MedPearls Clinical Decision Tools ABG Decision Map™

Patient Cases

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Nursing Handoff
Initial Impression

Before you see any data — what is your initial read on this patient?

Normal ABG Values
ParameterNormal RangeUnits
pH7.35 – 7.45
PaCO₂35 – 45mmHg
HCO₃⁻ (serum)22 – 26mEq/L
PaO₂80 – 100mmHg
SaO₂95 – 100%
Base Excess-2 to +2mEq/L
Anion Gap8 – 12mEq/L
Lactate< 2.0mmol/L
Baseline reference for all calculations: pH 7.40 · PaCO₂ 40 · HCO₃⁻ 24 · AG 12
Compensation Formulas
Metabolic Acidosis (Winter's Formula)
Expected PaCO₂ = (1.5 × HCO₃⁻) + 8 ± 2
Tolerance ±2 mmHg. PaCO₂ above range = concurrent respiratory acidosis. Below range = concurrent respiratory alkalosis.
Metabolic Alkalosis
Expected PaCO₂ = 40 + 0.7 × (HCO₃⁻ − 24) ± 5
Tolerance ±5 mmHg. Maximum PaCO₂ from compensation ≈ 55 mmHg. Above = concurrent respiratory acidosis.
Acute Respiratory Acidosis
Expected HCO₃⁻ = 24 + 1 × (ΔPaCO₂ / 10)
HCO₃⁻ rises 1 mEq/L per 10 mmHg rise in PaCO₂. Immediate buffering. Minutes to hours.
Chronic Respiratory Acidosis
Expected HCO₃⁻ = 24 + 3.5 × (ΔPaCO₂ / 10)
Full renal compensation requires ≥ 24–48 hours.
Acute Respiratory Alkalosis
Expected HCO₃⁻ = 24 − 2 × (ΔPaCO₂ / 10)
HCO₃⁻ falls 2 mEq/L per 10 mmHg fall in PaCO₂.
Chronic Respiratory Alkalosis
Expected HCO₃⁻ = 24 − 5 × (ΔPaCO₂ / 10)
Only disorder where pH may fully normalize with compensation.
Anion Gap
Anion Gap Formula
AG = Na⁺ − (Cl⁻ + HCO₃⁻)
Normal: 8–12 mEq/L. Use serum HCO₃⁻ (electrolytes), not ABG-calculated value. Calculate AG in every acid-base disorder to avoid missing a hidden high-AG metabolic acidosis.
Albumin Correction
Corrected AG = AG + 2.5 × (4 − albumin g/dL)
Hypoalbuminemia lowers the measured AG. Always correct AG when albumin is below normal.
AG interpretation: AG 8–12 = normal. AG 13–19 = mildly elevated (borderline, requires clinical context). AG ≥ 20 = high AG metabolic acidosis until proven otherwise. AG ≥ 30 = almost certainly high AG acidosis.
Delta-Delta Ratio
Delta-Delta Formula
Δ/Δ = (AG − 12) / (24 − HCO₃⁻)
Apply ONLY when high-AG metabolic acidosis is confirmed. Cause matters: lactic acidosis expected ratio ≈ 1.5; ketoacidosis expected ratio ≈ 1.0.
RatioInterpretation
< 1.0Concurrent normal-AG metabolic acidosis hidden underneath
1.0 – 2.0Pure high-AG metabolic acidosis
> 2.0Concurrent metabolic alkalosis raising HCO₃⁻ above expected
Critical rule: Delta-delta applies ONLY to lactic acidosis and ketoacidosis — not uremic or other high-AG causes. Lactic acidosis: expected ΔHCO₃⁻ = ΔAG / 1.5. Ketoacidosis: expected ΔHCO₃⁻ = ΔAG / 1.0.
Causes of Metabolic Acidosis
High AG — MUDPILES
MMethanol / Metformin
UUremia (renal failure)
DDiabetic ketoacidosis
PPropylene glycol / Paracetamol
IIsoniazid / Iron / CO
LLactic acidosis
EEthylene glycol / Ethanol
SSalicylates / Starvation
Normal AG — HARDUP
HHyperalimentation / Hyperchloremia
AAddison's disease
RRenal tubular acidosis
DDiarrhea / GI bicarbonate loss
UUreteral diversion
PPancreatic fistula / Post-RTA
Key rule: Calculate AG in every patient, regardless of the apparent primary disorder. A hidden high-AG metabolic acidosis can be completely masked by a coexisting metabolic alkalosis.
Metabolic Alkalosis — Classification
TypeUrine Cl⁻CausesTreatment
Saline-responsive< 10 mEq/LVomiting, NG suction, diuretics (early), post-hypercapniaNormal saline + KCl
Saline-resistant> 20 mEq/LPrimary hyperaldosteronism, Cushing's, Bartter/Gitelman, diuretics (active use)Treat underlying cause
Key concept: Metabolic alkalosis requires two conditions — generation (something raises HCO₃⁻) AND maintenance (the kidney abnormally retains HCO₃⁻). The kidney cannot correct alkalosis without chloride. Treat the chloride deficit, not the pH directly.
Respiratory Acidosis & Alkalosis
DisorderCommon Causes
Resp AcidosisCOPD, asthma, opioids/sedatives, neuromuscular disease, airway obstruction, obesity hypoventilation, auto-PEEP
Resp AlkalosisAnxiety, pain, sepsis (early), pregnancy, hepatic encephalopathy, salicylate toxicity (early), mechanical over-ventilation, altitude
In acute asthma: Initial ABG shows respiratory alkalosis (hyperventilation). A "normalizing" PaCO₂ during an asthma attack is an ominous sign — the patient is fatiguing, not improving.
Minimum PaCO₂ achievable: Young adults ≈ 10–15 mmHg. Older patients ≈ 20 mmHg. At maximum compensation, any further HCO₃⁻ fall or CO₂ rise can cause catastrophic pH collapse.
Oxygenation Indices
P/F Ratio (Horowitz Index)
P/F = PaO₂ / FiO₂
Normal > 400. Mild ARDS: 200–300. Moderate ARDS: 100–200. Severe ARDS: < 100.
A-a Gradient
A-a = (FiO₂ × 713 − PaCO₂ / 0.8) − PaO₂
Normal (room air): Age/4 + 4. Elevated A-a with hypoxemia = V/Q mismatch, shunt, or diffusion. Normal A-a with hypoxemia = hypoventilation or low FiO₂.
Correction Formulas
Sodium Correction for Hyperglycemia
Corrected Na⁺ = Measured Na⁺ + 2.4 × [(glucose − 100) / 100]
Add 2.4 mEq/L to measured Na⁺ for every 100 mg/dL glucose above 100.
AG Correction for Hypoalbuminemia
Corrected AG = Measured AG + 2.5 × (4 − albumin)
Each 1 g/dL fall in albumin below 4 lowers the AG by ~2.5 mEq/L.
Henderson Equation (Validity Check)
[H⁺] = 24 × PaCO₂ / HCO₃⁻
[H⁺] of 40 = pH 7.40. Always verify internal ABG consistency before interpreting. A pH that doesn't match the calculated [H⁺] invalidates the ABG.
3-Step ABG Interpretation Method
Step 1 — Verify validity, identify primary disorder
Check [H⁺] = 24 × PaCO₂ / HCO₃⁻. Then: pH low + PaCO₂ high = respiratory acidosis. pH low + HCO₃⁻ low = metabolic acidosis. pH high + PaCO₂ low = respiratory alkalosis. pH high + HCO₃⁻ high = metabolic alkalosis.
Step 2 — Check compensation
Apply the correct compensation formula. Compare expected vs. actual. If the actual compensatory value is outside the expected range: a second primary disorder exists. Compensation never fully normalizes pH (except chronic respiratory alkalosis).
Step 3 — Calculate AG, apply delta-delta if indicated
AG = Na⁺ − (Cl⁻ + HCO₃⁻). Correct for albumin. Elevated AG → identify cause (MUDPILES). Apply delta-delta only in lactic acidosis or ketoacidosis to detect hidden metabolic alkalosis or non-AG acidosis.
Henderson Equation & ABG Validity
Henderson Equation
[H⁺] = 24 × PaCO₂ / HCO₃⁻
pH[H⁺] nmol/LpH[H⁺] nmol/L
7.10797.4040
7.20637.4535
7.25567.5032
7.30507.5528
7.35457.6025
Validity rule: Always verify pH matches [H⁺] before interpreting. A pH that does not match the calculated [H⁺] means the ABG is internally inconsistent — repeat both ABG and serum electrolytes before making any clinical decisions.

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Cases completed of 15
Prediction accuracy
CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT
7.35–7.45
35–45
22–26
80–100
135–145
98–106
<2.0
3.5–5.0
3.5–5.0
≥ 95% · from ABG
A–a adj. by age
Normal −2 to +2 mEq/L
No previous ABGs saved this session.
⚠ Decision support only. Not a substitute for clinical judgement. Always follow institutional protocols.
Enter ABG values to analyse
pH, PaCO₂, and HCO₃⁻ are required. Na⁺ and Cl⁻ unlock the anion gap. PaO₂ and FiO₂ unlock oxygenation indices.