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VBG to ABG Converter
Medical Calculator

VBG to ABG Converter

Venous Blood Gas (VBG) analysis is less invasive and safer to perform than arterial sampling. In many clinical scenarios (e.g., Diabetic Ketoacidosis, COPD exacerbations), a VBG can accurately predict acid-base status.

This tool applies standard physiological offsets to VBG results to estimate the corresponding Arterial Blood Gas (ABG) values. Note: VBG cannot accurately estimate arterial oxygenation (pO2).

Venous Values (Input)

VBG

mmHg

mEq/L

Estimated Arterial

Est. pH
Est. PaCO₂
mmHg
Est. HCO₃⁻
mEq/L

Note: VBG correlates well with ABG for pH and pCO₂, but poorly for pO₂.

Logic & Evidence

Physiological Differences: As blood passes through tissues, it releases O₂ and picks up CO₂ and metabolic byproducts. Therefore, venous blood is slightly more acidic and has a higher pCO₂ than arterial blood.

Conversion Factors:
pH: Arterial pH ≈ Venous pH + 0.035.
pCO₂: Arterial pCO₂ ≈ Venous pCO₂ − 4 to 5 mmHg. (This calculator subtracts 5).
HCO₃⁻: Venous and Arterial bicarbonate values are roughly equivalent (difference ≈ 1 mEq/L).

Clinical References

How to Use This Converter

Follow these steps to estimate ABG values.

1

Obtain VBG

Draw a peripheral venous blood gas sample.

2

Enter Values

Input the venous pH and pCO₂. Input HCO₃⁻ if available (it acts as a pass-through).

3

Interpret

Use the estimated values for Acid-Base interpretation. If oxygenation status is a concern, an actual ABG or Pulse Oximetry is required.

? Frequently Asked Questions
Is VBG reliable for hypercapnia?

Yes. If the venous pCO₂ is less than 45 mmHg, arterial hypercapnia is extremely unlikely. If VBG pCO₂ is high, it correlates well with ABG pCO₂ but may be slightly higher.

When should I get an ABG?

If precise pO₂ measurement is needed (hypoxia), or if the patient is in severe shock (where the venous-arterial difference widens significantly).

Disclaimer: This tool uses standard conversion offsets (pH +0.035, pCO₂ -5). These estimates are reliable for hemodynamically stable patients but may be inaccurate in severe shock or cardiac arrest. Always use clinical judgment.