Episode 947: Hypercapnia


Episode Artwork
1.0x
0% played 00:00 00:00
Mar 10 2025 3 mins   51

Educational Pearls:

  • Physiologic stimulation of ventilation occurs through changes in levels of:

    • Arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO2)

    • Arterial oxygen (PaO2)

  • Hypercapnia is an elevated level of CO2 in the blood - this primarily drives ventilation

  • Hypoxia is a decreased level of O2 in the body’s tissues - the backup drive for ventilation

  • Patients at risk of hypercapnia should maintain an O2 saturation between 88-92%

    • Normal O2 saturation is 95-100%

  • In patients who chronically retain CO2, their main drive for ventilation becomes hypoxia

  • An audit was performed of SpO2 observations of all patients with a target range of 88–92% at a single hospital over a four-year period

    • This found that excessive oxygen administration was more common than insufficient oxygen and is associated with an increased risk of harm

  • Individuals at risk of hypercapnia include but are not limited to patients with COPD, hypoventilation syndrome, or altered mental status

References

  1. Homayoun Kazemi, Douglas C. Johnson, Respiration, Editor(s): V.S. Ramachandran, Encyclopedia of the Human Brain, Academic Press, 2002, Pages 209-216, ISBN 9780122272103, https://doi.org/10.1016/B0-12-227210-2/00302-2.

  2. O'Driscoll BR, Bakerly ND. Are we giving too much oxygen to patients at risk of hypercapnia? Real world data from a large teaching hospital. Respir Med. 2025 Mar;238:107965. doi: 10.1016/j.rmed.2025.107965. Epub 2025 Jan 30. PMID: 39892771.

Summarized by Meg Joyce, MS1 | Edited by Meg Joyce & Jorge Chalit, OMS3

Donate: https://emergencymedicalminute.org/donate/