Examination of the mixing hypothesis as an explanation for elevated urinary CO2 tensions

Abstract
To examine the adequacy of the mixing hypothesis as an explanation for high urinary CO2 tensions, urine-plasma pCO2 gradients were examined in normal subjects receiving NaHCO3 infusions in whom urinary buffer concentration was minimized by solute and water diuresis, antecedent carbohydrate diet and glucose infusions. U-P gradients varying from 23 to 78 mm Hg were generated in the face of minimal urinary buffer concentrations which varied from 1.40 to 2.95 mEq/l. Only by the most extreme assumptions, i. e. maximal heterogeneity and no back-diffusion of CO2, could the mixing hypothesis account for the observed gradients. Since these assumptions were highly improbable, it was concluded that the mixing hypothesis is not a tenable explanation of the high CO2 tension of alkaline urine.

This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit: