Free ABG Practice Case 4

Patient 4

A 19-year-old patient with type 1 diabetes arrives with abdominal pain, nausea, fruity breath, and deep rapid breathing. Blood glucose is very elevated and dehydration is suspected.

Category
ABG Interpretation Practice
Estimated Time
5–7 minutes
Level
Beginner / Intermediate
Step 1Step 2Step 3Step 4Step 5Step 6Step 7Step 8Step 9

Learning Objectives

By the end of this case, learners should be able to interpret the ABG in a complete, clinically useful format.

1. Classify pH
Determine whether the patient is acidotic, alkalotic, or normal.
2. Identify the primary pattern
Decide whether the disorder is respiratory, metabolic, or absent.
3. Assess compensation
Determine whether compensation is absent, partial, complete, or not applicable.
4. Assess oxygenation
Use PaO₂ to classify oxygenation status.
Patient Snapshot

Clinical Picture

A 19-year-old patient with type 1 diabetes arrives with abdominal pain, nausea, fruity breath, and deep rapid breathing. Blood glucose is very elevated and dehydration is suspected.

RR
30/min, deep
SpO₂
99% RA
HR
126/min
BP
96/58
Appearance
Ill, dry mucous membranes
Breath Sounds
Clear; Kussmaul pattern

ABG Results

pH7.25
PaCO₂28
HCO₃12
PaO₂96
Step 1

Determine the pH Status

The pH is 7.25. How should it be classified?

Step 2

Identify the Primary Pattern

Compare the pH with PaCO₂ and HCO₃. Which component explains the pH pattern?

pH 7.25  |  PaCO₂ 28  |  HCO₃ 12
Step 3

Evaluate Compensation

Is the opposite system trying to compensate for the primary disorder?

pH 7.25  |  PaCO₂ 28  |  HCO₃ 12  |  PaO₂ 96
Step 4

Assess Oxygenation

The PaO₂ is 96 mm Hg. How would you classify oxygenation?

Reference: Severe 0–39 · Moderate 40–59 · Mild 60–79 · Normal 80–100 mm Hg
Step 5

Build the Complete Interpretation

Select the best final ABG interpretation.

Clinical Connection

Final interpretation: Partially Compensated Metabolic Acidosis with Normal Oxygenation

The primary issue is metabolic acid buildup or bicarbonate loss.
The patient is compensating by hyperventilating to blow off CO₂.
Oxygenation is normal, even though the patient looks very sick.

Possible Clinical Causes

Diabetic ketoacidosis
Lactic acidosis
Renal failure
Severe diarrhea with bicarbonate loss
Toxin ingestion

RT Priority

Support airway and breathing, monitor work of breathing, and recognize that Kussmaul respirations are compensation—not the primary problem.

Board Pearl

In metabolic acidosis, the lungs compensate by decreasing PaCO₂ through increased ventilation.

Case Complete

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