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. 1990 Feb 1;68(3):175-82.
doi: 10.1007/BF01649081.

Ammonium and bicarbonate homeostasis in chronic liver disease

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Ammonium and bicarbonate homeostasis in chronic liver disease

D Häussinger et al. Klin Wochenschr. .

Abstract

Whereas traditionally in acid-base physiology one considers just two organs (lungs and kidneys) to be involved in the regulation of systemic acid-base homeostasis, recent developments indicate that also the liver must be viewed as an important organ for pH regulation. This is because urea synthesis is a quantitatively important bicarbonate-consuming process, which in turn underlies a feedback control by the acid-base status at least in vitro. Consequently, renal ammoniagenesis, generally accepted to be a direct bicarbonate-generating process, can be viewed as a pH-controlled ammonium homeostatic response. In view of the controversies regarding the roles of ureogenesis and renal ammoniagenesis in acid-base regulation, their relationships were studied in 28 patients with normal renal functions, but varying degrees of a well-compensated chronic liver disease. Progressive loss of urea cycle capacity (as determined by in vitro incubations of human liver tissue) was parallelled by increasing in vivo plasma bicarbonate levels (and metabolic alkalosis) and an increasing NH4+ excretion into the urine. Accordingly, renal ammoniagenesis rose with the extent of metabolic alkalosis. Neither hypokalemia, hyperaldosteronism, diuretic treatment, or volume contraction were present, and a satisfactory explanation for this unusual behavior of renal ammoniagenesis in terms of traditional acid-base physiology cannot be given. Here, it seems that renal ammoniagenesis is governed rather by the need to eliminate ammonia than by the acid-base status.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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