• Critical care medicine · Nov 1998

    Comparative Study

    Anion gap and hypoalbuminemia.

    • J Figge, A Jabor, A Kazda, and V Fencl.
    • Department of Medicine, St. Peter's Hospital, State University of New York, Albany, USA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1998 Nov 1; 26 (11): 1807-10.

    ObjectivesTo show how hypoalbuminemia lowers the anion gap, which can mask a significant gap acidosis; and to derive a correction factor for it.DesignObservational study.SettingIntensive care unit in a university-affiliated hospital.SubjectsNine normal subjects and 152 critically ill patients (265 measurements).InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsArterial blood samples analyzed for pH, PCO2, and concentrations of plasma electrolytes and proteins. Marked hypoalbuminemia was common among the critically ill patients: 49% of them had serum albumin concentration of <20 g/L. Each g/L decrease in serum albumin caused the observed anion gap to underestimate the total concentration of gap anions by 0.25 mEq/L (r2 = .94).ConclusionsThe observed anion gap can be adjusted for the effect of abnormal serum albumin concentrations as follows: adjusted anion gap = observed anion gap + 0.25 x ([normal albumin] [observed albumin]), where albumin concentrations are in g/L; if given in g/dL, the factor is 2.5. This adjustment returns the anion gap to the familiar scale of values that apply when albumin concentration is normal.

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