Core Principle

  • Both hypoxia and hyperoxia cause harm — avoid both extremes
  • SpO2 is the preferred monitoring modality in routine critical care — treat as a vital sign
  • Always specify upper and lower SpO2 limits (“swim between the flags”)

Default Targets

Patient GroupSpO2 Target
Most ICU patients92–96%
COPD / chronic respiratory failure88–92%
Post-ROSC (cardiac arrest)94–98%
Bleomycin / paraquat toxicity~85% (O2 potentiates lung injury)
CO poisoning / decompression sickness100% high-flow (pending hyperbaric)

SpO2 vs PaO2

Prefer SpO2 because:

  • Non-invasive, continuous, immediate
  • SaO2 is a better measure of systemic O2 delivery to tissues than PO2
  • Reads within ±2% across the 70–100% range
  • Chasing a “normal” PaO2 can lead to inappropriate over-oxygenation if SpO2 is already adequate

When SpO2 is unreliable → get ABG:

  • Marked hypoxaemia
  • Poor peripheral perfusion (unreliable trace)
  • Dyshaemoglobinaemia (COHb, MetHb)
  • Calculating P/F ratio (requires PaO2)
  • Hyperoxia risk assessment (SpO2 stays 100% over a wide PaO2 range)

Hyperoxia

  • Adverse effects on cardiovascular, pulmonary, CNS, and immune systems
  • Mechanism: reactive oxygen species (ROS) + hyperoxia-induced vasoconstriction
  • Historically liberal O2 has been ICU default — likely harmful
  • Mixed evidence but signal of harm in: cardiac arrest, stroke, TBI, general ICU

Key trial: OXYGEN-ICU (Girardis 2016) — conservative O2 (SpO2 94–98%) vs liberal (≥97%) → ICU mortality 11.6% vs 20.2%. Significant methodological limitations — hypothesis-generating only.

Hypoxia

  • Well-established harm across all critical illness groups
  • Particularly dangerous in: TBI, post-cardiac arrest, stroke, ARDS survivors (long-term cognitive impairment)
  • Risk of aiming too low: unplanned hypoxaemia if titration fails

Special Conditions

ConditionKey Point
COPDTarget 88–92%; titrated O2 halved pre-hospital mortality vs high-flow in one RCT
ACS / StrokeO2 only if hypoxaemic; supplemental O2 in non-hypoxaemic STEMI may increase infarct size
ARDSNo formal SpO2 guideline; subnormal oxygenation linked to long-term cognitive impairment
Post-cardiac arrest100% during CPR → titrate to 94–98% once ROSC established
Asthma / CAPHigh-concentration O2 can cause CO2 retention — not unique to COPD

Sources

Oxygen saturation targets in critical care • LITFL • CCC