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Chart — Respiratory

Respiratory Failure Comparison Chart

Type I (hypoxemic) vs Type II (hypercapnic) respiratory failure compared side by side — oxygenation, CO₂, ABG patterns, causes, and treatment priorities for rapid clinical differentiation.

Educational use only. Diagnosis and management of respiratory failure require provider evaluation, ABG analysis, and clinical context. This chart supports learning and NCLEX preparation. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Type I vs Type II Comparison

ParameterType I — HypoxemicType II — Hypercapnic
Primary failureOxygenationVentilation (CO₂ removal)
DefinitionPaO₂ <60 mmHg on room airPaCO₂ >45 mmHg + pH <7.35 (acute)
PaO₂Low (<60 mmHg)Low (secondary to hypoventilation)
PaCO₂Normal or low (hyperventilating to compensate)HIGH (>45 mmHg) — defines Type II
pHNormal or elevated (respiratory alkalosis from compensatory hyperventilation)Low (<7.35 acute); near-normal if compensated/chronic
HCO₃NormalElevated if chronic (metabolic compensation for CO₂ retention)
Response to O₂Partial — FiO₂ increase improves SpO₂ unless true shunt (ARDS)Improves hypoxemia but does NOT correct CO₂ problem
MechanismV/Q mismatch, intrapulmonary shunt, diffusion impairmentDecreased minute ventilation (RR × Vt); inadequate CO₂ removal
Treatment priorityOptimize oxygenation: PEEP, HFNC, treat causeSupport ventilation: BiPAP, mechanical ventilation, reverse cause

Common Causes

Type I — Oxygenation Failure
ARDSBilateral diffuse alveolar damage; refractory hypoxemia
PneumoniaConsolidation blocks O₂ exchange in affected segments
Pulmonary edemaCardiogenic or non-cardiogenic; fluid in alveoli
Pulmonary embolismDead space lesion; V/Q mismatch
PneumothoraxLung collapse eliminates ventilation-perfusion
Pulmonary fibrosisDiffusion impairment; interstitial thickening
Type II — Ventilation Failure
COPD exacerbationMost common — acute-on-chronic CO₂ retention
Opioid/sedative overdoseSuppressed central respiratory drive
Neuromuscular diseaseGuillain-Barré, myasthenia gravis, ALS, high spinal cord injury
Severe asthma (late)Respiratory muscle fatigue; shifting from Type I to Type II
Chest wall deformityKyphoscoliosis, flail chest
Obesity hypoventilationElevated diaphragm; blunted respiratory drive

ABG Pattern Quick Reference

TypepHPaCO₂PaO₂HCO₃
Type I (acute)Normal or ↑Normal or ↓↓ (<60)Normal
Type II (acute)↓ (<7.35)↑ (>45)Normal or slightly ↑
Type II (chronic, compensated)Near-normal (7.35–7.45)↑ (chronically elevated)↓ or normal with O₂↑ (metabolic compensation)

NCLEX Pearls

  • Type I = PaO₂ <60 on room air. Type II = PaCO₂ >45 + acidosis. These are the defining criteria.
  • ARDS is the most severe Type I failure — bilateral infiltrates, refractory hypoxemia, non-cardiogenic.
  • COPD exacerbation is the most common Type II failure — acute-on-chronic CO₂ retention.
  • Adding O₂ to Type II failure does NOT fix it — the patient needs ventilatory support (BiPAP or intubation).
  • Rising PaCO₂ in a distressed asthma patient = impending respiratory failure (they were initially hypocapnic).
  • Chronic COPD patients have compensated Type II: high HCO₃, high PaCO₂, near-normal pH. Acute exacerbation = pH falls.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with ATS / ERS Respiratory Failure Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →