Capnography

On this page

Capnography - Breath by Breath

  • Definition: Continuous, non-invasive measurement of CO2 concentration in respiratory gases, primarily end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2).
  • Physiological Basis: Utilizes infrared spectroscopy; CO2 absorbs infrared light proportionally to its concentration.
  • Normal Values:
    • EtCO2: 35-45 mmHg.
    • $P_aCO_2 - EtCO_2$ gradient: 2-5 mmHg (arterial CO2 is typically higher).
  • Clinical Significance of Gradient:
    • Reflects alveolar dead space (ventilation without perfusion).
    • Increased gradient (>5 mmHg): Suggests V/Q mismatch (e.g., Pulmonary Embolism (PE), emphysema, ↓ cardiac output, shock), faulty equipment. Capnography: CO2 Sensor Principle & EtCO2 Measurement

⭐ Capnography provides immediate breath-to-breath feedback on ventilation, perfusion, and metabolism; essential for confirming Endotracheal Tube (ETT) placement and monitoring its position continuously during anesthesia and critical care.

Capnography - Shape Shifter Signs

  • Normal Waveform:
    • Phase 0: Inspiration (CO2 ~0 mmHg).
    • Phase I: Dead space.
    • Phase II: Expiratory upstroke.
    • Phase III: Alveolar plateau (PETCO2).
    • Alpha angle (V/Q): 100-110°. Beta angle (rebreathing): 90°.
  • Key Abnormal Shapes:
    • Shark Fin: Bronchospasm (asthma, COPD), ETT kink/obstruction. ↑ Alpha angle. Capnogram: Shark fin waveform
    • Curare Cleft: Spontaneous breath during MV. Dip in plateau.
    • Elevated Baseline: CO2 rebreathing (exhausted soda lime, valve fault). ↓ Beta angle.
    • Staircase Plateau: Uneven alveolar emptying (partial obstruction).
    • Sudden Loss of ETCO2 (to ~0): Esophageal intubation, disconnect, cardiac arrest.
    • Cardiac Oscillations: Ripples on plateau; normal in children, prominent in low flow.

⭐ Sudden loss of waveform (PETCO2 ~0) is a critical sign: check for esophageal intubation or circuit disconnect immediately.

Capnography - Capno Catcher

Capnography Waveform Interpretation

  • ETT Confirmation: Gold standard for ETT. Persistent square waveform after 5-6 breaths.
    • Absent/minimal CO2: Esophageal intubation or severe hypoperfusion (e.g., cardiac arrest).
  • CPR & ROSC: Monitor CPR quality: Aim PETCO2 > 10-15 mmHg.
    • ⭐ Sudden significant ↑ETCO2 indicates ROSC!

  • Malignant Hyperthermia (MH): Sensitive early sign: Unexplained, progressive, sustained ↑ETCO2 despite constant ventilation.
  • Pulmonary Embolism (PE): Sudden ↓ETCO2 with stable ventilation & clear lungs (↑ alveolar dead space).
  • Airway & Circuit Integrity:
    • Bronchospasm/Obstruction (kinked ETT): "Shark-fin" appearance (sloping Phase III, prolonged expiratory upstroke).
    • Rebreathing (exhausted absorber, valve issue): Elevated baseline (Phase 0 not zero), ETCO2 may gradually ↑.
    • Disconnect/Leak/ETT displacement: Sudden loss or marked ↓ETCO2 waveform.
  • Ventilation Status:
    • Hypoventilation: Gradual ↑PETCO2.
    • Hyperventilation: Gradual ↓PETCO2.

Capnography - Glitch Guardian

  • Factors ↑ EtCO₂:
    • Physiological: Hypoventilation, ↑metabolism (malignant hyperthermia, sepsis), rebreathing.
    • Equipment: Exhausted soda lime, faulty unidirectional valves.
  • Factors ↓ EtCO₂:
    • Physiological: Hyperventilation, ↓cardiac output, pulmonary embolism, cardiac arrest.
    • Equipment: Circuit leak/disconnection, esophageal intubation, sample line issue.
  • Glitches & Caveats:
    • Sample line (kinks, water), calibration errors.
    • P(a-ET)CO₂ gradient: Normally 2-5 mmHg; ↑ in V/Q mismatch.

⭐ Sudden ↓ EtCO₂ to near zero strongly suggests: Esophageal intubation, circuit disconnect, ventilator failure, or total circulatory collapse (cardiac arrest).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Capnography measures end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2), reflecting ventilation and pulmonary perfusion.
  • Normal ETCO2: 35-45 mmHg; sudden ↓ indicates esophageal intubation, apnea, or circuit disconnection.
  • Gradual ↑ ETCO2 suggests hypoventilation, malignant hyperthermia, or CO2 rebreathing.
  • "Shark fin" appearance (sloping Phase III) indicates bronchospasm or COPD.
  • Failure to return to zero baseline (Phase 0) signifies CO2 rebreathing.
  • Sudden loss of waveform can mean cardiac arrest, pulmonary embolism, or total airway obstruction.

Practice Questions: Capnography

Test your understanding with these related questions

A patient is undergoing MRND for laryngeal malignancy; while dissecting the venous tributaries the surgeon elevated the internal jugular vein for ligation. Suddenly the patient's EtCO2 dropped from 38 mmHg to 12 mmHg and the patient developed hypotension along with cardiac arrhythmia. Which of the following is the most likely cause?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Capnography

1/10

The following capnography waveform represents:_____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

The following capnography waveform represents:_____

curare clefts

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial