Term infant to 2 years of age
Ph7.3-7.4
Paco2 30-40
Pao2 80-100
Bicarb 20-22
Older than 2 are the same as adult values
The saturation should be above 90% in normal arterial blood. A totally healthy person will have 95-100% saturation.
The normal range for arterial blood pH is around 7.35-7.45. Any value below 7.35 is considered acidosis, while any value above 7.45 is considered alkalosis. Values outside of this range can disrupt normal bodily functions and may require medical intervention.
7.35 pH is normal and 7.0 is acidic.
There are many measures of Arterial Blood Gases. The most common measure oxygen (by PaO2) and carbon dioxide (by PaCO2) levels. Normal PaO2 is 80-100 mmHg. Normal PaCO2 is 35-45 mmHg. Bicarbonate is sometimes measured and its value is 22-26 mmHg. Other measurements are also taken depending on the situation. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arterial_blood_gas
Yes. Deoxygenated blood (venous blood) can mix with arterial blood in a few different manners: the thebesian circulation perfuses the left ventricle and then empties with the oxygenated (arterial blood); blood that supplies pulmonary tissue with oxygen empties into pulmonary veins (which carry newly oxygenated blood); atelectatic or collapsed alveoli; other congenital problems (septal defects).
Normal PH for arterial blood is 7.4 and it is basic ph below 7 is acidic and 7 to 7.3 is neutral
Bright cherry red is the normal systemic arterial blood color
by reading the values
Arterial values should be between 85 and 100 mmHg, Venous values should be between 30 and 40 mmHg.
The saturation should be above 90% in normal arterial blood. A totally healthy person will have 95-100% saturation.
Normal PH for arterial blood is 7.4 and it is basic ph below 7 is acidic and 7 to 7.3 is neutral
The normal partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood is 75-100 millimeters of mercury. In comparison the partial pressure of oxygen at sea level is 750 millimeters of mercury.
It is the state in which the arterial blood pressure is within the normal range.
The normal range for arterial blood pH is around 7.35-7.45. Any value below 7.35 is considered acidosis, while any value above 7.45 is considered alkalosis. Values outside of this range can disrupt normal bodily functions and may require medical intervention.
O2 sat on room air or arterial blood would be lower than normal. CO2 levels would be higher.
65-70mmhg
arterial blood pH = 7.41 (outgoing from heart) venous blood pH = 7.36 (returning to heart)