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ABG Disorder Guide

Respiratory Alkalosis Explained

Respiratory alkalosis occurs when ventilation is excessive and carbon dioxide is blown off faster than the body produces it. For respiratory therapy students, the key ABG pattern is a high pH with a low PaCO₂.

Category
ABG Interpretation
Primary Pattern
High pH + Low PaCO₂
Audience
RT Students + Board Prep
Core Concept

What Is Respiratory Alkalosis?

Respiratory alkalosis is an acid-base disorder caused by decreased carbon dioxide in the blood. Since carbon dioxide acts as an acid in the blood, removing too much CO₂ makes the blood more alkaline.

Main problem:
Too much ventilation compared with CO₂ production.
ABG clue:
pH is high and PaCO₂ is low.
Clinical clue:
The patient is often tachypneic, anxious, in pain, hypoxemic, febrile, or overventilated.
RT question:
Why is the patient hyperventilating?

Respiratory Alkalosis ABG Pattern

The classic respiratory alkalosis pattern is a pH above 7.45 with a PaCO₂ below 35 mmHg.

pH7.52
PaCO₂28
HCO₃24
PaO₂86
ValueFindingMeaning
pH 7.52HighAlkalemia is present.
PaCO₂ 28LowThe respiratory system is causing alkalosis by removing too much CO₂.
HCO₃ 24NormalNo metabolic compensation is present in this example.
PaO₂ 86NormalOxygenation is normal in this example.

Memory Tip

For respiratory disorders, pH and PaCO₂ move in opposite directions. In respiratory alkalosis, pH goes up while PaCO₂ goes down.

Common Causes of Respiratory Alkalosis

Respiratory alkalosis usually means the patient is breathing faster or deeper than needed for current CO₂ production. The cause may be respiratory, neurologic, metabolic, medication-related, or mechanical.

CauseWhy PaCO₂ FallsRT Consideration
Anxiety or panicHyperventilation blows off CO₂.Assess severity and rule out hypoxemia or other causes before assuming anxiety.
PainPain can increase respiratory rate and depth.Treat the underlying trigger while monitoring ventilation.
HypoxemiaLow oxygen stimulates increased ventilation.Correct oxygenation and identify the reason for low PaO₂ or SpO₂.
Pulmonary embolismDead space and hypoxemia may trigger tachypnea.Sudden dyspnea, chest pain, and low PaO₂ should raise concern.
Sepsis or feverIncreased metabolic demand can drive tachypnea.Look for infection signs and worsening clinical status.
Excessive mechanical ventilationSet minute ventilation may be too high.Evaluate respiratory rate, tidal volume, minute ventilation, and ABG trend.

Clinical Clues

Respiratory alkalosis is not diagnosed by symptoms alone, but clinical presentation helps explain why the patient is hyperventilating.

Breathing pattern
Tachypnea, deep breathing, visible anxiety, or increased work of breathing.
Patient symptoms
Lightheadedness, tingling, chest tightness, palpitations, or dizziness may occur.
Do not miss
Hypoxemia, pulmonary embolism, sepsis, CNS injury, or ventilator over-assistance.

Compensation in Respiratory Alkalosis

The kidneys compensate for chronic respiratory alkalosis by lowering bicarbonate. Compensation takes time, so acute respiratory alkalosis may show a normal HCO₃.

PatternABG ExampleInterpretation
No compensationpH 7.52 / PaCO₂ 28 / HCO₃ 24Uncompensated respiratory alkalosis.
Partial compensationpH 7.48 / PaCO₂ 28 / HCO₃ 20Partially compensated respiratory alkalosis.
Full compensationpH 7.41 / PaCO₂ 30 / HCO₃ 19Fully compensated respiratory alkalosis.

Board Prep Pearl

If the pH is still alkalotic and HCO₃ has moved downward, compensation is partial. If pH has returned to normal while PaCO₂ and HCO₃ are both abnormal, compensation is complete.

Respiratory Therapist Priorities

The RT priority is not simply to label the ABG. The priority is to identify why the patient is hyperventilating and whether oxygenation, ventilation, or ventilator settings need intervention.

Assess oxygenation
Check SpO₂, PaO₂, oxygen device, and patient response.
Assess ventilation
Review RR, tidal volume, minute ventilation, PaCO₂ trend, and patient effort.
Look for triggers
Pain, anxiety, fever, sepsis, PE, hypoxemia, neurologic injury, or ventilator over-support.
Escalate when needed
Sudden dyspnea, chest pain, altered mental status, or worsening hypoxemia requires urgent evaluation.

Respiratory Alkalosis Examples

ScenarioABGLikely Interpretation
An anxious patient breathing rapidly after a procedurepH 7.51 / PaCO₂ 29 / HCO₃ 23 / PaO₂ 92Uncompensated respiratory alkalosis with normal oxygenation.
Patient with suspected pulmonary embolism and sudden dyspneapH 7.49 / PaCO₂ 30 / HCO₃ 22 / PaO₂ 58Uncompensated respiratory alkalosis with moderate hypoxemia.
Ventilated patient with excessive minute ventilationpH 7.47 / PaCO₂ 27 / HCO₃ 19 / PaO₂ 98Partially compensated respiratory alkalosis with normal oxygenation.

Common Student Mistakes

Calling every fast breather anxious
Tachypnea can be caused by hypoxemia, PE, sepsis, pain, or neurologic changes.
Ignoring oxygenation
Respiratory alkalosis can occur with significant hypoxemia.
Missing ventilator over-support
On a ventilator, low PaCO₂ may reflect excessive minute ventilation.
Forgetting compensation
A low HCO₃ may be compensation for a chronic respiratory alkalosis, not a separate metabolic acidosis.

Practice Respiratory Alkalosis in a Clinical ABG Case

Use PulmoLearn’s free guided ABG cases to classify pH, identify the primary disorder, assess compensation, evaluate oxygenation, and build the final interpretation.