fbpx
Wikipedia

Alveolar–arterial gradient

Pathophysiology sample values
BMP/ELECTROLYTES:
Na+ = 140 Cl = 100 BUN = 20 /
Glu = 150
\
K+ = 4 CO2 = 22 PCr = 1.0
ARTERIAL BLOOD GAS:
HCO3 = 24 paCO2 = 40 paO2 = 95 pH = 7.40
ALVEOLAR GAS:
pACO2 = 36 pAO2 = 105 A-a g = 10
OTHER:
Ca = 9.5 Mg2+ = 2.0 PO4 = 1
CK = 55 BE = −0.36 AG = 16
SERUM OSMOLARITY/RENAL:
PMO = 300 PCO = 295 POG = 5 BUN:Cr = 20
URINALYSIS:
UNa+ = 80 UCl = 100 UAG = 5 FENa = 0.95
UK+ = 25 USG = 1.01 UCr = 60 UO = 800
PROTEIN/GI/LIVER FUNCTION TESTS:
LDH = 100 TP = 7.6 AST = 25 TBIL = 0.7
ALP = 71 Alb = 4.0 ALT = 40 BC = 0.5
AST/ALT = 0.6 BU = 0.2
AF alb = 3.0 SAAG = 1.0 SOG = 60
CSF:
CSF alb = 30 CSF glu = 60 CSF/S alb = 7.5 CSF/S glu = 0.6

The Alveolar–arterial gradient (A-aO
2
,[1] or A–a gradient), is a measure of the difference between the alveolar concentration (A) of oxygen and the arterial (a) concentration of oxygen. It is a useful parameter for narrowing the differential diagnosis of hypoxemia.[2]

The A–a gradient helps to assess the integrity of the alveolar capillary unit. For example, in high altitude, the arterial oxygen PaO
2
is low but only because the alveolar oxygen (PAO
2
) is also low. However, in states of ventilation perfusion mismatch, such as pulmonary embolism or right-to-left shunt, oxygen is not effectively transferred from the alveoli to the blood which results in an elevated A-a gradient.

In a perfect system, no A-a gradient would exist: oxygen would diffuse and equalize across the capillary membrane, and the pressures in the arterial system and alveoli would be effectively equal (resulting in an A-a gradient of zero).[2] However even though the partial pressure of oxygen is about equilibrated between the pulmonary capillaries and the alveolar gas, this equilibrium is not maintained as blood travels further through pulmonary circulation. As a rule, PAO
2
is always higher than P
a
O
2
by at least 5–10 mmHg, even in a healthy person with normal ventilation and perfusion. This gradient exists due to both physiological right-to-left shunting and a physiological V/Q mismatch caused by gravity-dependent differences in perfusion to various zones of the lungs. The bronchial vessels deliver nutrients and oxygen to certain lung tissues, and some of this spent, deoxygenated venous blood drains into the highly oxygenated pulmonary veins, causing a right-to-left shunt. Further, the effects of gravity alter the flow of both blood and air through various heights of the lung. In the upright lung, both perfusion and ventilation are greatest at the base, but the gradient of perfusion is steeper than that of ventilation so V/Q ratio is higher at the apex than at the base. This means that blood flowing through capillaries at the base of the lung is not fully oxygenated.[3]

Equation edit

The equation for calculating the A–a gradient is:

 [4]

Where:

 
  • P
    a
    O
    2
    = arterial PO
    2
    (measured in arterial blood)


In its expanded form, the A–a gradient can be calculated by:

 

On room air ( F
i
O
2
= 0.21, or 21% ), at sea level ( Patm = 760 mmHg ) assuming 100% humidity in the alveoli (PH2O = 47 mmHg), a simplified version of the equation is:

 

Values and Clinical Significance edit

The A–a gradient is useful in determining the source of hypoxemia. The measurement helps isolate the location of the problem as either intrapulmonary (within the lungs) or extrapulmonary (elsewhere in the body).

A normal A–a gradient for a young adult non-smoker breathing air, is between 5–10 mmHg. Normally, the A–a gradient increases with age. For every decade a person has lived, their A–a gradient is expected to increase by 1 mmHg. A conservative estimate of normal A–a gradient is [age in years + 10]/ 4. Thus, a 40-year-old should have an A–a gradient around 12.5 mmHg.[2] The value calculated for a patient's A-a gradient can assess if their hypoxia is due to the dysfunction of the alveolar-capillary unit, for which it will elevate, or due to another reason, in which the A-a gradient will be at or lower than the calculated value using the above equation. [2]

An abnormally increased A–a gradient suggests a defect in diffusion, V/Q mismatch, or right-to-left shunt.[5]

The A-a gradient has clinical utility in patients with hypoxemia of undetermined etiology. The A-a gradient can be broken down categorically as either elevated or normal. Causes of hypoxemia will fall into either category. To better understand which etiologies of hypoxemia falls in either category, we can use a simple analogy. Think of the oxygen's journey through the body like a river. The respiratory system will serve as the first part of the river. Then imagine a waterfall from that point leading to the second part of the river. The waterfall represents the alveolar and capillary walls, and the second part of the river represents the arterial system. The river empties into a lake, which can represent end-organ perfusion. The A-a gradient helps to determine where there is flow obstruction. [2]

For example, consider hypoventilation. Patients can exhibit hypoventilation for a variety of reasons; some include CNS depression, neuromuscular diseases such as myasthenia gravis, poor chest elasticity as seen in kyphoscoliosis or patients with vertebral fractures, and many others. Patients with poor ventilation lack oxygen tension throughout their arterial system in addition to the respiratory system. Thus, the river will have decreased flow throughout both parts. Since both the "A" and the "a" decrease in concert, the gradient between the two will remain in normal limits (even though both values will decrease). Thus patients with hypoxemia due to hypoventilation will have an A-a gradient within normal limits. [2]

Now let us consider pneumonia. Patients with pneumonia have a physical barrier within the alveoli, which limits the diffusion of oxygen into the capillaries. However, these patients can ventilate (unlike the patient with hypoventilation), which will result in a well-oxygenated respiratory tract (A) with poor diffusion of oxygen across the alveolar-capillary unit and thus lower oxygen levels in the arterial blood (a). The obstruction, in this case, would occur at the waterfall in our example, limiting the flow of water only through the second part of the river. Thus patients with hypoxemia due to pneumonia will have an inappropriately elevated A-a gradient (due to normal "A" and low "a"). [2]

Applying this analogy to different causes of hypoxemia should help reason out whether to expect an elevated or normal A-a gradient. As a general rule of thumb, any pathology of the alveolar-capillary unit will result in a high A-a gradient. The table below has the different disease states that cause hypoxemia. [2]

Because A–a gradient is approximated as: (150 − 5/4(PCO2)) – PaO
2
at sea level and on room air (0.21x(760-47) = 149.7 mmHg for the alveolar oxygen partial pressure, after accounting for the water vapor), the direct mathematical cause of a large value is that the blood has a low PaO
2
, a low PaCO2, or both. CO2 is very easily exchanged in the lungs and low PaCO2 directly correlates with high minute ventilation; therefore a low arterial PaCO2 indicates that extra respiratory effort is being used to oxygenate the blood. A low PaO
2
indicates that the patient's current minute ventilation (whether high or normal) is not enough to allow adequate oxygen diffusion into the blood. Therefore, the A–a gradient essentially demonstrates a high respiratory effort (low arterial PaCO2) relative to the achieved level of oxygenation (arterial PaO
2
). A high A–a gradient could indicate a patient breathing hard to achieve normal oxygenation, a patient breathing normally and attaining low oxygenation, or a patient breathing hard and still failing to achieve normal oxygenation.

If lack of oxygenation is proportional to low respiratory effort, then the A–a gradient is not increased; a healthy person who hypoventilates would have hypoxia, but a normal A–a gradient. At an extreme, high CO2 levels from hypoventilation can mask an existing high A–a gradient. This mathematical artifact makes A–a gradient more clinically useful in the setting of hyperventilation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Logan, Carolynn M.; Rice, M. Katherine (1987). Logan's Medical and Scientific Abbreviations. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company. p. 4. ISBN 0-397-54589-4.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Hantzidiamantis PJ, Amaro E (2020). Physiology, Alveolar to Arterial Oxygen Gradient. StatPearls. PMID 31424737. NBK545153.
  3. ^ Kibble, Jonathan D.; Halsey, Colby R. (2008). "5. Pulmonary Physiology § Oxygenation". Medical Physiology: The Big Picture. McGraw Hill Professional. p. 199–. ISBN 978-0-07-164302-3.
  4. ^ "Alveolar-arterial Gradient". Retrieved 2008-11-14.
  5. ^ Costanzo, Linda (2006). BRS Physiology. Hagerstown: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 0-7817-7311-3.

External links edit

  • A-a Oxygen Gradient online calculator

alveolar, arterial, gradient, pathophysiology, sample, values, electrolytes, 0arterial, blood, hco3, paco2, pao2, 40alveolar, paco2, pao2, 10other, 16serum, osmolarity, renal, 20urinalysis, fena, 95uk, 800protein, liver, function, tests, tbil, 7alp, 5ast, saag. Pathophysiology sample values BMP ELECTROLYTES Na 140 Cl 100 BUN 20 Glu 150 K 4 CO2 22 PCr 1 0ARTERIAL BLOOD GAS HCO3 24 paCO2 40 paO2 95 pH 7 40ALVEOLAR GAS pACO2 36 pAO2 105 A a g 10OTHER Ca 9 5 Mg2 2 0 PO4 1CK 55 BE 0 36 AG 16SERUM OSMOLARITY RENAL PMO 300 PCO 295 POG 5 BUN Cr 20URINALYSIS UNa 80 UCl 100 UAG 5 FENa 0 95UK 25 USG 1 01 UCr 60 UO 800PROTEIN GI LIVER FUNCTION TESTS LDH 100 TP 7 6 AST 25 TBIL 0 7ALP 71 Alb 4 0 ALT 40 BC 0 5AST ALT 0 6 BU 0 2AF alb 3 0 SAAG 1 0 SOG 60CSF CSF alb 30 CSF glu 60 CSF S alb 7 5 CSF S glu 0 6 The Alveolar arterial gradient A aO2 1 or A a gradient is a measure of the difference between the alveolar concentration A of oxygen and the arterial a concentration of oxygen It is a useful parameter for narrowing the differential diagnosis of hypoxemia 2 The A a gradient helps to assess the integrity of the alveolar capillary unit For example in high altitude the arterial oxygen PaO2 is low but only because the alveolar oxygen PAO2 is also low However in states of ventilation perfusion mismatch such as pulmonary embolism or right to left shunt oxygen is not effectively transferred from the alveoli to the blood which results in an elevated A a gradient In a perfect system no A a gradient would exist oxygen would diffuse and equalize across the capillary membrane and the pressures in the arterial system and alveoli would be effectively equal resulting in an A a gradient of zero 2 However even though the partial pressure of oxygen is about equilibrated between the pulmonary capillaries and the alveolar gas this equilibrium is not maintained as blood travels further through pulmonary circulation As a rule PAO2 is always higher than Pa O2 by at least 5 10 mmHg even in a healthy person with normal ventilation and perfusion This gradient exists due to both physiological right to left shunting and a physiological V Q mismatch caused by gravity dependent differences in perfusion to various zones of the lungs The bronchial vessels deliver nutrients and oxygen to certain lung tissues and some of this spent deoxygenated venous blood drains into the highly oxygenated pulmonary veins causing a right to left shunt Further the effects of gravity alter the flow of both blood and air through various heights of the lung In the upright lung both perfusion and ventilation are greatest at the base but the gradient of perfusion is steeper than that of ventilation so V Q ratio is higher at the apex than at the base This means that blood flowing through capillaries at the base of the lung is not fully oxygenated 3 Contents 1 Equation 2 Values and Clinical Significance 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksEquation editThe equation for calculating the A a gradient is A a Gradient PAO2 PaO2 displaystyle text A a Gradient P A ce O2 P a ce O2 nbsp 4 Where PAO2 alveolar PO2 calculated from the alveolar gas equation PAO2 FiO2 Patm PH2O PaCO20 8 displaystyle P A ce O2 F i ce O2 P ce atm P ce H2O frac P a ce CO2 0 8 nbsp dd Pa O2 arterial PO2 measured in arterial blood In its expanded form the A a gradient can be calculated by A a Gradient FiO2 Patm PH2O PaCO20 8 PaO2 displaystyle text A a Gradient left F i ce O2 P text atm P ce H2O frac P a ce CO2 0 8 right P a ce O2 nbsp On room air Fi O2 0 21 or 21 at sea level Patm 760 mmHg assuming 100 humidity in the alveoli PH2O 47 mmHg a simplified version of the equation is A a Gradient 150 mmHg 54 PaCO2 PaO2or 20 kPa 54 PaCO2 PaO2 displaystyle text A a Gradient begin cases left 150 text mm ce Hg frac 5 4 P a ce CO2 right P a ce O2 quad text or left 20 text kPa frac 5 4 P a ce CO2 right P a ce O2 end cases nbsp Values and Clinical Significance editThe A a gradient is useful in determining the source of hypoxemia The measurement helps isolate the location of the problem as either intrapulmonary within the lungs or extrapulmonary elsewhere in the body A normal A a gradient for a young adult non smoker breathing air is between 5 10 mmHg Normally the A a gradient increases with age For every decade a person has lived their A a gradient is expected to increase by 1 mmHg A conservative estimate of normal A a gradient is age in years 10 4 Thus a 40 year old should have an A a gradient around 12 5 mmHg 2 The value calculated for a patient s A a gradient can assess if their hypoxia is due to the dysfunction of the alveolar capillary unit for which it will elevate or due to another reason in which the A a gradient will be at or lower than the calculated value using the above equation 2 An abnormally increased A a gradient suggests a defect in diffusion V Q mismatch or right to left shunt 5 The A a gradient has clinical utility in patients with hypoxemia of undetermined etiology The A a gradient can be broken down categorically as either elevated or normal Causes of hypoxemia will fall into either category To better understand which etiologies of hypoxemia falls in either category we can use a simple analogy Think of the oxygen s journey through the body like a river The respiratory system will serve as the first part of the river Then imagine a waterfall from that point leading to the second part of the river The waterfall represents the alveolar and capillary walls and the second part of the river represents the arterial system The river empties into a lake which can represent end organ perfusion The A a gradient helps to determine where there is flow obstruction 2 For example consider hypoventilation Patients can exhibit hypoventilation for a variety of reasons some include CNS depression neuromuscular diseases such as myasthenia gravis poor chest elasticity as seen in kyphoscoliosis or patients with vertebral fractures and many others Patients with poor ventilation lack oxygen tension throughout their arterial system in addition to the respiratory system Thus the river will have decreased flow throughout both parts Since both the A and the a decrease in concert the gradient between the two will remain in normal limits even though both values will decrease Thus patients with hypoxemia due to hypoventilation will have an A a gradient within normal limits 2 Now let us consider pneumonia Patients with pneumonia have a physical barrier within the alveoli which limits the diffusion of oxygen into the capillaries However these patients can ventilate unlike the patient with hypoventilation which will result in a well oxygenated respiratory tract A with poor diffusion of oxygen across the alveolar capillary unit and thus lower oxygen levels in the arterial blood a The obstruction in this case would occur at the waterfall in our example limiting the flow of water only through the second part of the river Thus patients with hypoxemia due to pneumonia will have an inappropriately elevated A a gradient due to normal A and low a 2 Applying this analogy to different causes of hypoxemia should help reason out whether to expect an elevated or normal A a gradient As a general rule of thumb any pathology of the alveolar capillary unit will result in a high A a gradient The table below has the different disease states that cause hypoxemia 2 Because A a gradient is approximated as 150 5 4 PCO2 PaO2 at sea level and on room air 0 21x 760 47 149 7 mmHg for the alveolar oxygen partial pressure after accounting for the water vapor the direct mathematical cause of a large value is that the blood has a low PaO2 a low PaCO2 or both CO2 is very easily exchanged in the lungs and low PaCO2 directly correlates with high minute ventilation therefore a low arterial PaCO2 indicates that extra respiratory effort is being used to oxygenate the blood A low PaO2 indicates that the patient s current minute ventilation whether high or normal is not enough to allow adequate oxygen diffusion into the blood Therefore the A a gradient essentially demonstrates a high respiratory effort low arterial PaCO2 relative to the achieved level of oxygenation arterial PaO2 A high A a gradient could indicate a patient breathing hard to achieve normal oxygenation a patient breathing normally and attaining low oxygenation or a patient breathing hard and still failing to achieve normal oxygenation If lack of oxygenation is proportional to low respiratory effort then the A a gradient is not increased a healthy person who hypoventilates would have hypoxia but a normal A a gradient At an extreme high CO2 levels from hypoventilation can mask an existing high A a gradient This mathematical artifact makes A a gradient more clinically useful in the setting of hyperventilation See also editPulmonary gas pressuresReferences edit Logan Carolynn M Rice M Katherine 1987 Logan s Medical and Scientific Abbreviations Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company p 4 ISBN 0 397 54589 4 a b c d e f g h Hantzidiamantis PJ Amaro E 2020 Physiology Alveolar to Arterial Oxygen Gradient StatPearls PMID 31424737 NBK545153 Kibble Jonathan D Halsey Colby R 2008 5 Pulmonary Physiology Oxygenation Medical Physiology The Big Picture McGraw Hill Professional p 199 ISBN 978 0 07 164302 3 Alveolar arterial Gradient Retrieved 2008 11 14 Costanzo Linda 2006 BRS Physiology Hagerstown Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins ISBN 0 7817 7311 3 External links editA a Oxygen Gradient online calculator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alveolar arterial gradient amp oldid 1211848612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.