Oxygenation Indices
Reviewed and revised 6 January 2016
OVERVIEW
This page summaries different indices used to quantify pulmonary oxygenation
- Measured intrapulmonary shunt is the gold standard test for determining pulmonary oxygen transfer
- Indices are either tension-based or content-based (aka concentration-based)
- tension-based indices require partial pressures of gases to be calculated from the alveolar gas equation and are subject to its limitations (e.g. estimation of the respiratory quotient)
- content-based indices do not depend on oxygen partial pressures, but arterial oxygen content instead. unless measured directly, they are limited by variations in the arterio-venous oxygen content difference from a normal 30-50ml/L in critically ill patients
Tension-based indices include:
- A-a gradient
- a/A ratio
- PaO2/FIO2 ratio
- Respiratory index (RI) (RI = pO2(A-a)/pO2(a))
Content-based indices include:
- F shunt
PULSE OXIMETRY OXYGEN SATURATIONS (SpO2)
Calculation
- Derived from the difference in absorption of two infra-red light wavelengths
Pros
- real-time monitoring
- Non-invasive
- requires no special expertise
Cons
- erroneous in the presence of dyshemoglobinaemia
- does not reflect level of oxygenation in hyperoxic patients
- not a direct measurement of hemoglobin saturation – instead, correlates signal intensity with empirical data
- no absolute method for calibration exists – only empirical data collected from hypoxic volunteers
- unreliable in severely hypoxic patients
- unreliable in poorly perfused patients
- unreliable in arrhythmia
- positional
- confounded by motion artifact (unreliable in agitated patients)
PaO2
Calculation
- Measured directly from the arterial blood by the Clark electrode in the blood gas analyser
Pros
- accurate measure of oxygenation
- not confounded by dyshemoglobins
- allows accurate calculation of hemoglobin saturation
Cons
- Invasive
- requires arterial access expertise
- requires blood gas analyser
- confounded by collection error, eg. bubbles in the syringe
- Measurement delay exists
A-a GRADIENT
Calculation
- Alveolar gas equation
Pros
- Simple
- Minimally invasive
- distinguishes alveolar hypoventilation from other causes of hypoxia (e.g. V/Q mismatch)
- Required by APACHE II, III and IV
Cons
- highly dependent on FiO2, especially in the presence of a large shunt
- Age dependent (increases with age)
- Non-specific
PF RATIO
Calculation
- Alveolar oxygen tension (PaO2) divided by inspired oxygen fraction (FiO2)
Pros
- Simple
- Minimally invasive
- Required by APACHE IV
- Used in severity stratification of ARDS
- Used in SMARTCOP (pneumonia severity score)
Cons
- Cannot distinguish between alveolar hypoventilation and other causes of hypoxia (e.g. V/Q mismatch)
- Does not account for changes in PaCO2
- Unreliable unless FiO2 > 0.5 or PaO2 < 100
- Not reliable in COPD because of V/Q mismatch
- Barometric pressure dependent
a/A RATIO
Calculation
- PaO2 divided by PAO2
Pros
- Reasonably simple
- Minimally invasive
- distinguishes alveolar hypoventilation from other causes of hypoxia
- Independent of FiO2 changes
Cons
- Age dependent (increases with age)
- Non-specific – influenced by numerous factors
- Oxygen tension based index rather than oxygen content based
RESPIRATORY INDEX (R)
Calculation
- A-a gradient divided by the PaO2
Pros
- Reasonably simple
- Minimally invasive
- May distinguish alveolar hypoventilation from all other causes of hypoxia
- Independent of FiO2 changes
Cons
- No advantages over the a/A ratio
- Not commonly used
- Difficult to relate findings to management decision criteria or compare them to published studies
ESTIMATED SHUNT FRACTION
Calculation
- Shunt equation (assuming a CaO2-CVO2 difference of ~30-50ml/L)
Pros
- Oxygen content rather than oxygen tension based index
- Minimally invasive – does not require mixed venous sampling
- Independent of FiO2 and PaCO2changes
Cons
- CaO2-CVO2 difference can be markedly deranged in critical illness resulting in invalid calculations
MEASURED INTRAPULMONARY SHUNT
Calculation
- Shunt equation
Pros
- Gold standard of shunt assessment
- Empiric measurement
- accounts for unpredictable influences on shunt
Cons
- Maximally invasive (requires PA catheter)
- Requires mixed venous sampling
- Complex calculations involved
References and links
litfl.com
- CCC — PaO2/FiO2 Ratio
Journal articles
- Wandrup JH. Quantifying pulmonary oxygen transfer deficits in critically ill patients. Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica. Supplementum. 107:37-44. 1995. [pubmed]
Critical Care
Compendium
Chris is an Intensivist and ECMO specialist at The Alfred ICU, where he is Deputy Director (Education). He is a Clinical Adjunct Associate Professor at Monash University, the Lead for the Clinician Educator Incubator programme, and a CICM First Part Examiner.
He is an internationally recognised Clinician Educator with a passion for helping clinicians learn and for improving the clinical performance of individuals and collectives. He was one of the founders of the FOAM movement (Free Open-Access Medical education) has been recognised for his contributions to education with awards from ANZICS, ANZAHPE, and ACEM.
His one great achievement is being the father of three amazing children.
On Bluesky, he is @precordialthump.bsky.social and on the site that Elon has screwed up, he is @precordialthump.
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