Skip to main content
Calkulon

Praktisk

A-a Gradient Calculator

Alveolar-Arterial (A-a) Gradient

fraction
mmHg
mmHg
years
mmHg

Detaljert guide kommer snart

Vi jobber med en omfattende veiledning for A-a Gradient Calculator. Kom tilbake snart for trinnvise forklaringer, formler, eksempler fra virkeligheten og eksperttips.

💡

Pro Tips

When evaluating hypoxaemia, always determine whether the A-a gradient is normal or elevated first. A normal A-a gradient directs you to extra-pulmonary causes (hypoventilation, low FiO2, altitude) and an elevated gradient confirms an intrinsic pulmonary problem. This single step organises the entire differential diagnosis of hypoxaemia in a logical, efficient way.

Vanskelighetsgrad:Middels

Visste du?

The alveolar gas equation was first formally described in the 1940s. The lungs' ability to perform gas exchange is extraordinary — with approximately 480 million alveoli providing a total surface area of 130 square metres (roughly the size of a singles tennis court), all folded into a volume barely larger than a basketball. The A-a gradient reflects how efficiently this vast surface is being used.

Mathematically verified
Reviewed May 2026
Used 18K+ times
Our methodology
🔒
100% Gratis
Ingen registrering
Nøyaktig
Verifiserte formler
Øyeblikkelig
Resultater med én gang
📱
Mobilevennlig
Alle enheter

Innstillinger

PersonvernVilkårOm© 2026 Calkulon