This advanced edition is designed for ICU physicians, fellows, and senior anesthesiologists. It assumes familiarity with basic ABG interpretation and focuses on rapid pattern recognition, mixed disorders, ventilator management, the Radiometer ABL800 FLEX printout, and ICU-specific pearls.
Chapters follow a workflow-driven approach, from rapid triage to complex mixed disorder identification, case-based reasoning, and mastery drills.
Essential Tools — Reference & Formulas
🔧 The Four Essential Calculations
<−6: High AG + Normal AG acidosis · 0±6: Pure high AG · >+6: High AG + Metabolic alkalosis
📐 Adjusted HCO₃⁻ (in High AG Acidosis)
When AG is elevated due to acid accumulation, use Adjusted HCO₃⁻ to see what HCO₃⁻ would be without the acid load:
Normal: 22–26. Above 26 = hidden metabolic alkalosis. Below 22 = hidden normal AG acidosis.
Rapid Recognition Algorithm
In the ICU, you often need to make decisions in under 60 seconds. This algorithm builds pattern recognition speed.
⚡ 3-Second Triage
- Is pH <7.2? → Life-threatening. Act immediately.
- Is PaO₂ <60 on ≥40% O₂? → Respiratory failure. Intubation threshold.
- Is CO₂ >60 with pH <7.25? → Ventilatory crisis. Prepare for escalation.
| Pattern | Likely Diagnosis | ICU Action |
|---|---|---|
| pH↓, CO₂↑, HCO₃⁻ normal | Acute respiratory acidosis | Increase ventilation / NIV |
| pH↓, CO₂↑, HCO₃⁻↑↑ | Chronic respiratory acidosis (COPD) | Avoid over-correction of CO₂ |
| pH↓, CO₂↓, HCO₃⁻↓↓ | Metabolic acidosis with resp. compensation | Calculate AG, lactate |
| pH↑, CO₂↓, HCO₃⁻ normal | Acute respiratory alkalosis | Check pain, anxiety, PE, sepsis |
| pH↑, CO₂↑, HCO₃⁻↑↑ | Metabolic alkalosis | Check Cl⁻, diuretics, NG losses |
| Normal pH, ↑CO₂ + ↑HCO₃⁻ | Resp. acidosis + Metabolic alkalosis | COPD + diuretics classic |
| Normal pH, ↓CO₂ + ↓HCO₃⁻ | Resp. alkalosis + Metabolic acidosis | Sepsis, salicylates |
Compensation — Mechanics & Verification
| Disorder | Formula | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Metabolic Acidosis | Expected CO₂ = (1.5 × HCO₃⁻) + 8 ± 2 (Winter's Formula) | Rapid (mins) |
| Metabolic Alkalosis | Expected CO₂ = 0.7 × (HCO₃⁻ − 24) + 40 ± 5 | Hours |
| Resp. Acidosis — Acute | ΔHCO₃ = +1 per 10 mmHg ↑ CO₂ | Minutes (buffers) |
| Resp. Acidosis — Chronic | ΔHCO₃ = +3.5 per 10 mmHg ↑ CO₂ | Days (renal) |
| Resp. Alkalosis — Acute | ΔHCO₃⁻ = −2 per 10 mmHg ↓ CO₂ | Minutes |
| Resp. Alkalosis — Chronic | ΔHCO₃⁻ = −5 per 10 mmHg ↓ CO₂ | Days |
If measured compensation falls outside the expected range:
• Less than expected → the compensating organ is also compromised, or disorder is acute
• More than expected → a second primary process is present (mixed disorder)
Always verify before concluding "simple" disorder.
⏱️ ABG Recheck Frequency Guidelines (ICU)
| Scenario | Frequency |
|---|---|
| DKA management | Every 30–60 minutes (initial phase) |
| Septic shock with lactate >4 | Every 30–60 minutes until clearance |
| Post-ventilator change | 15–30 minutes after any change |
| NIV initiation | 1 hour, then every 2–4 hours |
| Stable intubated patient | Every 4–6 hours |
Mixed Disorders — Advanced Recognition
The Normal pH Paradox
A normal pH does not mean no acid-base disorder. Two opposing processes can cancel each other out. The key is to look beyond pH:
- If CO₂ and HCO₃⁻ are both markedly abnormal in opposite directions → mixed disorder
- If Delta-Delta reveals a second metabolic component → mixed metabolic processes
- If compensation appears excessive for the primary disorder → a second primary process
Triple Disorders
Three acid-base processes can coexist. Example: Sepsis with chronic liver disease on diuretics:
- High AG metabolic acidosis (lactic acidosis from sepsis)
- Respiratory alkalosis (compensation + liver disease hyperventilation)
- Metabolic alkalosis (diuretics, hypokalemia, alkalemia from liver disease)
Approach: Calculate AG → Delta-Delta → verify compensation → check all three metabolic drivers systematically.
| Mixed Combination | Classic Setting | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|
| High AG acidosis + Metabolic alkalosis | DKA + vomiting | Delta-Delta > +6 |
| High AG acidosis + Normal AG acidosis | Sepsis + saline resuscitation | Delta-Delta < −6 |
| Respiratory acidosis + Metabolic alkalosis | COPD + diuretics | Normal pH, high CO₂ AND high HCO₃⁻ |
| Respiratory alkalosis + Metabolic acidosis | Salicylate toxicity, sepsis | Normal pH, low CO₂ AND low HCO₃⁻ |
| Respiratory alkalosis + Metabolic alkalosis | Liver failure + vomiting | High pH, CO₂ low, HCO₃⁻ high |
| Respiratory acidosis + Metabolic acidosis | Arrest + shock | Severely low pH, high CO₂, low HCO₃⁻ |
Bicarbonate Decision Matrix
| pH | Recommendation | Guidance |
|---|---|---|
| <6.9 | ✅ Always consider NaHCO₃ | Strong indication, especially in DKA. Immediate pH optimization needed. |
| 6.9–7.1 | ⚠️ Consider NaHCO₃ | Clinical context required. Hemodynamic instability, hyperkalemia, or cardiac instability may push decision toward use. |
| >7.1 | 🚫 Usually avoid | Risk of paradoxical CSF acidosis, CO₂ overshoot, alkalemia from correction. |
When NOT to give NaHCO₃
- Lactic acidosis without hemodynamic instability — treat the cause
- Hyperchloremic acidosis — NaHCO₃ may worsen Na load
- Cardiac arrest from respiratory acidosis — ventilate first
- In COPD with chronic CO₂ retention — risk of overcorrection alkalosis
Complex ICU Case Studies
pH 7.10 | PaCO₂ 18 | HCO₃⁻ 5 | Na 138 | Cl 98 | Glucose 480 | Lactate 4.1
Step 1 — AG: AG = 138 − (98 + 5) = 35 → markedly elevated
Step 2 — Winter's: Expected CO₂ = (1.5 × 5) + 8 = 15.5 ± 2. Actual 18 → just above → minimal respiratory acidosis component (exhaustion?)
Step 3 — Adj. HCO₃⁻: 5 + (35−12) = 28 → above 26 → hidden metabolic alkalosis (vomiting in DKA?)
Interpretation: High AG metabolic acidosis (DKA + lactic acidosis) + mild metabolic alkalosis component. Aggressive AG without matching HCO₃⁻ drop → two contributing acids.
Management: IV fluids, insulin drip, K⁺ replacement, source control for sepsis.
pH 7.20 | PaCO₂ 75 | HCO₃⁻ 28 | Baseline CO₂ ~55 | PaO₂ 50
Baseline: Chronic COPD → CO₂ ~55, HCO₃⁻ ~30. Expected chronic HCO₃⁻ rise = (55−40)/10 × 3.5 = +5.25 → HCO₃⁻ ~29. Matches baseline.
Now: CO₂ has risen to 75 (+20 acute) but HCO₃⁻ only 28 — hasn't risen with the acute component. Expected additional rise (acute) = 20/10 × 1 = +2 → HCO₃⁻ should be ~31, but it's only 28.
Interpretation: Acute-on-chronic respiratory acidosis with metabolic acidosis (sepsis consuming HCO₃⁻). Requires both respiratory support AND sepsis management.
Critical Pearl: Don't aim for CO₂ = 40 in a COPD patient. Their "normal" is much higher. Hypercapnic target = slightly above their baseline.
pH 7.55 | PaCO₂ 42 | HCO₃⁻ 36
Patient ventilated over 24h for COPD. CO₂ now corrected rapidly from 70 to 42.
Problem: HCO₃⁻ still elevated from chronic renal retention. Kidneys need 2–4 days to excrete it. Result: post-hypercapnic metabolic alkalosis — now pH is dangerously high.
Consequences: High pH shifts K⁺ into cells → hypokalemia. Shifts oxyhemoglobin curve left → less O₂ delivered to tissues. Tetany risk if Ca²⁺ drops.
Management: Do NOT aggressively ventilate a CO₂ retainer. Permit slow correction. Target PCO₂ slightly above their usual baseline (e.g., 50–55). Replenish K⁺, correct Cl⁻ if deficient.
Ventilator Response Decision Tree
| ABG Finding | Likely Cause | Ventilator Response |
|---|---|---|
| pH <7.3, CO₂ high | Hypoventilation | ↑ RR or ↑ Vt to blow off CO₂ |
| pH >7.5, CO₂ low | Overventilation | ↓ RR or ↓ Vt to retain CO₂ |
| PaO₂ <60 on FiO₂ 0.4 | Oxygenation failure | ↑ PEEP or ↑ FiO₂ |
| Pplat >30 cmH₂O | Lung overdistension | ↓ Vt (4–5 mL/kg), consider ↑ PEEP |
| Driving pressure >15 | High risk for VILI | Reduce Vt, optimize PEEP |
| CO₂ not responding to ↑ RR | Dead space ↑ (PE, ARDS) | Consider Vt increase, optimize PEEP |
Radiometer ABL800 FLEX — Printout Reference
The ABL800 FLEX is one of the most widely used blood gas analyzers in ICUs worldwide. This section explains every parameter you'll encounter on a typical printout.
📋 Blood Gas Parameters
| Parameter | Normal Range | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| pH | 7.35–7.45 | Overall acid-base status |
| pCO₂ | 35–45 mmHg | Respiratory component |
| pO₂ | 80–100 mmHg (arterial) | Oxygenation (varies with FiO₂ and altitude) |
| cHCO₃⁻(P, ST) | 22–26 mEq/L | Calculated standard bicarbonate (at 37°C, pCO₂ 40) |
| BE(ecf) | −2 to +2 mEq/L | Base excess in extracellular fluid — metabolic load |
| BE(B) | −2 to +2 mEq/L | Base excess in whole blood — less volume-sensitive |
🔴 Oximetry Parameters
| Parameter | Normal | Clinical Note |
|---|---|---|
| sO₂ (O₂Hb%) | >95% | Actual measured sat by co-oximetry (not pulse ox) |
| ctHb | 12–17 g/dL | Total hemoglobin concentration |
| FO₂Hb | >94% | Oxyhemoglobin fraction |
| FCOHb | <2% (non-smoker) | Carboxyhemoglobin — elevated in CO poisoning |
| FMetHb | <1.5% | Methemoglobin — elevated with nitrites, dapsone |
💉 Electrolytes & Metabolites
| Parameter | Normal | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| cNa⁺ | 136–146 mEq/L | Measured directly by ISE |
| cK⁺ | 3.5–5.0 mEq/L | Critical in DKA, arrhythmias |
| cCa²⁺ (ionized) | 1.15–1.35 mmol/L | More accurate than total calcium for ICU decisions |
| cCl⁻ | 98–106 mEq/L | Key in AG calculation and alkalosis assessment |
| cLac | <2 mmol/L | Elevated: anaerobic metabolism, liver failure, ischemia |
| cGlu | 3.9–6.1 mmol/L (fasting) | Real-time glucose — essential in DKA, crit care |
🌡️ Temperature-Corrected Values
ABL800 FLEX reports both 37°C standard values and temperature-corrected values (labeled with "T" prefix, e.g., T-pH, T-pCO₂). In hypothermia or targeted temperature management (TTM), use temperature-corrected values for clinical decisions.
Alpha-Stat: Manage based on 37°C uncorrected values. Used in most adults; preserves cerebral autoregulation.
pH-Stat: Manage based on temperature-corrected values. Preferred in pediatric cardiac surgery; increases cerebral blood flow.
🫀 Oxygen Status Parameters
| Parameter | Formula/Normal | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| ctO₂ (Oxygen Content) | (Hb × 1.34 × sO₂) + (0.003 × pO₂) | Actual O₂ delivered — critical in anemia + hypoxia combo |
| p50(ST) | ~26.6 mmHg | pO₂ at 50% saturation — right/left Hb curve shift |
| RI (Respiratory Index) | <1.0 | A-a / PaO₂. >1 = impaired gas exchange. >3 = severe. |
Mastery Drills — 25 Clinical Scenarios
Work through each case using the systematic approach. Answers follow each group.
🔹 Single-Disorder Drills (10 Cases)
| # | pH | CO₂ | HCO₃⁻ | AG | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7.28 | 58 | 26 | Normal | Acute respiratory acidosis |
| 2 | 7.31 | 65 | 32 | Normal | Chronic respiratory acidosis (HCO₃ ↑ appropriately) |
| 3 | 7.52 | 30 | 24 | Normal | Acute respiratory alkalosis |
| 4 | 7.48 | 34 | 25 | Normal | Mild respiratory alkalosis (early sepsis pattern) |
| 5 | 7.28 | 28 | 13 | 22 | High AG metabolic acidosis (DKA/lactic acidosis) |
| 6 | 7.32 | 30 | 15 | 10 | Normal AG metabolic acidosis (diarrhea/hyperchloremic) |
| 7 | 7.55 | 48 | 40 | Normal | Metabolic alkalosis with appropriate CO₂ rise |
| 8 | 7.18 | 20 | 7 | 27 | Severe high AG metabolic acidosis (uremia/toxic ingestion) |
| 9 | 7.38 | 42 | 24 | 12 | Normal ABG — fully compensated or no disorder |
| 10 | 7.30 | 28 | 13 | 12 | Winter's: expected CO₂ = 27.5 ✅ → Pure metabolic acidosis |
🔸 Mixed Disorder Drills (15 Cases)
| # | pH | CO₂ | HCO₃⁻ | AG | Mixed Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | 7.10 | 58 | 17 | Normal | Resp acidosis + Metabolic acidosis (CO₂ up, HCO₃⁻ down) |
| 12 | 7.44 | 62 | 40 | Normal | Resp acidosis + Metabolic alkalosis (COPD + diuretics) |
| 13 | 7.43 | 26 | 17 | 20 | Resp alkalosis + High AG acidosis (salicylate/sepsis) |
| 14 | 7.48 | 28 | 20 | 24 | Resp alkalosis + High AG acidosis — pH pushed alkaline; co-alkalosis |
| 15 | 7.15 | 22 | 7 | 30 | High AG acidosis — Winter's: expected CO₂ = (1.5×7)+8 = 18.5. Actual 22 → also resp acidosis |
| 16 | 7.28 | 25 | 11 | 14 | ΔΔ = (14−12)−(24−11) = 2−13 = −11 → High AG + Normal AG acidosis (sepsis + saline) |
| 17 | 7.30 | 26 | 12 | 22 | ΔΔ = (22−12)−(24−12) = 10−12 = −2 → Pure high AG (normal delta range) |
| 18 | 7.22 | 25 | 10 | 28 | Adj. HCO₃⁻ = 10 + 16 = 26 → Hidden metabolic alkalosis (DKA + vomiting) |
| 19 | 7.58 | 26 | 23 | Normal | Resp alkalosis + Metabolic alkalosis (liver failure + diuretics) |
| 20 | 7.36 | 22 | 12 | 20 | Low pH with CO₂ also low + HCO₃⁻ low → resp alkalosis compensating acid. ΔΔ reveals high AG + additional normal AG acidosis |
| 21 | 7.41 | 55 | 33 | Normal | CO₂ elevated, HCO₃⁻ elevated, pH normal → verify compensation: for chronic acid, expect HCO₃⁻ = 24 + [(55−40)/10 × 3.5] = 29.25. Actual 33 → Resp acidosis + Metabolic alkalosis |
| 22 | 7.25 | 48 | 20 | 18 | High CO₂ (resp acidosis). AG elevated (metabolic acidosis). HCO₃⁻ below normal. Triple: resp acidosis + high AG metabolic acidosis + normal AG acidosis component |
| 23 | 7.38 | 28 | 16 | 24 | Normal pH but AG = 24. CO₂ low → resp alkalosis. HCO₃⁻ low → acid. Resp alkalosis + High AG acidosis (sepsis-driven) |
| 24 | 7.20 | 55 | 21 | Normal | CO₂ up + HCO₃⁻ below normal. No renal compensation. Acute resp acidosis + metabolic acidosis (arrest scenario) |
| 25 | 7.50 | 30 | 23 | 16 | pH up, CO₂ low (resp alk), AG elevated. ΔΔ = (16−12)−(24−23) = 4−1 = +3 → Resp alkalosis + High AG acidosis + possible Metabolic alkalosis component |
ICU Teaching Pearls
🧠 10 Advanced Pearls Every ICU Physician Should Know
- Never target a CO₂ of 40 in a COPD patient. Their physiologic "normal" is higher. Correct gradually.
- Lactate clears faster than pH recovers. A rising lactate with improving pH can mean ongoing hypoperfusion masked by compensatory HCO₃⁻ rise.
- A-a gradient distinguishes hypoventilation from pulmonary disease. If A-a is normal, the problem is external (CNS, NMJ). Elevated A-a = lung problem.
- In salicylate toxicity, initial ABG may show alkalosis only. Mixed picture emerges hours later. Repeat ABG in 2–4 hours if suspected.
- BE(ecf) and HCO₃⁻ diverge in hyperalbuminemia. Use Adj. AG in any patient with low albumin.
- Ionized Ca²⁺ is more clinically relevant than total Ca²⁺, especially in massive transfusion or post-citrate exposure.
- FCOHb on co-oximetry is the only way to diagnose CO poisoning from an ABG. SpO₂ by pulse oximetry will read falsely normal.
- Delta-Delta has limitations in DKA — ketone metabolism can produce HCO₃⁻ when insulin is given, artificially raising HCO₃⁻ beyond expectations.
- Post-ventilator ABG should be checked at 15–30 minutes, not 1 hour — this is the standard ICU practice for any ventilator change.
- A pH >7.55 is as dangerous as pH <7.20. Severe alkalemia causes coronary artery spasm, hypokalemia, seizures, and reduced cardiac output.
This guide was built for the clinician who refuses to see ABG interpretation as routine. Every line on that printout tells a physiologic story — and you now have the tools to read it.
Know the physiology. Read the patterns. Lead the team. 🧠