic: ROME — Respiratory = Opposite, Metabolic = Equal (e.g., Resp. acidosis = ↓pH, ↑CO₂; Metab. acidosis = ↓pH, ↓HCO₃⁻)

🚰 4️⃣ Urine Formation — The Big Picture

Urine is the final product of filtration, reabsorption, and secretion — representing the body’s way of excreting waste while conserving essentials.

Steps of Urine Formation:

  1. Glomerular Filtration – blood → Bowman’s capsule
  2. Tubular Reabsorption – reclaim water and solutes
  3. Tubular Secretion – remove unwanted ions & toxins
  4. Excretion – final urine passes through collecting duct → ureter → bladder → urethra
💡 Normal daily urine output: 1–1.5 L

Composition of Normal Urine

Component Presence Notes
Water ~95% Main solvent
Urea Present From protein breakdown
Creatinine Present From muscle metabolism
Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻ Variable Electrolyte balance
No glucose / protein / blood Abnormal if present Indicates renal pathology

🧠 Clinical correlations:

  • Proteinuria: glomerular damage (nephrotic syndrome)
  • Glycosuria: diabetes mellitus
  • Hematuria: infection, stones, or trauma

Urine pH and Color

  • Normal pH: 4.5–8 (acidic urine helps excrete acids)
  • Color: pale yellow (urochrome pigment)
  • Odor: slightly aromatic (ammonia-like after standing)
💡 Acidic urine = high protein diet, ketosis. Alkaline urine = vegetarian diet, UTI.

🧩 5️⃣ Summary Table

Aspect Main Site Key Action Clinical Note
HCO₃⁻ reabsorption PCT Prevents loss of base Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors ↓ this
H⁺ secretion DCT/CD Removes excess acid Buffers: phosphate, ammonia
New HCO₃⁻ DCT/CD Generates base Net from H⁺ excretion
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