Board Prep Shortcut
pH and PaCO₂ move opposite directions in respiratory disorders. pH and HCO₃ move the same direction in metabolic disorders.
Arterial blood gas interpretation is one of the most important skills for respiratory therapists. Whether you are preparing for clinicals, studying for the TMC, or reviewing for the CSE, this guide walks you through a systematic process for interpreting any ABG.
Many students try to interpret ABGs by memorizing isolated patterns. Experienced respiratory therapists use a repeatable sequence that reduces guessing and helps connect the numbers to the patient.
Start by deciding whether the blood is acidotic, alkalotic, or normal. Do this before looking at PaCO₂ or HCO₃.
| pH Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Less than 7.35 | Acidosis / acidemia |
| 7.35–7.45 | Normal pH range |
| Greater than 7.45 | Alkalosis / alkalemia |
After you know the pH direction, compare it to PaCO₂ and HCO₃. The value that matches the pH problem identifies the primary disorder.
| Pattern | How to Recognize It | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Respiratory acidosis | pH low and PaCO₂ high | pH 7.28, PaCO₂ 60 |
| Respiratory alkalosis | pH high and PaCO₂ low | pH 7.50, PaCO₂ 28 |
| Metabolic acidosis | pH low and HCO₃ low | pH 7.25, HCO₃ 16 |
| Metabolic alkalosis | pH high and HCO₃ high | pH 7.49, HCO₃ 34 |
pH and PaCO₂ move opposite directions in respiratory disorders. pH and HCO₃ move the same direction in metabolic disorders.
Compensation occurs when the body attempts to bring the pH back toward normal. The lungs compensate for metabolic disorders, and the kidneys compensate for respiratory disorders.
| Example | Interpretation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| pH 7.28, PaCO₂ 60, HCO₃ 24 | Respiratory acidosis with no compensation | HCO₃ is still normal. |
| pH 7.32, PaCO₂ 58, HCO₃ 30 | Partially compensated respiratory acidosis | HCO₃ is elevated, but pH remains acidotic. |
| pH 7.38, PaCO₂ 56, HCO₃ 32 | Fully compensated respiratory acidosis | Both PaCO₂ and HCO₃ are abnormal, but pH is back in range. |
Acid-base status and oxygenation are related, but they are not the same thing. After interpreting pH, PaCO₂, and HCO₃, assess PaO₂ separately.
| PaO₂ | Oxygenation Interpretation |
|---|---|
| 80–100 mmHg | Normal oxygenation |
| 60–79 mmHg | Mild hypoxemia |
| 40–59 mmHg | Moderate hypoxemia |
| Less than 40 mmHg | Severe hypoxemia |
Once each step is complete, combine the findings into one complete interpretation.
Partially compensated respiratory acidosis with mild hypoxemia.
PulmoLearn includes interactive respiratory therapy lessons, disease modules, clinical reasoning activities, ABG review, oxygen therapy, pulmonary assessment, mechanical ventilation, and board preparation.