Reference — Respiratory
SpO₂, PaO₂, and SaO₂ Reference
Three different measurements describe oxygenation — SpO₂, PaO₂, and SaO₂ — and each provides different clinical information. Understanding the differences helps nurses accurately interpret monitoring data and recognize oxygenation problems.
Educational use only. Oxygenation assessment requires provider interpretation and clinical context. This reference supports learning and NCLEX preparation — it does not replace clinical evaluation or ABG interpretation by qualified providers. 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.
Definitions and Normal Values
Source: Pulse oximetry (non-invasive, continuous monitoring)
The percentage of hemoglobin molecules currently bound to oxygen, estimated by measuring the light absorption difference between oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin through a peripheral site (finger, toe, earlobe). Non-invasive and continuous, making it the primary bedside oxygenation monitor.
Source: Arterial blood gas (invasive, intermittent)
The amount of oxygen dissolved in arterial plasma (not bound to hemoglobin). Measured directly from an arterial blood gas sample. PaO₂ drives oxygen onto hemoglobin — it reflects how much oxygen has crossed from the alveoli into the bloodstream. Lower PaO₂ values are expected with age and altitude.
Source: Arterial blood gas (direct co-oximetry measurement)
The actual percentage of hemoglobin bound to oxygen in arterial blood, measured directly via co-oximetry in the ABG analyzer. More accurate than SpO₂ — the ABG machine directly measures oxyhemoglobin and differentiates carboxy- and methemoglobin. When SpO₂ accuracy is in doubt (CO poisoning, methemoglobinemia), SaO₂ from ABG is the gold standard.
Clinical Comparison at a Glance
| Feature | SpO₂ | PaO₂ | SaO₂ |
|---|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Estimated % Hgb bound to O₂ | Dissolved O₂ in plasma (mmHg) | Actual % Hgb bound to O₂ (co-ox) |
| Method | Pulse oximetry (non-invasive) | Arterial blood gas (invasive) | ABG co-oximetry (invasive) |
| Continuous? | Yes — beat to beat | No — single sample | No — single sample |
| Normal value | 94–100% | 80–100 mmHg | 95–100% |
| CO poisoning accuracy | Falsely NORMAL | Normal or near-normal | Accurately detects COHgb |
| Primary clinical use | Continuous bedside monitoring | ABG interpretation; respiratory failure diagnosis | Confirm SpO₂; rule out CO/methHgb |
Oxyhemoglobin Dissociation Curve — Clinical Application
The oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve describes the relationship between PaO₂ and SaO₂/SpO₂. The S-shaped curve has two critical zones:
Curve Shifts
Key Clinical Scenarios
NCLEX Pearls
- ›SpO₂ = non-invasive estimate. SaO₂ = direct co-oximetry measurement. PaO₂ = dissolved O₂ pressure in plasma.
- ›SpO₂ is falsely normal in CO poisoning — always obtain ABG with co-oximetry when CO poisoning is suspected.
- ›PaO₂ <60 mmHg = hypoxemia (Type I respiratory failure threshold on room air).
- ›The flat portion of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve means SpO₂ may not warn you of falling PaO₂ until PaO₂ is already critically low.
- ›COPD oxygen target: SpO₂ 88–92%. Targeting 94–98% in a chronic CO₂ retainer risks blunting hypoxic drive.
- ›Normal SpO₂ does not guarantee adequate oxygen delivery — always consider hemoglobin level and cardiac output.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC) · GOLD (COPD) / ATS / CHEST. 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 →
