Calculate the bicarbonate deficit to guide sodium bicarbonate replacement in severe metabolic acidosis. Enter your patient's values below for instant results with dosing guidance and clinical interpretation.
Enter body weight, measured bicarbonate, and target bicarbonate to calculate the replacement dose.
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How to calculate the bicarbonate deficit for replacement therapy.
The factor 0.5 represents the apparent volume of distribution of bicarbonate — approximately 50% of body weight. This means bicarbonate distributes through about half of total body water. Some sources use 0.4–0.6 depending on the severity of acidosis.
Each mEq of NaHCO₃ provides 1 mEq of bicarbonate. An 8.4% NaHCO₃ solution contains 1 mEq/mL. Give half the calculated deficit initially, recheck labs, and adjust. Never give the full amount at once — the body's buffering systems will regenerate some bicarbonate on their own.
Updates in real-time as you change values.
Why and when to replace bicarbonate in metabolic acidosis.
The bicarbonate deficit is the total amount of bicarbonate (in mEq) needed to raise the patient's serum bicarbonate from its current low level back to a target level. It accounts for the patient's body size and the volume through which bicarbonate distributes.
In severe metabolic acidosis (pH < 7.1), the body's compensatory mechanisms may be overwhelmed. Extreme acidosis impairs cardiac contractility, causes vasodilation, and reduces the effectiveness of vasopressors. Bicarbonate replacement can be life-saving in these situations — but only when used judiciously. Overcorrection causes its own problems, including hypokalemia and paradoxical CNS acidosis.
Normal values and clinical thresholds for replacement therapy.
| Parameter | Value | Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal HCO₃⁻ | 22 – 28 | mEq/L | Arterial blood gas or metabolic panel |
| Distribution Volume (Vd) | 0.5 | × body weight | May use 0.4–0.6 depending on severity |
| Replacement Threshold | pH < 7.1 | — | Or HCO₃⁻ < 8 mEq/L |
| NaHCO₃ 8.4% solution | 1 mEq/mL | mEq per mL | Standard concentration for IV use |
| Initial dose | ½ of deficit | mEq | Over 3–4 hours, then reassess |
Visual representation of the bicarbonate deficit. Changes as you update inputs.
Clinical guidance based on the severity of the deficit.
Clinical indications and contraindications for bicarbonate therapy.
Answers to common questions about bicarbonate deficit and replacement therapy.