ABG Interpretation Made Easy: The Ultimate NCLEX-RN Guide
Why ABGs Feel So Confusing (and Why They Don't Have to Be)
Arterial blood gas interpretation has a reputation for being one of the hardest topics in nursing school. Students see a wall of numbers — pH, PaCO2, HCO3, PaO2 — and freeze.
Here's the truth: ABGs aren't hard. They're just taught badly.
Most textbooks dump all four acid-base disorders on you at once, mix in compensation, throw in some Roman Arrows, and hope something sticks. No wonder students walk into NCLEX feeling shaky on this topic.
This guide teaches ABGs the way they actually click — one step at a time, with a repeatable system you can use on every single question. No guessing. No panic. Just a method that works.
Why ABGs Matter for NCLEX
ABG interpretation shows up across multiple NCLEX content areas. You won't just see a standalone question asking "is this respiratory acidosis?" Instead, NCLEX embeds ABG values inside clinical scenarios:
- A COPD patient in respiratory distress — what do the gases tell you?
- A diabetic patient with Kussmaul respirations — what's happening metabolically?
- A post-op patient who's hypoventilating — is this expected or dangerous?
- A patient on a ventilator — do the settings need to change?
NCLEX expects you to interpret ABGs quickly, connect them to the clinical picture, and choose the right nursing action. The Physiological Adaptation course and Reduction of Risk Potential course both test this skill heavily.
The Normal Values You Must Memorize
Before you can interpret anything, you need these numbers locked in. There's no shortcut here — memorize them.
| Component | Normal Range | What It Tells You |
|---|---|---|
| pH | 7.35 – 7.45 | Overall acid-base status of the blood |
| PaCO2 | 35 – 45 mmHg | Respiratory component (controlled by the lungs) |
| HCO3⁻ | 22 – 26 mEq/L | Metabolic component (controlled by the kidneys) |
| PaO2 | 80 – 100 mmHg | Oxygenation status (separate from acid-base) |
The 7.40 Rule: Normal pH is 7.40 right in the middle. Below 7.40 leans acidotic, above 7.40 leans alkalotic. When you're deciding on partial compensation later, this tells you which direction the body is trending — even if pH is still technically in the normal range.
You can review these alongside every other critical lab value in the Lab Values Bootcamp or grab a quick-reference from the Cheat Sheets page.
The 4-Step ABG Method
This is the system. Use it the same way every single time. It works on textbook questions, NCLEX questions, and real patients.
This is your starting point. Everything else flows from here.
- pH < 7.35 → Acidosis
- pH > 7.45 → Alkalosis
- pH 7.35–7.45 → Normal (may be compensated — you'll figure that out in Step 4)
Don't overthink this step. Just decide: acid or base?
CO2 is an acid. It's controlled by the lungs. Remember: CO2 and pH move in opposite directions.
- PaCO2 > 45 (high CO2 = too much acid) → Respiratory Acidosis
- PaCO2 < 35 (low CO2 = too little acid) → Respiratory Alkalosis
Ask yourself: Does the CO2 explain the pH? If the pH is acidotic and CO2 is high — the lungs are the problem. Move to Step 4.
Bicarbonate (HCO3) is a base. It's controlled by the kidneys. HCO3 and pH move in the same direction.
- HCO3 < 22 (low base = not enough buffer) → Metabolic Acidosis
- HCO3 > 26 (high base = too much buffer) → Metabolic Alkalosis
Ask yourself: Does the HCO3 explain the pH? If the pH is acidotic and HCO3 is low — the kidneys (or metabolism) are the problem.
The body always tries to bring pH back to normal. The lungs compensate for metabolic problems (fast — minutes to hours). The kidneys compensate for respiratory problems (slow — hours to days).
- Uncompensated: pH is abnormal. Only one value (CO2 or HCO3) is off. The other system hasn't kicked in yet.
- Partially compensated: pH is still abnormal, but both CO2 and HCO3 are abnormal. The opposite system is trying to help but hasn't fixed the pH yet.
- Fully compensated: pH is back to normal (7.35–7.45), but both CO2 and HCO3 are abnormal. The body corrected the pH, but the underlying problem is still reflected in the numbers.
In full compensation, the pH is normal — so how do you know if the original problem was respiratory or metabolic? Use the 7.40 rule. If pH is 7.35–7.39 (normal but leaning acidotic), the primary problem is acidosis. If pH is 7.41–7.45 (normal but leaning alkalotic), the primary problem is alkalosis. Then match it to whichever value — CO2 or HCO3 — would cause that direction.
The Complete ABG Cheat Table
This is the table you screenshot, print, and study until it's automatic.
| Disorder | pH | PaCO2 | HCO3⁻ | Cause |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory Acidosis | ↓ < 7.35 | ↑ > 45 | Normal (or ↑ if compensating) | CO2 retention — lungs not blowing off enough |
| Respiratory Alkalosis | ↑ > 7.45 | ↓ < 35 | Normal (or ↓ if compensating) | CO2 blown off too fast — hyperventilation |
| Metabolic Acidosis | ↓ < 7.35 | Normal (or ↓ if compensating) | ↓ < 22 | Too much acid or too little bicarbonate |
| Metabolic Alkalosis | ↑ > 7.45 | Normal (or ↑ if compensating) | ↑ > 26 | Too much bicarbonate or too much acid lost |
What Causes Each ABG Disorder?
NCLEX doesn't just ask you to identify the disorder — it gives you a patient scenario and expects you to connect the dots. You need to know why the ABG looks the way it does.
Respiratory Acidosis — "Not Breathing Enough"
The lungs aren't eliminating CO2 fast enough, so acid builds up.
| Common Causes | Why It Happens |
|---|---|
| COPD (chronic) | Air trapping prevents full exhalation of CO2 |
| Opioid overdose | CNS depression slows respiratory drive |
| Sedation / anesthesia | Post-op hypoventilation is extremely common |
| Pneumonia / atelectasis | Reduced functional lung tissue for gas exchange |
| Neuromuscular disease (ALS, Guillain-Barré) | Respiratory muscles too weak to ventilate |
| Chest wall trauma / flail chest | Mechanical restriction of ventilation |
Key nursing actions: Improve ventilation — incentive spirometry, repositioning, suctioning, naloxone for opioid-induced respiratory depression, possible mechanical ventilation. Review respiratory interventions in the Respiratory and Ventilation Management lesson.
Respiratory Alkalosis — "Breathing Too Much"
The lungs are blowing off too much CO2, making the blood too alkalotic.
| Common Causes | Why It Happens |
|---|---|
| Anxiety / panic attack | Hyperventilation from emotional stress |
| Pain | Tachypnea driven by acute pain response |
| Fever / sepsis (early) | Increased metabolic demand → compensatory hyperventilation |
| Mechanical ventilation (over-ventilated) | Rate or tidal volume set too high |
| Hypoxia (early response) | Body hyperventilates trying to get more O2 |
| Salicylate (aspirin) overdose (early) | Direct stimulation of respiratory center |
Key nursing actions: Address the underlying cause — calm the anxious patient, treat pain, adjust ventilator settings, rebreathing techniques if appropriate.
Aspirin overdose is a classic NCLEX trick. It causes respiratory alkalosis early (stimulates the respiratory center → hyperventilation → low CO2) and then shifts to metabolic acidosis later (salicylic acid accumulates). If you see an aspirin OD question, the time frame tells you which ABG to expect. This crosses into the Adverse Effects & Interactions lesson.
Metabolic Acidosis — "Too Much Acid in the Body"
The body has either accumulated too much acid or lost too much bicarbonate buffer.
| Common Causes | Why It Happens |
|---|---|
| Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) | Fat breakdown produces ketoacids |
| Renal failure | Kidneys can't excrete acid or regenerate bicarb |
| Lactic acidosis (shock, sepsis) | Anaerobic metabolism produces lactic acid |
| Severe diarrhea | Loss of bicarbonate-rich intestinal fluid |
| Aspirin overdose (late) | Salicylic acid accumulation |
| Starvation / alcoholic ketoacidosis | Ketone production from fat metabolism |
Key nursing actions: Treat the underlying cause — insulin for DKA, fluids for shock, dialysis for renal failure, replace bicarbonate in severe cases. The Endocrine Emergencies lesson covers DKA and HHS in detail.
Kussmaul respirations = metabolic acidosis. When you see deep, rapid breathing in a patient (not on a ventilator), the body is trying to compensate for metabolic acidosis by blowing off CO2. Classic in DKA. If NCLEX describes a diabetic patient with deep, rapid breathing and fruity breath — you're looking at metabolic acidosis from DKA before you even see the ABG.
Metabolic Alkalosis — "Too Little Acid in the Body"
The body has lost too much acid or gained too much bicarbonate.
| Common Causes | Why It Happens |
|---|---|
| Excessive vomiting / NG suction | Loss of hydrochloric acid (HCl) from the stomach |
| Over-use of antacids / sodium bicarbonate | Direct addition of base |
| Loop / thiazide diuretics | Volume contraction concentrates bicarbonate |
| Hypokalemia | Kidneys retain H⁺ in exchange for K⁺ → raises pH |
| Cushing syndrome / excess corticosteroids | Aldosterone effects → H⁺ loss, K⁺ loss |
Key nursing actions: Replace fluids and potassium, stop the acid loss (anti-emetics, reduce NG suction if possible), hold or adjust diuretics.
Notice how vomiting causes metabolic alkalosis (losing stomach acid) while diarrhea causes metabolic acidosis (losing intestinal bicarbonate). NCLEX loves this distinction. Upper GI loss = alkalosis. Lower GI loss = acidosis. This also connects to electrolyte shifts — vomiting depletes potassium and chloride too. Review the connections in our Fluid & Electrolyte Imbalances lesson.
The Complete Cause-and-Compensation Reference
This table pulls it all together — what causes each disorder, how the body compensates, and what to look for clinically.
| Disorder | Primary Problem | Compensation | Key Clinical Sign |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory Acidosis | ↑ CO2 (lungs retaining) | Kidneys retain HCO3 (slow — days) | Hypoventilation, drowsiness, confusion |
| Respiratory Alkalosis | ↓ CO2 (lungs blowing off) | Kidneys excrete HCO3 (slow — days) | Hyperventilation, lightheadedness, tingling |
| Metabolic Acidosis | ↓ HCO3 (acid excess) | Lungs blow off CO2 (fast — minutes) | Kussmaul respirations, confusion |
| Metabolic Alkalosis | ↑ HCO3 (base excess) | Lungs retain CO2 (fast — but limited) | Shallow breathing, muscle twitching, confusion |
Speed of compensation matters: Lungs compensate fast (minutes to hours) — so metabolic disorders show respiratory compensation quickly. Kidneys compensate slowly (hours to days) — so respiratory disorders take longer to show metabolic compensation. This is why an acute COPD exacerbation shows uncompensated respiratory acidosis, but chronic COPD patients often show fully compensated respiratory acidosis with an elevated HCO3.
Memory Tricks That Actually Work
The ROME Method
This mnemonic helps you remember which values move in the same direction and which move opposite:
| Letter | Meaning | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| R | Respiratory | In respiratory disorders, pH and CO2 move in Opposite directions. pH ↓ = CO2 ↑ (acidosis). pH ↑ = CO2 ↓ (alkalosis). |
| O | Opposite | |
| M | Metabolic | In metabolic disorders, pH and HCO3 move in the saME direction. pH ↓ = HCO3 ↓ (acidosis). pH ↑ = HCO3 ↑ (alkalosis). |
| E | Equal (same direction) |
Quick Compensation Rule
"Lungs are fast, kidneys are slow."
- Metabolic problem? → Lungs compensate within minutes to hours (you'll see CO2 shift quickly)
- Respiratory problem? → Kidneys compensate over hours to days (HCO3 shifts slowly)
This is why an acute problem is usually uncompensated and a chronic problem is usually partially or fully compensated.
Vomiting vs. Diarrhea
"Vom = alkal-OM. Dia = aci-DIA."
- Vomiting → losing acid → metabolic alkalosis
- Diarrhea → losing base → metabolic acidosis
Find more memory aids like these in the Black Belt Recall mnemonic library.
Don't Forget PaO2 — Oxygenation Is Separate
Students often focus so hard on acid-base that they forget about PaO2. Oxygenation and acid-base are separate assessments.
| PaO2 Level | Interpretation | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 80–100 mmHg | Normal oxygenation | Adequate gas exchange |
| 60–79 mmHg | Mild hypoxemia | Monitor closely, may need supplemental O2 |
| < 60 mmHg | Severe hypoxemia / respiratory failure | Emergency — O2 desaturation accelerates rapidly below 60 |
A PaO2 below 60 mmHg is the danger zone. This corresponds to approximately 90% SpO2 on the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve — and below this point, oxygen saturation drops rapidly with even small decreases in PaO2. This is why 60/90 is the critical threshold to memorize: PaO2 60 ≈ SpO2 90%. Below this, the patient is crashing.
The COPD exception: Patients with chronic COPD may normally run PaO2 in the 55–65 range. Their respiratory drive relies on hypoxia (not CO2). Giving them too much oxygen can suppress their drive to breathe. This is covered in the Respiratory and Ventilation Management lesson and the Pulmonary Pathophysiology Bootcamp.
Putting It All Together: Walk-Through Examples
Example 1: pH 7.28 | PaCO2 58 | HCO3 24
| Step | What You See | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 1. pH | 7.28 (↓ low) | Acidosis |
| 2. CO2 | 58 (↑ high) | High CO2 = respiratory cause. CO2 explains the acidosis ✓ |
| 3. HCO3 | 24 (normal) | Kidneys haven't kicked in yet |
| 4. Compensation | Only CO2 is abnormal | Uncompensated respiratory acidosis |
Clinical match: Post-op patient who received opioids and is now breathing 8 breaths/min. Sedation → hypoventilation → CO2 retention → acute respiratory acidosis. Priority action: Stimulate breathing, consider naloxone, prepare for possible ventilatory support.
Example 2: pH 7.30 | PaCO2 30 | HCO3 14
| Step | What You See | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 1. pH | 7.30 (↓ low) | Acidosis |
| 2. CO2 | 30 (↓ low) | Low CO2 would cause alkalosis, not acidosis — CO2 is NOT the cause |
| 3. HCO3 | 14 (↓ low) | Low bicarb = metabolic acidosis. HCO3 explains the acidosis ✓ |
| 4. Compensation | CO2 is also abnormal (low) — lungs are blowing off CO2 to help | Partially compensated metabolic acidosis |
Clinical match: Patient with DKA — blood glucose 480, Kussmaul respirations, fruity breath. Ketoacids are consuming bicarbonate, and the lungs are hyperventilating to compensate. Priority action: IV insulin, IV fluids, monitor potassium (it shifts during treatment). The Endocrine Emergencies lesson walks through the full DKA protocol.
Example 3: pH 7.48 | PaCO2 40 | HCO3 32
| Step | What You See | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 1. pH | 7.48 (↑ high) | Alkalosis |
| 2. CO2 | 40 (normal) | Lungs are not the cause, and they haven't started compensating |
| 3. HCO3 | 32 (↑ high) | High bicarb = metabolic alkalosis. HCO3 explains the alkalosis ✓ |
| 4. Compensation | Only HCO3 is abnormal | Uncompensated metabolic alkalosis |
Clinical match: Patient with continuous NG suction for 3 days — losing hydrochloric acid from the stomach. Priority action: Monitor potassium and chloride (both are lost with gastric suction), replace fluids, and reassess the need for continued suction.
The ABG-Electrolyte Connection
ABG imbalances don't happen in isolation — they drag electrolytes with them. NCLEX frequently tests this crossover.
| ABG Disorder | Electrolyte Effect | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Acidosis (respiratory or metabolic) | ↑ Potassium (hyperkalemia) | H⁺ moves into cells → K⁺ gets pushed out |
| Alkalosis (respiratory or metabolic) | ↓ Potassium (hypokalemia) | H⁺ moves out of cells → K⁺ gets pulled in |
| Alkalosis | ↓ Ionized calcium | More calcium binds to albumin in alkalotic blood → less free calcium → tingling, tetany |
| Metabolic alkalosis from vomiting | ↓ K⁺, ↓ Cl⁻, ↓ Na⁺ | Gastric fluid contains HCl, K⁺, and Na⁺ |
The potassium-pH seesaw is one of the most tested connections on NCLEX. We cover this in depth in the Fluid & Electrolyte Bootcamp.
When a patient is in DKA, the initial potassium may look normal or even high — but this is deceptive. Acidosis pushes K⁺ out of cells, masking total body potassium depletion. Once you start insulin and correct the acidosis, potassium will plummet. Always check potassium before starting insulin in DKA, and replace it during treatment. NCLEX tests this timing frequently.
Common NCLEX Mistakes with ABGs
Mistake #1: Skipping the system and just guessing.
Students see the numbers and try to pattern-match from memory. Use the 4-step method every time. It takes 15 seconds and eliminates guessing.
Mistake #2: Forgetting that CO2 is an acid.
CO2 goes opposite to pH. High CO2 = acidosis, not alkalosis. This trips people up because "high" feels like it should match "high pH." It doesn't. ROME helps here.
Mistake #3: Mixing up compensation direction.
The compensating system always moves to correct the pH. In metabolic acidosis, the lungs blow off CO2 (CO2 drops). In respiratory acidosis, the kidneys retain bicarb (HCO3 rises). The compensation always moves toward fixing the pH.
Mistake #4: Ignoring PaO2.
A patient can have a perfectly normal acid-base balance and still be in respiratory failure if PaO2 is below 60. Always check oxygenation separately.
Mistake #5: Forgetting the clinical context.
NCLEX gives you a patient, not just numbers. A COPD patient with a CO2 of 55 and a normal pH is fully compensated — that's their baseline, not an emergency. But a post-op patient with a CO2 of 55 and a pH of 7.25 is in acute danger. Context determines the priority action.
Sharpen your prioritization skills in the Establishing Priorities lesson.
Practice NCLEX Question
A nurse is reviewing ABG results for a patient admitted with diabetic ketoacidosis. The results are: pH 7.22, PaCO2 28, HCO3 12, PaO2 96. Which interpretation is correct?
- Uncompensated respiratory acidosis
- Partially compensated metabolic acidosis
- Fully compensated metabolic alkalosis
- Uncompensated metabolic acidosis
Step 1: pH 7.22 is below 7.35 → acidosis.
Step 2: PaCO2 is 28 (low). Low CO2 would cause alkalosis, so CO2 is NOT the primary cause. But it's abnormal — the lungs are trying to compensate by blowing off CO2.
Step 3: HCO3 is 12 (low). Low bicarbonate matches acidosis → this is metabolic acidosis. HCO3 explains the pH.
Step 4: Both CO2 and HCO3 are abnormal, but the pH is still outside normal range → partially compensated.
This is partially compensated metabolic acidosis — exactly what you'd expect in DKA. Ketoacids are consuming bicarbonate, and the lungs are hyperventilating (Kussmaul respirations) to compensate. PaO2 of 96 is normal — oxygenation is fine.
Why the other answers are wrong:
- A (respiratory acidosis): CO2 is low, not high. A respiratory acidosis would show elevated CO2.
- C (metabolic alkalosis): The pH is acidotic, not alkalotic. And HCO3 is low, not high.
- D (uncompensated metabolic acidosis): Close — it correctly identifies metabolic acidosis. But the CO2 is also abnormal (the lungs are compensating), which means it's partially compensated, not uncompensated.
Want to drill more ABG scenarios? Test yourself in the Proving Grounds or jump into the ABG Interpretation Bootcamp for a deep-dive training module with mnemonic images. You can also sharpen your clinical judgment on questions like these through the Nurse Dojo Arcade.
Final Takeaway
ABG interpretation is not about memorizing every possible combination. It's about following a repeatable system that works every time:
- pH → Acidosis or alkalosis?
- CO2 → Is it respiratory?
- HCO3 → Is it metabolic?
- Compensation → Is the body trying to fix it?
Then connect it to the clinical picture. A COPD exacerbation, a DKA admission, a post-op patient on opioids, a panicking patient hyperventilating — the ABG tells you what's happening inside when the clinical signs tell you something is wrong outside.
Follow the steps. Trust the method. You've got this.
Train like a black belt. Think like a nurse. 🥋
Ready to Lock In ABGs for Good?
Start with the ABG Interpretation Bootcamp, review your lab values, then battle-test yourself in the Proving Grounds. Or grab our free NCLEX Quick-Strike book to build your complete study plan.
FAQ: ABG Interpretation for NCLEX
What is the easiest way to interpret ABGs?
Use a systematic 4-step method: (1) Look at the pH to determine acidosis or alkalosis, (2) Check the CO2 to see if the respiratory system is causing the problem, (3) Check the HCO3 to see if the metabolic system is causing the problem, (4) Determine if the body is compensating. This step-by-step approach works for every ABG question on NCLEX.
What are normal ABG values?
Normal ABG values are: pH 7.35–7.45, PaCO2 35–45 mmHg, HCO3 22–26 mEq/L, and PaO2 80–100 mmHg. A pH below 7.35 is acidosis, and a pH above 7.45 is alkalosis. You can find the full list of NCLEX lab values in the Lab Values Bootcamp.
What is the difference between respiratory and metabolic acidosis?
Respiratory acidosis is caused by CO2 retention (hypoventilation) — the lungs are the problem. Metabolic acidosis is caused by a loss of bicarbonate or accumulation of acid — the kidneys or metabolism are the problem. In respiratory acidosis, CO2 is high. In metabolic acidosis, HCO3 is low.
How do you know if an ABG is compensated or uncompensated?
Look at the pH and the system that is NOT causing the problem. If the pH is abnormal and only one value (CO2 or HCO3) is off, it's uncompensated. If the pH is abnormal but the opposite system has also shifted to try to correct it, it's partially compensated. If the pH is normal but both CO2 and HCO3 are abnormal, it's fully compensated.
What ABG findings indicate respiratory failure?
Respiratory failure is indicated by a PaO2 below 60 mmHg and/or a PaCO2 above 50 mmHg with an acidotic pH. This signals the lungs can no longer maintain adequate gas exchange and requires immediate intervention. The Recognizing Complications lesson covers the full emergency response framework.
Does NCLEX test ABG interpretation?
Yes. ABG interpretation is tested across multiple NCLEX content areas including physiological adaptation, reduction of risk potential, and pharmacological therapies. Questions often embed ABG values inside clinical scenarios involving COPD, DKA, respiratory distress, post-operative patients, or mechanical ventilation rather than asking you to interpret values in isolation.