The A-a gradient (Alveolar-arterial gradient) is a measure of the difference between the oxygen concentration in the alveoli (PAO₂) and the oxygen concentration in the arterial blood (PaO₂). It helps assess gas exchange efficiency in the lungs and is useful in diagnosing hypoxemia (low blood oxygen levels).

The alveolar-arterial (A–a) gradient gives you valuable insight into how well oxygen is being transferred from your alveoli (air sacs) into your blood. Here’s a step-by-step guide on how to calculate it:
Step 1: Calculate the Alveolar Oxygen Pressure (PAO₂)
Use the alveolar gas equation to estimate the oxygen pressure in the alveoli:
PAO₂=FiO₂×(Patm−PH₂O)−PaCO₂/R
Where:
- FiO₂ is the fraction of inspired oxygen (for room air, it’s 0.21).
- Patm is the atmospheric pressure (typically 760 mmHg at sea level).
- PH₂O is the water vapor pressure in the alveoli (usually 47 mmHg at 37°C).
- PaCO₂ is the arterial carbon dioxide pressure, measured in mmHg.
- R is the respiratory quotient (commonly taken as 0.8).
Example Calculation: If a patient is breathing room air (FiO₂ = 0.21) at sea level (Patm = 760 mmHg), with a water vapor pressure (PH₂O) of 47 mmHg, and if an arterial blood gas shows a PaCO₂ of 40 mmHg, then:
- Compute the inspired oxygen component:
FiO₂×(Patm−PH₂O)=0.21×(760−47)=0.21×713≈149.7 mmHg
- Account for the CO₂ effect:
PaCo₂R=400.8=50 mmHg
- Calculate the alveolar oxygen tension:
PAO₂=149.7−50≈99.7 mmHg
Step 2: Determine the Measured Arterial Oxygen Pressure (PaO₂)
This value is obtained from an arterial blood gas (ABG) test. For example, suppose the measured PaO₂ is 95 mmHg.
Step 3: Calculate the A–a Gradient
Subtract the measured arterial oxygen (PaO₂) from the calculated alveolar oxygen (PAO₂):
A–a Gradient=PAO₂−PaO₂
Using our example:
A–a Gradient≈99.7 mmHg−95 mmHg≈4.7 mmHg
This result can then be interpreted in the context of normal values—for a young, healthy individual breathing room air, a normal A–a gradient is typically between 5 to 10 mmHg. Remember that as people age or when the patient is receiving supplemental oxygen, the normal range for the gradient increases.
Putting It All Together: Quick Reference Table
| Parameter | Typical Value/Example | Description |
|---|---|---|
| FiO₂ | 0.21 | Fraction of inspired oxygen (room air) |
| Patm | 760 mmHg | Atmospheric pressure at sea level |
| PH₂O | 47 mmHg | Water vapor pressure at 37°C |
| PaCO₂ | 40 mmHg | Arterial carbon dioxide pressure (from ABG) |
| R (Respiratory Quotient) | 0.8 | Typical value used in the alveolar gas equation |
| PAO₂ Calculation | 0.21 × (760–47) – (40/0.8) | = 149.7 – 50 ≈ 99.7 mmHg |
| Measured PaO₂ | 95 mmHg (example) | From arterial blood gas |
| A–a Gradient | PAO₂ – PaO₂ ≈ 99.7 – 95 ≈ 4.7 mmHg | Difference indicating the efficiency of oxygen transfer |
Clinical Relevance
Understanding the A–a gradient helps clinicians:
- Differentiate between various causes of hypoxemia.
- Identify defects in gas exchange (such as ventilation/perfusion mismatch, diffusion impairment, or right-to-left shunts).
- Assess the severity of underlying pulmonary pathology.
Important Notes about the A-a Gradient
- In patients who are healthy, there is generally a small difference between PAO2 and PaO2 because PAO2 is approximately 100 mm Hg and PaO2 is about 95 mm Hg.
- Proper determination of the A-a gradient requires exact measurement of FiO2, most easily done when a patient is breathing room air or receiving mechanical ventilation. The FiO2 of patients receiving supplemental oxygen by nasal cannula or mask can be estimated, but this does limit the usefulness of the A-a gradient.
- The A-a gradient increases with higher FiO2. When a patient receives a high FiO2, both PAO2 and PaO2 increase. However, the PAO2 increases disproportionately, causing the A-a gradient to increase.
Clinical Implications related to the A-a Gradient
Measuring the A-a gradient helps narrow the cause of hypoxemia as either extrapulmonary (outside of the lungs) or intrapulmonary (inside of the lungs); in other words, to distinguish hypercapnic respiratory failure due to global hypoventilation (extrapulmonary respiratory failure) from respiratory failure due to abnormal gas exchange from intrinsic lung disease. An A-a gradient within the normal range (< 20 mm Hg) in the setting of an elevated PaCO2 is highly suggestive of global hypoventilation, whereas a widened gradient (> 20 mm Hg) suggests that underlying lung disease may be contributing to the measured hypercapnia.
REFERENCES
- Hantzidiamantis, P. & Amaro, E. (2023, June 5). Physiology, Alveolar to Arterial Oxygen Gradient . StatPearls. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK545153/
- Cris Nickson, A-a gradient, Jul 6, 2024, https://litfl.com/a-a-gradient/
- Kopman, D. & Schwartztein, R. (2024, April 1). The evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of the adult patient with acute hypercapnic respiratory failure. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/the-evaluation-diagnosis-and-treatment-of-the-adult-patient-with-acute-hypercapnic-respiratory-failure
- Theodore, A. (2023, August 15). Measures of oxygenation and mechanisms of hypoxemia. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/measures-of-oxygenation-and-mechanisms-of-hypoxemia
- AACN Essentials of Critical Care Nursing, 5th Ed. Sarah. Delgado, 2023, Published by American Association of Critical-Care Nurses ISBN: 978-1264269884
Stories are the threads that bind us; through them, we understand each other, grow, and heal.
JOHN NOORD
Connect with “Nurses Lab Editorial Team”
I hope you found this information helpful. Do you have any questions or comments? Kindly write in comments section. Subscribe the Blog with your email so you can stay updated on upcoming events and the latest articles.