ABGs Interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

What do ABGs show?

A

ABGs show a pts respiratory and metabolic status

  • 94-98% O2 is the target sats
    • normal O2 sats mean we want to check metabolic status - could use VBG instead
  • lactate = shows major organ perfusion

FIO2 is the inspired O2 conc - we want to know this for the ABG machine e.g. how much o2 is pt on NB:room air is 21% oxygen

Temperature alters reference range - if pt has an infection etc

  • HCO3 is metabolic
    • inc BE = inc alkalosis (HCO3)
    • dc BE = acidic
  • PO2 and PCO2 is resp
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2
Q

What steps should you look at an ABG in?

A
  1. Oxygenation - PaO2
  2. CO2
  3. pH
  4. LOOK AGAIN @ PCO2
  5. Bicarbonate
  6. Compensation
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3
Q

What should be considered about oxygenation levels in an ABG - PaO2?

A
  • are they hypoxic
  • >10kPa on air?
    • should be ~10% less than inspired O2
  • <10kPa = HYPOXIC
  • <8 = severly hypoxic & in RESP FAILURE

venturi masks are: 24, 28, 35, 40 & 60

a hudson mask is a non rebreathe mask = is 80% as system isnt sealed –> a bag valve mask is a seal

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4
Q

What should be considered about carbon dioxide levels in an ABG - PaCO2?

A
  • type 1 resp failure
    • decreased oxygen (<8kPa) and a normal/low CO2
    • Causes:
      • V/Q mismatch
      • PE
      • pulm oedema
      • pneumonia
  • type 2 respiratory failure
    • LOW O2 and HIGH CO2
    • cause
      • ventrilation problems e.g. getting in and out of lungs problem
      • reduced respiratory drive and hypoventilation
      • e.g. brain problems / chest wall / ribcage decreased expansion
      • pulmonary cause
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5
Q

What should be considered about pH levels in an ABG?

A
  • <3.5 is acidosis
  • >7.45 is alkalosis
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6
Q

What should be considered about CO2 levels when you look at them AGAIN (after O2, Co2, pH…)?

A

looking again at PCO2 for metabolic side

  • acidosis and raised PCO2 = respiratory acidosis
  • Alkalosis and LOW PCO2 = resp alkalosis
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7
Q

What should be considered about bicarbonate levels in an ABG?

What is SMORF?

A
  • acidosis (low pH) and HCO3 LOW = metabolic acidosis
  • alkalosis (high pH) and HIGH HCO3 = metabolic alkalosis

SMORF- Same (direction as pH) = Metabolic & Opposite (direction of pH) = Respiratory

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8
Q

How do you check for compensation?

A

NB: remember you can get partial/alltogether compensation - think is the pH still affected?

is the alternative still in range e.g. not comp?

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9
Q

What is anion gap?

what is MUDPILES?

A
  • metabolic acidosis
    • can also include an anion gap (+ takeway -ve ions)
  • normal anion gap = losing bicarb
  • high = excess acid - so where is the acid coming from

if the anion gap is high (met acidosis)

  • losing HCo3 by diarrhoea/gi tract

uraemia can cause acidosis, so can sepsis

(mudpiles; methanol, uraemia, diabetic/alco/starvation ketoacidosis, paracetamol, iron, lactic acidosis, ethanol (from lactic acidosis), salicylates)

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