Dead Space - The Wasted Breath
- Alveolar Dead Space: Alveoli that are ventilated but not perfused, creating a V/Q mismatch where V/Q → ∞.
- This volume of air does not participate in gas exchange, representing wasted ventilation.

-
Key Causes:
- Pulmonary Embolism (classic example)
- Emphysema (capillary destruction)
- Positive pressure ventilation (compresses capillaries)
-
Physiologic Consequences:
- Increases total physiologic dead space.
- The Bohr equation calculates it: $V_D = V_T \times \frac{P_aCO_2 - P_ECO_2}{P_aCO_2}$
⭐ A key finding in pulmonary embolism is an increased gradient between arterial PCO₂ ($P_aCO_2$) and end-tidal PCO₂ ($P_{ET}CO_2$) due to the large alveolar dead space.
Pathophysiology - Blood Flow Block
- Primary Insult: Obstruction of pulmonary arterial flow, most commonly by a pulmonary embolism (PE). Other causes include pulmonary vasculitis or in-situ thrombosis.
- Mechanism:
- Ventilation (V) to the downstream alveoli continues, but perfusion (Q) is severely reduced or absent (↓Q).
- This creates a V/Q mismatch where the ratio approaches infinity ($V/Q \to \infty$).
- The affected alveoli are ventilated but not perfused, thus they cannot participate in gas exchange.
- These non-functional units become alveolar dead space, contributing to physiological dead space.
⭐ In pure dead space units, the composition of alveolar gas ($P_A O_2$, $P_A CO_2$) equilibrates with and becomes identical to inspired tracheal air ($P_I O_2$ ≈ 150 mmHg, $P_I CO_2$ ≈ 0 mmHg).
Etiologies - The Usual Suspects
-
Pulmonary Embolism (PE): The classic cause. An embolus obstructs a pulmonary artery, stopping downstream perfusion. The affected lung segment is ventilated but not perfused, creating pure dead space.
-
Emphysema (COPD): Destruction of alveolar septa and capillary beds creates large air sacs (bullae). These zones are ventilated but have severely limited blood flow for effective gas exchange.
-
States of ↓ Perfusion:
- Right Heart Failure: Weak RV output diminishes pulmonary blood flow.
- Low Cardiac Output/Shock: Reduces overall lung perfusion.
- Pulmonary Hypertension: ↑ vascular resistance impedes flow.
-
Positive Pressure Ventilation: High airway pressures can over-distend alveoli, compressing capillaries and creating iatrogenic dead space (↑ Zone 1).

⭐ Pulmonary embolism is the quintessential example of a pathology that acutely increases alveolar dead space, leading to a high V/Q mismatch.
Diagnosis - Spotting the Gap
- Arterial Blood Gas (ABG):
- Initial test reveals hypoxemia (↓ PaO₂) and often respiratory alkalosis (↓ PaCO₂) due to compensatory hyperventilation.
- A-a Gradient:
- The key finding is an elevated alveolar-arterial (A-a) oxygen gradient.
- Calculated as: $PAO_2 - PaO_2$.
- A normal gradient is typically < 15 mmHg.
- A high V/Q state significantly widens this gradient.
- Imaging Studies:
- V/Q Scan: Demonstrates areas that are ventilated but not perfused.

- CT Pulmonary Angiography (CTPA): Gold standard for identifying pulmonary embolism, a classic cause.
⭐ A high V/Q mismatch is characterized by an elevated A-a gradient that, unlike a true shunt, typically improves with the administration of 100% oxygen.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways\n\n> * Alveolar dead space is defined by ventilation without perfusion, resulting in a high V/Q ratio (V/Q → ∞).\n> * The most classic clinical cause is a pulmonary embolism (PE), which obstructs blood flow.\n> * Gas composition in the affected alveoli resembles inspired tracheal air (high PO₂, low PCO₂).\n> * This phenomenon represents wasted ventilation, impairing overall gas exchange efficiency.\n> * A key finding is an increased Alveolar-arterial (A-a) gradient.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app