How to Know Whether an ABG Sample Is Correct?
“Is this ABG reliable?”
Before interpreting numbers, you must confirm the sample is valid.
ABG errors are usually pre-analytical (most common) rather than machine errors.
Common ABG Errors in ICU
|
Error |
Clue |
|
Venous sample |
Low PaO₂ |
|
Air bubble |
PaO₂ ↑, PaCO₂ ↓ |
|
Delay in processing |
PaO₂ ↓, PaCO₂ ↑ |
|
Excess heparin |
Low HCO₃⁻ |
|
Clotted sample |
Analyzer error |
|
Line contamination |
Glucose/electrolyte mismatch |
Step 1 — Confirm It Is Truly ARTERIAL
Arterial vs Venous Values
|
Parameter |
Arterial |
Venous |
|
pH |
Slightly higher |
0.02–0.05 lower |
|
PaCO₂ |
35–45 |
5–10 mmHg higher |
|
PaO₂ |
80–100 |
30–50 |
Step 2 — Check Clinical Correlation
Ask:
- Does SpO₂ match PaO₂?
- Does patient’s respiratory status match PaCO₂?
- Does shock match lactate?
Example:
SpO₂ = 99%
ABG PaO₂ = 52 mmHg means Something is wrong.
Possible causes:
- Air bubble
- Analyzer delay
- Sample mix-up
Step 3 — Check for Air Bubble Contamination
Air contains:
- PO₂ ≈ 150 mmHg
- PCO₂ ≈ 0
If air contamination occurs:
|
Parameter |
Effect |
|
PaO₂ |
Falsely ↑ |
|
PaCO₂ |
Falsely ↓ |
|
pH |
Falsely ↑ |
Clue:
Unexplained respiratory alkalosis + high PaO₂.
Step 4 — Check Time to Analysis
ABG must be analyzed within:
- 10–15 minutes (room temp)
- 30–60 minutes if iced
If delayed:
- Cells continue metabolism
- CO₂ ↑
- O₂ ↓
- pH ↓
Clue:Metabolic acidosis in stable patient without cause.
Step 5 — Heparin Dilution Error
Excess liquid heparin can cause:
|
Parameter |
Effect |
|
HCO₃⁻ |
Falsely ↓ |
|
Electrolytes |
Dilutional error |
|
pH |
Slightly ↓ |
Always use:
- Dry balanced heparin syringes.
- 0.5 mL of liquid heparin (2–5 IU of heparin per mL of blood)into the syringe.
- How Much Blood Should Be Collected?—Minimum:1–1.5 mL ,Too small sample → heparin dilution effect more pronounced.
Why Heparin Causes Metabolic Acidosis on ABG
Heparin solution is slightly acidic.
Excess heparin:
- Dilutes bicarbonate
- Reduces measured HCO₃⁻
- Causes apparent metabolic acidosis
But patient is actually normal.
Why 2 mL or 3 mL Size syringe ?
ABG machines require:
- ~0.5–1 mL minimum blood
- But ideally 1–1.5 mL for accurate analysis
So:
- 2–3 mL syringe gives adequate capacity
- Prevents over-dilution (if using liquid heparin)
- Easy handling for arterial puncture
Large 10 mL syringes ❌ are not ideal because:
- More dead space
- More air contamination risk
- More heparin dilution
- Less precise control
What Is an “ABG-Type” Syringe?
It is different from a routine injection syringe.
It has:
✔ Gas-tight plunger
✔ Minimal dead space
✔ Thin needle (23–25G)
✔ Luer-lock cap
✔ Often pre-heparinized (dry balanced)
✔ Smooth self-filling design
Step 6 — Check Internal Consistency (Henderson–Hasselbalch Rule)
If pH, HCO₃⁻, and PaCO₂ do not mathematically match:
❌ Analyzer error or transcription error.
Using the H⁺ Ion Table?
There is a fixed mathematical relationship between pH and hydrogen ion concentration (H⁺).
Approximate relationship:
|
pH |
H⁺ (nmol/L) |
|
7.40 |
40 |
|
7.30 |
50 |
|
7.20 |
63 |
|
7.10 |
80 |
|
7.00 |
100 |
|
7.50 |
32 |
|
7.60 |
25 |
Rule of thumb:
For every 0.1 drop in pH → H⁺ increases by ~25%.
Why Is This Useful?
Because acid–base disorders ultimately reflect changes in H⁺ concentration.
So if:
- pH and PaCO₂ suggest acidosis
- But HCO₃⁻ does not explain that H⁺ level
→ ABG may be inconsistent.
How to Use H⁺ for Validity Check
H+≈24×PaCO2/HCO3
This comes from rearranged Henderson–Hasselbalch.
If calculated H⁺ does NOT match pH-derived H⁺ → suspect error.
Example — Invalid ABG:
pH = 7.40 → H⁺ ≈ 40
PaCO₂ = 60
HCO₃⁻ = 24
Now calculate:
24 × 60 / 24 = 60
Calculated H⁺ = 60
But pH 7.40 corresponds to H⁺ = 40.
Mismatch ❌
This ABG is mathematically inconsistent.
Step 7 — Check Oxygenation Logic (Alveolar Gas Equation)
If patient is on 50% FiO₂:
Expected PaO₂ ≈ 5 × FiO₂ (%)
≈ 250 mmHg
If PaO₂ is 60 mmHg:
Either:
- Severe shunt
OR - Sample error
Always calculate A–a gradient.

