ROUNDS·
Respiratory / Acid-Base

ABG Interpretation: A Step-by-Step Guide

A systematic framework for reading arterial blood gases — plus two worked examples so you can see it in action.

The Systematic Approach

  1. Check the pH — acidemia <7.35, alkalemia >7.45
  2. Check PaCO2 — this is the respiratory component
  3. Check HCO3- — this is the metabolic component
  4. Find which component moved in the same direction as the pH abnormality — that's your primary disorder
  5. Check whether the other system is compensating
  6. If metabolic acidosis is present, calculate the anion gap
  7. Check PaO2 for hypoxemia

Acidosis vs. Alkalosis at a Glance

DisorderpHPrimary changeCompensation
Respiratory acidosisLowHigh PaCO2High HCO3- (renal, slow)
Respiratory alkalosisHighLow PaCO2Low HCO3- (renal, slow)
Metabolic acidosisLowLow HCO3-Low PaCO2 (resp, fast)
Metabolic alkalosisHighHigh HCO3-High PaCO2 (resp, fast)

Worked Examples

Example 1: pH 7.25, PaCO2 60 mmHg, HCO3- 26 mEq/L. pH is low. PaCO2 is high, moving the same direction: primary respiratory acidosis. HCO3- only slightly up, so compensation is incomplete. Think COPD exacerbation or opioid overdose.

Example 2: pH 7.30, PaCO2 25 mmHg, HCO3- 12 mEq/L. pH is low. HCO3- is low, moving the same direction: primary metabolic acidosis. PaCO2 is low, showing respiratory compensation. Next step: anion gap. Think DKA or lactic acidosis.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need all four ABG values to interpret a gas?

At minimum you need pH, PaCO2, and HCO3- to identify the primary disorder and compensation. PaO2 is assessed separately for oxygenation.

What if pH is normal but PaCO2 and HCO3- are both abnormal?

This can be a mixed disorder, or full compensation of a chronic condition. Clinical context and history help distinguish the two.

Is a venous gas read the same way?

Venous pH and HCO3- correlate reasonably well with arterial values, but venous PaCO2 and PaO2 are not reliable substitutes for assessing oxygenation.