Learning Objectives
Master the Alveolar Gas Equation to calculate the expected alveolar oxygen partial pressure. Understand how to use the A-a Gradient to differentiate between causes of hypoxemia (extrapulmonary vs. intrapulmonary) for the USMLE Step 1.
1. The Alveolar Gas Equation
The Alveolar Gas Equation () allows us to calculate the partial pressure of oxygen specifically within the alveoli. This is the oxygen available to diffuse into the blood.
The Formula:
| Variable | Definition | Standard Value (Sea Level) |
|---|---|---|
| Inhaled |
150 mmHg (at room air) | |
| Arterial |
~40 mmHg | |
| Respiratory Quotient ( |
0.8 |
2. The A-a Gradient
The A-a gradient is the difference between the oxygen in the Alveoli () and the oxygen in the arteries (
). It tells us if the lungs are transferring oxygen efficiently into the blood.
The Formula:
$
| Result | Interpretation | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Normal Gradient | Hypoxemia is due to low oxygen reaching the alveoli. | High altitude, Hypoventilation (Opioids, Obesity). |
| Increased Gradient | Hypoxemia is due to a problem with the lung/membrane itself. |
3. Determining “Normal” and Age Correlation
The A-a gradient naturally increases with age as the efficiency of gas exchange slightly declines.
| Category | Formula / Threshold | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated Normal | Defines the upper limit of a healthy gradient for a specific age. | |
| General Rule (< 40 yrs) | Gradient should be < 14 mmHg | Quick bedside reference for younger patients. |
Activity:
High-Yield Clinical Pearls:
- Hypoventilation: If a patient has a high
and low
with a normal A-a gradient, the lungs are fine—they just aren’t breathing enough (e.g., drug overdose).
- The Shunt Trap: Remember that in a Shunt, the A-a gradient is increased, but providing 100%
will not fix the arterial hypoxemia.
- The RQ: On a pure carbohydrate diet, RQ = 1.0. On a pure fat diet, RQ = 0.7. The standard USMLE value is 0.8 (mixed diet).