Master Arterial Blood Gas Analysis — GCC Nursing Reference (DHA • SCHS • QCHP)
Enter the patient's arterial blood gas values. All fields optional but more data gives fuller interpretation.
| Parameter | Normal Range | Acidotic | Alkalotic |
|---|---|---|---|
| pH | 7.35 – 7.45 | <7.35 | >7.45 |
| PaCO₂ | 35 – 45 mmHg | >45 (resp.) | <35 (resp.) |
| HCO₃¯ | 22 – 26 mEq/L | <22 (met.) | >26 (met.) |
| PaO₂ | 80 – 100 mmHg | <80 = hypoxaemia | |
| SaO₂ | >95% | <90% = significant | |
| A-a Gradient | <10–15 mmHg | Age-adjusted = age/4 + 4 | |
| Anion Gap | 8 – 12 mEq/L | >12 = elevated AG | |
Use expected compensation formulas. If measured value ≠ expected → mixed disorder.
| Disorder | Primary Change | Expected Compensation | Degree |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory Acidosis (acute) | PaCO₂ ↑ | HCO₃ +1 per 10 mmHg ↑ CO₂ | Minutes |
| Respiratory Acidosis (chronic) | PaCO₂ ↑ | HCO₃ +3.5 per 10 mmHg ↑ CO₂ | Days |
| Respiratory Alkalosis (acute) | PaCO₂ ↓ | HCO₃ −2 per 10 mmHg ↓ CO₂ | Minutes |
| Respiratory Alkalosis (chronic) | PaCO₂ ↓ | HCO₃ −5 per 10 mmHg ↓ CO₂ | Days |
| Metabolic Acidosis | HCO₃ ↓ | PaCO₂ = (1.5 × HCO₃) + 8 ±2 | Hours |
| Metabolic Alkalosis | HCO₃ ↑ | PaCO₂ = (0.7 × HCO₃) + 21 ±2 | Hours |
Chronic CO₂ retention with acute-on-chronic deterioration. Elevated HCO₃ reflects chronic compensation. Target SpO₂ 88–92% in known COPD (avoid over-oxygenation).
Acute respiratory depression. Normal HCO₃ (no compensation yet). Requires airway management and naloxone. A-a gradient normal (pure hypoventilation).
Respiratory muscle weakness causes CO₂ retention. Monitor NIF (negative inspiratory force) — intubate if NIF <–25 cmH₂O. Mildly elevated HCO₃ if subacute.
Hypoxia-driven hyperventilation. Elevated A-a gradient. Normal or low PaO₂ despite supplemental O₂ suggests significant V/Q mismatch. Classic triad: tachycardia, pleuritic pain, dyspnoea.
Normal A-a gradient. PaO₂ may be elevated. Symptoms: perioral tingling, carpopedal spasm, light-headedness. Treat with reassurance and controlled breathing. Exclude organic causes first.
Progesterone drives hyperventilation in pregnancy (normal). High altitude: hypoxic drive. Liver failure: hyperammonaemia stimulates respiratory centre. All show low PaCO₂ with compensatory HCO₃ fall.
Kussmaul breathing (compensatory hyperventilation). Very high AG. Check glucose, ketones, urine ketones. Treat with IV fluids, insulin infusion, potassium replacement. K⁺ often low at presentation.
Tissue hypoperfusion → anaerobic metabolism. High AG. Lactate >4 mmol/L with sepsis = septic shock. Aggressive fluid resuscitation and antibiotics. Monitor lactate clearance.
Accumulation of sulphates, phosphates, urates. Moderate AG elevation. Often accompanied by hyperkalemia, fluid overload. Bicarbonate supplementation and dialysis may be needed.
Classic mixed picture: primary respiratory alkalosis (salicylate stimulates brainstem) + metabolic acidosis. pH may appear normal despite severe toxicity. Toxic salicylate level >300 mg/L. Treat: IV NaHCO₃, urinary alkalinisation.
GI tract loses HCO₃. Compensatory hyperchloraemia (hyperchloraemic acidosis). Normal AG. Common in diarrhoeal illness, ileostomy, small bowel fistula. Replace HCO₃ losses with IV/oral rehydration.
Impaired renal acid excretion or HCO₃ reabsorption. Normal AG. Urinary anion gap positive in distal RTA (type 1) and type 4; negative in type 2 (proximal). Treat underlying cause + HCO₃ supplements.
Loss of HCl from stomach. Hypochloraemia, hypokalaemia. Kidneys retain HCO₃ to preserve Cl⁻. Treat with IV NaCl (chloride-responsive alkalosis) + K⁺ replacement.
Volume depletion activates RAAS → Na⁺/H⁺ exchange → HCO₃ retention. Hypokalaemia drives H⁺ into cells (extracellular alkalosis). Replace K⁺, consider spironolactone.
Conn's: excess aldosterone drives H⁺ excretion. Post-hypercapnia: after correction of chronic CO₂ retention the kidneys still hold HCO₃. Chloride-resistant alkalosis. Treat underlying cause.
pH deceptively normal. High PaCO₂ + very high HCO₃. Both drive each other. Diuretics for HF cause alkalosis on top of CO₂ retention. Delta-Delta >2.
Classic sepsis pattern. pH near-normal masks severity. PaCO₂ lower than expected for metabolic acidosis → concurrent respiratory alkalosis. High lactate confirms tissue hypoperfusion.
Combined respiratory acidosis (hypoventilation) + metabolic acidosis (lactic/ischaemic). Maximally deranged. Ventilation corrects CO₂; perfusion/time corrects lactate. Targeted Temperature Management if ROSC achieved.
Read each scenario, review the ABG values, form your interpretation, then reveal the answer.
A 68-year-old male with known COPD presents with 3 days of increasing breathlessness and productive cough. He is on home oxygen 2 L/min. RR 28, confused, using accessory muscles.
Action: NIV (BiPAP) indicated. Target SpO₂ 88–92%. Nebulisers, steroids, antibiotics. Avoid high-flow O₂. Alert medical team urgently — GCS change is critical.
A 22-year-old female with type 1 diabetes presents with 2 days of vomiting, polyuria and abdominal pain. RR 32 deep. BSL 28 mmol/L. Urine ketones 3+.
Action: DKA protocol — IV 0.9% NaCl resuscitation, fixed-rate insulin infusion 0.1 U/kg/hr, K⁺ replacement (hold insulin if K⁺ <3.5), hourly glucose monitoring. Do NOT give NaHCO₃ unless pH <6.9.
A 54-year-old male is 2 hours post general anaesthesia for laparotomy. He is drowsy (opioid PCA), SpO₂ 90% on 4 L/min O₂. RR 8 shallow.
Action: Stimulate patient, encourage deep breathing. Reduce/hold PCA. Consider naloxone 0.1–0.4 mg IV titrated. Elevate head of bed. Notify anaesthetist/intensivist if no improvement. Prepare for airway support.
A 38-year-old woman 5 days post-Caesarean section develops sudden onset pleuritic chest pain and breathlessness. HR 122, RR 26, BP 105/70, SpO₂ 91% on room air.
Action: High-flow O₂. Urgent CTPA or V/Q scan. Anticoagulation (LMWH) unless contraindicated. Echo to assess RV strain. Consider thrombolysis if haemodynamically unstable.
A 72-year-old diabetic male presents with 2-day history of fever, dysuria, confusion. T 39.8°C, HR 118, BP 82/50, RR 30, SpO₂ 94% on 10 L/min O₂.
Action: Sepsis 6 bundle immediately. 30 mL/kg IV crystalloid bolus. Blood cultures x2 then broad-spectrum antibiotics within 1 hour. Vasopressors if MAP <65. Lactate remeasure at 2 hours. ICU referral.
A 19-year-old female is found unresponsive after reportedly taking "lots of aspirin." Tinnitus reported. RR 32, T 38.5°C, diaphoretic.
Action: Check salicylate level (toxic >300 mg/L), paracetamol, glucose. IV NaHCO₃ to alkalinise urine (pH 7.5–8) → traps salicylate in urine. Haemodialysis if level >700 mg/L, renal failure, or deteriorating. Do NOT intubate unless necessary (loses resp. alkalosis compensation).
A 24-year-old nurse presents to A&E with tingling in hands/feet, carpopedal spasm. She reports a panic attack during a busy shift. SpO₂ 100% on room air. Exam otherwise normal.
Action: Reassurance, controlled breathing (not paper bag in hospital setting — risk of hypoxia). Treat as anxiety attack. Exclude organic causes (PE, metabolic disorder). Tetany resolves with normalisation of pH.
A 35-year-old hiker arrives at a GCC emergency room after trekking at high altitude in Nepal (4,500 m). Headache, nausea, ataxia, confusion (HACE suspected).
Action: Immediate descent (most important). High-flow O₂ 10–15 L/min. Dexamethasone 8 mg then 4 mg q6h (reduces cerebral oedema). Consider Gamow bag if descent delayed. Acetazolamide 250 mg BD for AMS prophylaxis.
A 45-year-old male with hepatic encephalopathy from acute liver failure. GCS 12, jaundiced. Ammonia 180 µmol/L. On lactulose.
Action: Monitor ammonia closely. Lactulose titration (target 2–3 soft stools/day). Rifaximin. Nutritional support. Monitor for progression to lactic acidosis (poor prognosis). Early liver transplant evaluation if appropriate.
A 58-year-old male had a witnessed VF arrest. CPR for 22 minutes. ROSC achieved. Now on mechanical ventilation. Temperature 35°C (post-arrest protocol). Remains comatose.
Action: Optimise ventilation to normalise PaCO₂ 35–45 (avoid hypocapnia post-arrest). Targeted Temperature Management 34–36°C for 24 hr. Serial lactates — clearance >10%/2 hr is favourable. Coronary angiography if STEMI. NaHCO₃ only if pH <7.0 persists. ICU care, neuroprognostication at 72 hr.
Respiratory → Opposite:
In respiratory disorders, pH and PaCO₂ move in opposite directions.
(Acidosis: pH ↓, PaCO₂ ↑ | Alkalosis: pH ↑, PaCO₂ ↓)
Metabolic → Equal:
In metabolic disorders, pH and HCO₃ move in the same direction.
(Acidosis: pH ↓, HCO₃ ↓ | Alkalosis: pH ↑, HCO₃ ↑)
Methanol / Metformin (rare)
Uraemia (renal failure)
Diabetic ketoacidosis
Propylene glycol / Paracetamol OD
Isoniazid (INH) / Iron overdose
Lactic acidosis (sepsis, shock, ischaemia)
Ethylene glycol (antifreeze)
Salicylates (aspirin overdose)
Hyperalimentation (TPN)
Acetazolamide / Addison's disease
Renal tubular acidosis (RTA type 1, 2, 4)
Diarrhoea (GI HCO₃ loss)
Ureteroenterostomy / Urinary diversion
Pancreatic fistula
Saline excess (dilutional acidosis)
| Disorder | Formula | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Met. Acidosis | PaCO₂ = (1.5 × HCO₃) + 8 ±2 | Winter's formula; Kussmaul breathing |
| Met. Alkalosis | PaCO₂ = (0.7 × HCO₃) + 21 ±2 | Hypoventilation; limited (hypoxia limits) |
| Resp. Acid. (acute) | ΔHCO₃ = +1 per ↑10 PaCO₂ | Buffering, minutes |
| Resp. Acid. (chronic) | ΔHCO₃ = +3.5 per ↑10 PaCO₂ | Renal, 3–5 days |
| Resp. Alk. (acute) | ΔHCO₃ = −2 per ↓10 PaCO₂ | Buffering, minutes |
| Resp. Alk. (chronic) | ΔHCO₃ = −5 per ↓10 PaCO₂ | Renal, 3–5 days |
Note: PaO₂ must be from ABG, not SpO₂. FiO₂ must be known accurately. P/F ratio requires PEEP ≥5 cmH₂O for ARDS criteria (Berlin 2012).
● pH <7.25 or >7.60 (any cause)
● PaCO₂ >60 with altered consciousness
● PaO₂ <60 despite supplemental O₂
● SaO₂ <88% not responding to O₂
● Lactate >4 mmol/L
● Suspected mixed disorder
● Any ABG requiring NIV / intubation decision
● New ARDS pattern (P/F <300)
● Post-arrest or haemodynamic instability
● Document FiO₂ and O₂ delivery device with every ABG
● Record time of sample, patient position, temperature
● State your interpretation: e.g. "Acute-on-chronic respiratory acidosis"
● Note action taken and doctor notified (name + time)
● Compare to previous ABG trends where available
● Log in DHA nursing notes: ABG parameters + clinical response
● For ICU patients: integrate with ventilator settings documentation
● QCHP examinations: practice 6-step approach for OSCEs
| Finding | A-a Normal | A-a Elevated |
|---|---|---|
| Hypoxia cause | Hypoventilation, High altitude | V/Q mismatch, shunt, diffusion defect |
| Common conditions | Opioids, NMJ disease, COPD (pure hypovent.) | PE, pneumonia, pulmonary oedema, ARDS, ILD |
| Formula (room air) | PAO₂ = (0.21 × 713) − (PaCO₂ / 0.8) → A-a = PAO₂ − PaO₂ | |
| Age-adjusted normal | (Age ÷ 4) + 4 mmHg | |