Interpreting arterial blood gas (ABG) could be initially challenging for medical students / House Officers. It is important to master ABG interpretation for management of patients’ acute conditions.
Remember the normal range for ABG parameters
- pH: 7.35-7.45
- PaO2: 80-100 mmHg
- PaCO2: 35-45 mmHg
- HCO3-: 22-26 mmol/L
- Base Excess (BE): -2 to +2
- SaO2: 95-100%
Examples of what base excess (BE) tells us:
- BE +4: Metabolic alkalosis // compensated respiratory acidosis
- BE -4: Metabolic acidosis // compensated respiratory alkalosis
Step 1: Evaluate pH
- Acidaemia: Acidosis is present
- Alkalaemia: Alkalosis is present
- Normal pH: Either no acid-base issue or full compensation
Step 2: Assess respiratory (PaCO2) & metabolic (HCO3-) components
- ↑ PaCO2: Respiratory acidosis
- ↓ PaCO2: Respiratory alkalosis
- ↓ HCO3-: Metabolic acidosis
- ↑ HCO3- : Metabolic alkalosis
Step 3: Check for Compensation – Is the body trying to correct the imbalance?
- Uncompensated: pH abnormal + no compensatory change in PaCO2/HCO3
- Partially compensated: pH still abnormal but compensatory mechanism is active
- Fully compensated: pH normal + PaCO2/HCO3 altered to compensate
Some equations related to compensation:
☘️ Winter's Formula – Expected PaCO2 in metabolic acidosis = (1.5 x HCO3-) + (8±2)
☘️ Point Seven Plus Twenty Rule – Expected PaCO2 in metabolic alkalosis = (0.7 x HCO3-) + (20±5)
☘️ 1-2-4-5 Rule – Expected HCO3- changes based on acute vs. chronic respiratory acidosis/alkalosis
Step 4: Evaluate PaO2 for oxygenation status
- Type 1 respiratory failure: PaO2 <60 mmHg + normal/low PaCO2
- Type 2 respiratory failure: hypoxaemia + hypercapnia (PaCO2 >45 mmHg)
Step 5: Final impression
- Once all elements are assessed, define the overall disorder (e.g., partially compensated metabolic acidosis).

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