CaO₂ Explained
CaO₂, or arterial oxygen content, estimates how much oxygen is carried in arterial blood. It helps respiratory therapy students understand why a patient can have a normal PaO₂ and SpO₂ but still have inadequate oxygen delivery when hemoglobin is low.
What Is CaO₂?
CaO₂ is the total amount of oxygen contained in arterial blood. Most oxygen is carried attached to hemoglobin, while a very small amount is dissolved in plasma and reflected by PaO₂.
Pressure of dissolved oxygen in plasma.
Percent of hemoglobin binding sites carrying oxygen.
The main oxygen-carrying molecule in blood.
Total oxygen content in arterial blood.
CaO₂ Formula
Hb = hemoglobin in g/dL
SaO₂ = arterial oxygen saturation as a decimal
PaO₂ = arterial oxygen pressure in mmHg
The first part of the formula represents oxygen bound to hemoglobin. The second part represents dissolved oxygen. The hemoglobin-bound portion is much larger.
What Each Part Means
| Formula Component | Meaning | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1.34 | Approximate mL of oxygen carried per gram of hemoglobin. | Shows why hemoglobin is central to oxygen content. |
| Hb | Hemoglobin concentration. | Low Hb can severely reduce oxygen content. |
| SaO₂ | Hemoglobin saturation. | Shows how full the hemoglobin binding sites are. |
| 0.003 × PaO₂ | Dissolved oxygen. | Small contribution compared with hemoglobin-bound oxygen. |
Worked Examples
Hb 15 g/dL, SaO₂ 98%, PaO₂ 95
CaO₂ ≈ (1.34 × 15 × 0.98) + (0.003 × 95)
CaO₂ ≈ 20.0 mL/dL
Hb 7 g/dL, SaO₂ 98%, PaO₂ 95
CaO₂ ≈ (1.34 × 7 × 0.98) + (0.003 × 95)
CaO₂ ≈ 9.5 mL/dL
Hb 15 g/dL, SaO₂ 88%, PaO₂ 55
CaO₂ ≈ (1.34 × 15 × 0.88) + (0.003 × 55)
CaO₂ ≈ 17.9 mL/dL
The anemic patient may have a normal PaO₂ but far less oxygen content than expected because there is less hemoglobin available to carry oxygen.
How Low Hemoglobin Can Cause Hypoxia Without Hypoxemia
Hypoxemia means low oxygen pressure in arterial blood, usually reflected by low PaO₂. Hypoxia means inadequate oxygen at the tissue level. A patient with severe anemia may have a normal PaO₂ because oxygen is dissolving into plasma normally, but their total oxygen content is low because there is not enough hemoglobin to carry oxygen.
| Patient Pattern | PaO₂ | Hemoglobin | Problem |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low PaO₂ with normal Hb | Low | Normal | Hypoxemia reducing oxygen loading. |
| Normal PaO₂ with low Hb | Normal | Low | Low oxygen content despite normal dissolved oxygen pressure. |
| Low PaO₂ and low Hb | Low | Low | Both oxygen loading and oxygen-carrying capacity are impaired. |
Connection to Oxygen Delivery
CaO₂ is one part of oxygen delivery. Even when CaO₂ is adequate, tissue oxygen delivery also depends on cardiac output.
This is why shock, low cardiac output, anemia, hypoxemia, and low saturation can all contribute to tissue hypoxia through different mechanisms.
Common Student Mistakes
In the formula, saturation must be entered as a decimal.
PaO₂ is dissolved oxygen pressure, not total oxygen content.
Hemoglobin is usually the largest determinant of CaO₂.
Oxygen content does not guarantee oxygen delivery if perfusion is poor.
Connect Oxygen Content to ABGs and Clinical Reasoning
Use PulmoLearn resources to connect PaO₂, SaO₂, hemoglobin, oxygen content, oxygen delivery, and real respiratory therapy decision-making.