Oxygenation Concepts

5 Causes of Hypoxemia

Hypoxemia means low arterial oxygen, usually reflected by a low PaO₂. Respiratory therapy students should know the five major mechanisms: low inspired oxygen, hypoventilation, V/Q mismatch, diffusion limitation, and shunt.

Problem
Low PaO₂
Framework
5 mechanisms
Key skill
Match data to cause

The Five Mechanisms

When PaO₂ is low, ask what prevented oxygen from reaching arterial blood. Each mechanism has different clues and different responses to oxygen therapy.

1. Low inspired oxygen
Not enough oxygen is entering the alveoli.
2. Hypoventilation
Alveolar ventilation is reduced.
3. V/Q mismatch
Ventilation and perfusion are poorly matched.
4. Diffusion limitation
Oxygen has trouble crossing the membrane.
5. Shunt
Blood bypasses ventilated alveoli or alveoli are not ventilated.
RT question
Does oxygen help, and what do PaCO₂ and A-a gradient suggest?

1. Low Inspired Oxygen

Low inspired oxygen means the patient is not breathing enough oxygen into the alveoli. The lungs may be functioning normally, but the starting oxygen level is too low.

Examples
High altitude, oxygen supply issue, incorrect FiO₂ delivery.
A-a gradient
Usually normal because oxygen transfer may still be intact.
PaCO₂
May be normal unless another problem is present.
Response to oxygen
Usually improves with increased FiO₂.

2. Hypoventilation

Hypoventilation occurs when alveolar ventilation is too low. CO₂ rises, alveolar oxygen falls, and PaO₂ may drop.

Hypoventilation clue: Low PaO₂ + high PaCO₂
Examples
Opioid overdose, neuromuscular weakness, fatigue, severe obesity hypoventilation.
A-a gradient
Often normal or not significantly widened.
PaCO₂
Typically elevated.
RT priority
Support ventilation, not just oxygenation.

3. V/Q Mismatch

V/Q mismatch is one of the most common causes of hypoxemia. Some lung units receive too little ventilation compared with perfusion, while others may receive ventilation without enough perfusion.

Examples
COPD, asthma, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism.
A-a gradient
Usually elevated.
Response to oxygen
Often improves with supplemental oxygen.
Board clue
Low V/Q behaves like shunt tendency; high V/Q behaves like dead space tendency.

4. Diffusion Limitation

Diffusion limitation occurs when oxygen has difficulty crossing the alveolar-capillary membrane. It is often worse with exertion because blood moves through pulmonary capillaries faster, leaving less time for gas exchange.

Examples
Interstitial lung disease, pulmonary fibrosis, thickened alveolar-capillary membrane.
A-a gradient
Usually elevated.
DLCO
Often reduced in diffusion impairment.
Clinical clue
Exertional desaturation may be prominent.

5. Shunt

Shunt occurs when blood reaches the arterial circulation without participating in gas exchange. This may happen because blood bypasses ventilated alveoli or because alveoli are perfused but not ventilated.

Examples
ARDS, atelectasis, severe pneumonia, pulmonary edema, intracardiac shunt.
A-a gradient
Usually elevated.
Response to oxygen
Often poor compared with V/Q mismatch.
RT priority
Recruitment, PEEP, positioning, and escalation may be needed depending on cause.

Quick Comparison Table

CausePaCO₂ ClueA-a GradientOxygen ResponseExample
Low inspired oxygenOften normalUsually normalImprovesHigh altitude, low FiO₂ delivery
HypoventilationHighUsually normalImproves, but ventilation must be addressedOpioids, neuromuscular weakness
V/Q mismatchVariableElevatedUsually improvesCOPD, asthma, pneumonia, PE
Diffusion limitationOften normal/lowElevatedOften improvesILD, pulmonary fibrosis
ShuntVariableElevatedPoor responseARDS, atelectasis, severe pneumonia

Common Student Mistakes

Treating every low PaO₂ the same
Different mechanisms require different clinical thinking.
Ignoring PaCO₂
High PaCO₂ points toward hypoventilation and ventilatory failure risk.
Forgetting the A-a gradient
A widened gradient suggests an oxygen transfer problem.
Assuming oxygen always fixes hypoxemia
True shunt responds poorly to supplemental oxygen alone.
Continue Learning

Connect Hypoxemia Mechanisms to ABGs

Use ABG values, oxygenation calculations, A-a gradient, P/F ratio, and clinical presentation together to identify why a patient is hypoxemic.