Oxygenation Concepts

Hypoxemia vs Hypoxia

Hypoxemia and hypoxia are related, but they are not the same thing. Hypoxemia means low oxygen in arterial blood. Hypoxia means inadequate oxygen at the tissue level. Respiratory therapy students need to recognize both, because a patient can be hypoxic even when PaO₂ looks normal.

Hypoxemia
Low PaO₂
Hypoxia
Low tissue oxygen
Key distinction
Blood oxygen vs tissue oxygen

Simple Definitions

Hypoxemia
Low oxygen level in arterial blood, usually reflected by a low PaO₂ on an ABG.
Hypoxia
Inadequate oxygen available to tissues, even if the PaO₂ is not low.
PaO₂ tells you:
How much oxygen is dissolved in arterial plasma.
Oxygen delivery depends on:
PaO₂, SaO₂, hemoglobin, cardiac output, and tissue perfusion.

Hypoxemia vs Hypoxia Comparison

TermPrimary ProblemCommon MeasurementExample
HypoxemiaLow arterial oxygen pressure.Low PaO₂ on ABG.PaO₂ 55 mmHg.
HypoxiaInadequate tissue oxygen availability or use.Clinical signs, lactate, perfusion, oxygen delivery context.Severe anemia with normal PaO₂ but low oxygen content.

Common Causes of Hypoxemia

Hypoxemia usually comes from problems getting oxygen into arterial blood.

MechanismWhat HappensExamples
Low inspired oxygenLess oxygen enters the alveoli.High altitude, equipment issue, low FiO₂.
HypoventilationAlveolar ventilation is reduced, often with elevated PaCO₂.Opioids, neuromuscular weakness, fatigue.
V/Q mismatchVentilation and perfusion are not matched well.COPD, asthma, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism.
Diffusion limitationOxygen does not cross the alveolar-capillary membrane effectively.Interstitial lung disease, pulmonary fibrosis.
ShuntBlood bypasses ventilated alveoli or alveoli are not participating in gas exchange.ARDS, atelectasis, severe pneumonia.

Common Causes of Hypoxia Without Hypoxemia

Hypoxia can occur even when PaO₂ is normal if oxygen is not being carried, delivered, or used effectively.

TypeProblemClinical Example
Anemic hypoxiaNot enough hemoglobin to carry oxygen.Severe anemia with normal PaO₂ and SpO₂.
Circulatory hypoxiaBlood flow is inadequate.Shock, low cardiac output, poor perfusion.
Histotoxic hypoxiaTissues cannot use oxygen effectively.Cyanide toxicity or cellular oxygen utilization problem.
Carbon monoxide exposureHemoglobin is occupied by CO instead of oxygen.Normal PaO₂ can occur, but oxygen carriage is impaired.

Clinical Examples

Hypoxemia + hypoxia
PaO₂ 50, SpO₂ 84%, dyspnea, cyanosis.
Low arterial oxygen can lead to tissue oxygen problems.
Hypoxia without hypoxemia
PaO₂ 95, SpO₂ 98%, Hb 6 g/dL, tachycardia, fatigue.
Oxygen pressure is normal, but oxygen content is low.
Poor perfusion hypoxia
PaO₂ normal, Hb normal, but hypotension and cool extremities.
Oxygen may be in the blood but not reaching tissues well.
Normal oxygenation
PaO₂ 90, SpO₂ 97%, Hb normal, adequate perfusion.
No obvious blood oxygen or delivery problem.

RT Assessment Clues

Do not rely on one number. Respiratory therapists should connect oxygenation data with hemoglobin, perfusion, mental status, work of breathing, and the clinical picture.

Assessment AreaWhy It Matters
PaO₂Identifies arterial hypoxemia.
SpO₂ / SaO₂Shows hemoglobin saturation but not hemoglobin amount.
HemoglobinDetermines oxygen-carrying capacity.
Cardiac output / perfusionDetermines whether oxygen content reaches tissues.
Lactate, mentation, skin signsMay suggest tissue oxygenation problems.

Common Student Mistakes

Using hypoxia and hypoxemia interchangeably
They overlap, but they describe different problems.
Assuming normal PaO₂ means no oxygen problem
Low hemoglobin or poor perfusion can still cause tissue hypoxia.
Ignoring hemoglobin
A normal saturation with severe anemia can still mean poor oxygen content.
Forgetting oxygen delivery
Oxygen must be loaded, carried, delivered, and used.
Continue Learning

Connect Hypoxemia, Hypoxia, and Oxygen Content

Review CaO₂, P/F ratio, A-a gradient, and ABG interpretation to build a complete oxygenation framework for clinical practice.