Calculators  ›  Acid-Base

Anion Gap

The first move when you see a metabolic acidosis on an ABG. A high anion gap narrows the differential to a short list of dangerous causes (DKA, lactic acidosis, salicylate, uremia).

Optional — corrects the gap if albumin is low.

Anion gap
— mEq/L
Enter Na, Cl, and HCO₃ to calculate.

Formula

Anion gap  =  Na  −  (Cl  +  HCO₃)
Normal  =  8–12 mEq/L (without potassium)
Albumin-corrected gap  =  Anion gap  +  2.5 × (4 − albumin)

The anion gap reflects the unmeasured anions in serum. When a strong acid like ketoacid or lactate accumulates, it consumes bicarbonate and is replaced in the gap by an unmeasured anion — so HCO₃ drops, Cl stays the same, and the gap rises.

MUDPILES — high-gap differential

  • Methanol
  • Uremia (kidney failure)
  • DKA — diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Propylene glycol
  • INH / iron
  • Lactic acidosis (sepsis, ischemia)
  • Ethylene glycol
  • Salicylates

NCLEX-favorite high-gap causes: DKA, lactic acidosis (sepsis or shock), and salicylate toxicity (look for tinnitus + tachypnea).

Normal-gap acidosis differential

Mnemonic HARDASS: Hyperalimentation, Addison's, Renal tubular acidosis, Diarrhea, Acetazolamide, Spironolactone, Saline (0.9% can cause hyperchloremic acidosis at large volumes).

NCLEX trap: A patient with a serum Na 132, Cl 98, HCO₃ 14 has an anion gap of 20 — high. The most common cause in a hospitalized patient is lactic acidosis from sepsis or shock. Fluids and source control are the priority, not bicarbonate replacement.

Worked example

Na 138, Cl 100, HCO₃ 12, albumin 2.5.

  1. Raw gap: 138 − (100 + 12) = 26 mEq/L → high.
  2. Albumin-corrected: 26 + 2.5 × (4 − 2.5) = 26 + 3.75 = 29.75 → even higher than the raw value suggested.
  3. Differential: MUDPILES. Check lactate, ketones, salicylate level, BUN.

Drill acid-base in NCLEX context

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