Bone Wizardry — COMLEX Review
Bite-sized chunks. Tap to expand. Learn one piece at a time.
Tap a type to see which segment breaks. Follow the flow left to right.
All RTAs cause the same lab pattern:
That's your starting point. If you see high Cl⁻ + low HCO₃⁻Bicarbonate — the body's main base/buffer. The kidneys normally reabsorb it to keep blood pH balanced. + normal anion gapA calculation: Na⁺ minus (Cl⁻ + HCO₃⁻). If elevated, think lactic acidosis, ketoacidosis, toxins. If normal = RTA or diarrhea. = think RTA.
Then use two questions to figure out which type:
Wait — two different "anion gaps"?
Yes. Don't mix them up. They measure completely different things:
Think of it this way: negative = kidney is trying hard (good kidney, problem elsewhere). Positive = kidney gave up (kidney itself is broken).
AldosteroneA hormone made by the adrenal glands. It tells the collecting duct to: (1) reabsorb Na⁺, (2) secrete K⁺, and (3) secrete H⁺. Without it, K⁺ and H⁺ get trapped in blood. deficiency or resistance. No aldosterone means the collecting ductThe final part of the nephron (kidney tube). Last chance to fine-tune urine — dump acid, dump potassium, concentrate urine. can't secrete K+ or H+.
The hyperkalemia itself makes things worse: high K+ suppresses NH3+ synthesisThe proximal tubule makes ammonia (NH3) to help carry acid out. NH3 grabs an H⁺ to become NH4⁺, which gets excreted in urine. High K⁺ blocks this process — so acid has no ride out. in the proximal tubuleThe first part of the nephron after the glomerulus. Reabsorbs ~65% of filtered water, sodium, and almost all bicarbonate. This is where Type 2 RTA breaks., which means less NH4+ excretionNH4⁺ (ammonium) is how the kidney dumps acid into urine. Less NH4⁺ = less acid removed = acidosis gets worse. It's a vicious cycle in Type 4. = less acid dumped.
| Feature | Type 4 |
|---|---|
| Serum K+ | HIGH |
| Urine pH | < 5.5 |
| Acidosis severity | Mild |
| Urine anion gap | Positive |
Common causes — and WHY they cause Type 4:
Treatment — and WHY each one works:
Alpha-intercalated cellsSpecial acid-pumping cells in the collecting duct. Their only job: grab H⁺ from blood and pump it into urine. In Type 1, these cells are broken. in the collecting duct can't secrete H+. Acid is trapped in the blood.
| Feature | Type 1 |
|---|---|
| Serum K+ | Low-normal |
| Urine pH | > 5.5 ALWAYS |
| Acidosis severity | Severe |
| Stones? | YES (calcium phosphate) |
| Bone effects | Demineralization, osteopenia |
Why stones?
Basic urine pH causes calcium phosphate precipitationWhen urine is too basic (alkaline), calcium and phosphate can't stay dissolved — they crystallize into stones. That's why only Type 1 (basic urine) gets stones.. Type 1 is the ONLY RTA with kidney stones.
Causes — and WHY:
Treatment — and WHY:
PCT cellsProximal Convoluted Tubule cells. The workhorses of the nephron — they reabsorb ~85% of filtered bicarbonate, plus glucose, amino acids, and phosphate. can't reabsorb HCO₃⁻. Base leaks into the urine early, but the collecting duct still works fine.
| Feature | Type 2 |
|---|---|
| Serum K+ | Low-normal |
| Urine pH | < 5.5 |
| Acidosis severity | Moderate |
| Stones? | No |
| Bone effects | Rickets/osteomalacia (Vit D-resistant) |
Key associations:
Fanconi syndromeThe proximal tubule loses its ability to reabsorb EVERYTHING — glucose, amino acids, phosphate, uric acid, AND bicarbonate all spill into urine. Like a broken shopping bag. (proximal tubule dysfunction loses everything — glucose, amino acids, phosphate, uric acid, HCO₃⁻). Also: acetazolamideA carbonic anhydrase inhibitor (used for glaucoma, altitude sickness). Blocks the enzyme that helps the proximal tubule reabsorb HCO₃⁻ — intentionally causes Type 2 RTA as a side effect. (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor).
Treatment — and WHY it's harder:
RTAs aren't super high-yield on COMLEX — maybe one diagnosis question. But if you know these four things, you'll get it right:
| Feature | Type 1 | Type 2 | Type 4 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Where? | Distal | Proximal | Collecting duct |
| What breaks? | H+ secretion | HCO₃⁻ reabsorption | Aldosterone |
| K+ | Low | Low | HIGH |
| Urine pH | > 5.5 | < 5.5 | < 5.5 |
| Urine AGUrine Anion Gap = (Na⁺ + K⁺ - Cl⁻) in urine. Positive = kidney can't dump acid. Negative = kidney IS dumping acid fine, problem is elsewhere. | PositiveCollecting duct is broken, can't make NH4⁺. Less NH4⁺ = less Cl⁻ carried out = positive gap. | NegativeCollecting duct works! Lots of NH4⁺ being made and excreted, bringing Cl⁻ with it = negative gap. Problem is upstream (proximal leak). | PositiveEven though the collecting duct structure is fine, high K⁺ blocks NH3 synthesis. Less NH4⁺ = less Cl⁻ = positive gap. |
| Stones? | Yes | No | No |
| Severity | Severe | Moderate | Mild |
| Treatment | Alkali | Alkali (high dose) | Fludrocortisone + furosemide |
Think through it:
Hyperkalemia + diabetes? That's the pattern.
Diabetes causes hyporeninemic hypoaldosteronismDiabetes damages the kidney cells that make renin. No renin = no angiotensin II = no signal to make aldosterone. Result: aldosterone is low, K⁺ and H⁺ build up. = no aldosterone = Type 4 RTA.