(see also ABG Values; Base Excess/Deficit; SVO2 Monitoring)
Respiratory Acidosis (↓pH, ↑PaCO2)
Respiratory acidosis is related to stroke, drug overdose, aspiration, pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), cardiac arrest, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hypoventilation, and neuromuscular disorders.
Treatment: Aggressive chest PT, suction. Increase respiratory rate, increase tidal volume.
Respiratory Alkalosis (↑pH, ↓PaCO2)
Respiratory alkalosis is related to anxiety, fear, head trauma, brain tumor, hepatic insufficiency, fever, mechanical overventilation, pulmonary embolism, and thyrotoxicosis.
Treatment: Sedation, support, breathe in paper bag for attack of hyperventilation. Decrease respiratory rate, decrease tidal volume.
Metabolic Acidosis (↓pH, ↓HCO3−)
Metabolic acidosis is related to renal failure, diarrhea, TPN, acetazolamide (Diamox) (diuretic that prevents carbonic acid formation), ketoacidosis, and lactic acidosis (caused by bicarbonate loss or excess acids in extracellular fluid).
Treatment: Treat underlying cause, monitor intake/output and dysrhythmias, protect against infection.
Metabolic Alkalosis (↑pH, ↑HCO3−)
Metabolic alkalosis is related to volume depletion (loss of H+, Cl−, K+ from vomiting or diarrhea, gastric suction, or diuretic therapy). Hint: al-K+-low-sis means potassium value is low when the patient is alkalotic.
Treatment: Treat underlying cause, monitor intake/output, potassium replacement therapy.
Acute Decompensation vs. Chronic Compensation
There are rules that are consistent in ABG analysis:
pH 7.39, HCO3 32, PaCO2 56
ABG Sampling
Blood gas samples can be either arterial, venous, or mixed:
Key Point Often VBGs and mixed venous blood gases are used interchangeably, but a true mixed venous sample must come from the distal port of a pulmonary artery catheter. Mixed venous sampling provides more accurate information than a VBG, but both are beneficial when monitoring the trended values. |