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Bicarbonate (HCO3-)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Serum / Plasma Total CO₂ – Major Blood Buffer – Acid–Base Homeostasis Marker)

Synonyms

  • Bicarbonate
  • HCO₃⁻
  • CO₂ (total CO₂ on chemistry panel)
  • Standard bicarbonate
  • Carbonic acid–bicarbonate buffer component
  • Alkali reserve

Units of Measurement

  • µmol/L
  • mmol/L
  • mg/L
  • mg/dL
  • mg/100mL
  • mg%
  • µg/mL
  • mEq/L (most commonly used in clinical labs)

(1 mmol of HCO₃⁻ = 1 mEq because valency = 1)

Description

Bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻) is the main extracellular buffer that maintains the body’s acid–base balance.
It represents:

  • Kidney’s metabolic regulation of acid-base status
  • The metabolic component of the Henderson–Hasselbalch equation
  • ~95% of the total CO₂ content in blood

Measured in:

  • Serum/plasma (as total CO₂, mostly HCO₃⁻)
  • Arterial blood gas (ABG) as calculated bicarbonate

Bicarbonate is crucial in diagnosing:

  • Metabolic acidosis
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Respiratory compensation
  • Renal tubular disorders
  • Diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Shock & critical illness

Physiological Role

1. Buffering System (Primary Role)

Part of the CO₂ + H₂O ↔ H₂CO₃ ↔ H⁺ + HCO₃⁻ system.

2. Kidney Regulation

  • Reabsorbed in proximal tubule
  • New bicarbonate synthesized in distal nephron
  • Excretion of acids as NH₄⁺ and H₂PO₄⁻

3. Lung Compensation

CO₂ exhalation influences pH and bicarbonate equilibrium.

Clinical Significance

Low Bicarbonate (Metabolic Acidosis)

Seen in:

  • DKA
  • Lactic acidosis
  • Renal failure
  • Renal tubular acidosis
  • Diarrhea (bicarbonate loss)
  • Toxins (methanol, ethylene glycol, salicylates)
  • Shock, sepsis

Severity:

  • Mild: 18–22 mEq/L
  • Moderate: 10–18 mEq/L
  • Severe: < 10 mEq/L

High Bicarbonate (Metabolic Alkalosis)

Seen in:

  • Vomiting / gastric suction (acid loss)
  • Diuretics
  • Hyperaldosteronism
  • Cushing syndrome
  • Hypokalemia
  • Excess bicarbonate intake

Often >30 mEq/L.

Reference Intervals

(Tietz 8E + ABG guidelines + Mayo/ARUP)

Serum Bicarbonate (Total CO₂)

  • 22 – 28 mEq/L (mmol/L) = normal
  • Children similar
  • Critical: < 10 or > 40 mEq/L

Arterial Bicarbonate (ABG)

  • 22 – 26 mEq/L

Total CO₂ in chemistry = HCO₃⁻ (~95%) + dissolved CO₂ (~5%).

Unit Meanings

UnitMeaning
mmol/Lmillimole per liter
mEq/Lmilliequivalent per liter
µmol/Lmicromole per liter
mg/Lmilligram per liter
mg/dL / mg%milligram per deciliter
mg/100mLmg%
µg/mLmicrogram per milliliter

Diagnostic Uses

1. Acid–Base Disorders

  • Metabolic acidosis
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Compensation assessment
    Use with arterial blood gases, anion gap, pH, pCO₂.

2. DKA Monitoring

Bicarbonate <18 mEq/L → metabolic acidosis.
<10 mEq/L → severe DKA.

3. Renal Tubular Acidosis

  • Type 1 (distal): low HCO₃⁻, high urine pH
  • Type 2 (proximal): low HCO₃⁻, normal anion gap
  • Type 4: hyperkalemia + low bicarbonate

4. Critical Care

Low HCO₃⁻ in sepsis, shock, multi-organ failure.

5. Lung/Kidney Compensation

Critical to interpret mixed acid–base disorders.

Analytical Notes

  • Measured by automated chemistry analyzers (total CO₂).
  • ABG bicarbonate is calculated, not directly measured.
  • Delayed sample processing → underestimated bicarbonate (CO₂ escapes).
  • Avoid exposure of tubes to air.
  • Hemolysis minimal impact.

Clinical Pearls

  • Serum total CO₂ ≈ bicarbonate level in most cases.
  • Always interpret bicarbonate with:
    • pH
    • pCO₂
    • Anion gap
    • Clinical context
  • In DKA, β-hydroxybutyrate correlates better with severity than HCO₃⁻ - but HCO₃⁻ is essential for acid–base assessment.
  • Low HCO₃⁻ with normal pH → mixed disorders.
  • High bicarbonate + low chloride → suggests metabolic alkalosis.

Interesting Fact

Bicarbonate accounts for ~90% of CO₂ transport in the blood, acting as the body's most powerful natural buffer system - essential for life.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Acid-Base Balance.
  2. IFCC Acid-Base Standardization.
  3. ADA/ISPAD DKA Guidelines.
  4. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Bicarbonate (CO₂).
  5. ARUP Consult - Acid–Base Disorder Interpretation.
  6. MedlinePlus / NIH - Bicarbonate Test.
  7. ABG & Critical Care Texts - Henderson–Hasselbalch Physiology.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

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