Calculate Fraction of Expired CO2 (FECO2)
Use pressure-based physiology equations or ventilation-based metabolic data to estimate the fraction of carbon dioxide in mixed expired gas.
Expert Guide: How to Calculate the Fraction of Expired CO2 and Interpret It Correctly
The fraction of expired carbon dioxide, commonly written as FECO2, is one of the most practical and clinically meaningful respiratory variables in pulmonary physiology, anesthesia, critical care, and cardiopulmonary testing. In simple terms, FECO2 tells you what proportion of exhaled gas is carbon dioxide. While that sounds straightforward, the value integrates ventilation, perfusion, metabolism, dead-space ventilation, and sampling technique. That is why understanding how to calculate FECO2 and how to interpret it in context is more important than memorizing a normal range.
At baseline in healthy adults at rest, mixed expired CO2 fraction is typically around 3% to 4.5%, while alveolar or end-tidal values are often higher. Ambient atmospheric CO2 is much lower, currently around 0.04% (roughly 420 ppm), highlighting how strongly pulmonary gas exchange enriches exhaled gas with CO2 compared with inspired air. If your calculation is far outside expected physiology, the issue may be true pathology, but it may also be unit mismatch, sensor calibration drift, or using end-tidal values where mixed expired values are required.
Core Formula 1: Pressure-Based FECO2
The classic physiology equation is:
FECO2 = PECO2 / (PB – PH2O)
- PECO2: mixed expired partial pressure of CO2
- PB: barometric pressure
- PH2O: water vapor pressure in inspired/expired gas, commonly 47 mmHg at body temperature
This formula converts partial pressure to fraction by dividing by the pressure available to dry gases. At sea level, PB is often approximated as 760 mmHg. If PECO2 is 28 mmHg and PH2O is 47 mmHg, then FECO2 = 28 / (760 – 47) = 0.0393, or 3.93%.
Core Formula 2: Ventilation-Based FECO2
When you have metabolic data instead of gas partial pressures, FECO2 can be estimated as:
FECO2 = VCO2 / VE (with consistent volume units)
- VCO2: carbon dioxide elimination rate, often mL/min
- VE: minute ventilation, often L/min
If VCO2 = 200 mL/min and VE = 5 L/min, convert VE to 5000 mL/min. FECO2 = 200/5000 = 0.04, or 4.0%. This approach is especially useful in metabolic carts, exercise physiology labs, and ventilator analytics. Keep in mind that depending on instrumentation, a dry-gas correction may be needed for strict research-grade comparability.
Mixed Expired vs End-Tidal vs Alveolar CO2: Why Confusion Happens
A common error is substituting end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) directly for mixed expired CO2. ETCO2 reflects gas near the end of exhalation and more closely approximates alveolar CO2, whereas mixed expired gas contains dead-space gas plus alveolar gas integrated over the whole breath. Therefore mixed expired CO2 is usually lower than end-tidal CO2. In normal lungs the difference may be small, but with increased dead space, V/Q mismatch, pulmonary embolism, or severe obstructive disease, the gap can widen substantially.
For FECO2 calculations intended to estimate dead-space behavior, use true mixed expired sampling whenever possible. If only capnogram end-tidal values are available, interpret with caution and document the method clearly.
Typical Values and Practical Ranges
| Gas variable | Typical value at rest | Equivalent fraction | Clinical meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atmospheric CO2 | ~420 ppm | ~0.042% | Baseline inspired background CO2 concentration |
| Mixed expired CO2 (PECO2) | ~25 to 35 mmHg | ~3% to 5% | Whole-breath integrated CO2 output |
| Alveolar/End-tidal CO2 | ~35 to 45 mmHg | ~5% to 6% | Late-expiration gas, closer to alveolar composition |
Values are representative adult resting ranges and vary with altitude, disease burden, ventilation strategy, and measurement technology.
Step-by-Step Workflow for Accurate FECO2 Calculation
- Choose the right equation for available data: pressure method for blood-gas/capnography style inputs, ventilation method for metabolic/ventilator flow data.
- Check units before calculating. Do not mix mmHg and kPa within the same equation unless converted first.
- Correct for water vapor pressure (PH2O) if using pressure equation. At 37°C, PH2O is about 47 mmHg (6.3 kPa).
- Perform the fraction calculation and convert to percent by multiplying by 100.
- Compare with expected physiology and clinical context (resting, exercise, sedation, controlled ventilation, acute lung injury).
- If dead-space assessment is needed, pair with PaCO2 and compute Bohr ratio.
How FECO2 Connects to Dead-Space Physiology
FECO2 is not just a gas fraction; it is deeply tied to dead-space ventilation. If more of each breath goes to regions that are ventilated but poorly perfused, mixed expired CO2 falls because dead-space gas dilutes alveolar CO2. This concept is captured in the Bohr relationship:
VD/VT = (PaCO2 – PECO2) / PaCO2
Here, a low PECO2 relative to PaCO2 suggests a larger dead-space fraction. Clinically, this is useful in ARDS monitoring, perioperative ventilation strategy, and trend assessment in shock states. Note that “normal” VD/VT is often around 0.2 to 0.35 in healthy adults at rest, but it rises with age, posture effects, and cardiopulmonary disease.
Comparison Table: Typical FECO2 Trends Across Conditions
| Scenario | Expected FECO2 trend | Reason | Typical interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Resting healthy breathing | Stable around 3% to 4.5% | Balanced metabolism and ventilation-perfusion matching | Physiologic baseline |
| Hyperventilation | Falls | More ventilation relative to CO2 production | Low FECO2 with respiratory alkalosis tendency |
| Hypoventilation | Rises (up to a point) | Reduced CO2 washout | High FECO2 with hypercapnia risk |
| Pulmonary embolism or high dead space | Often falls | Ventilated regions underperfused, mixed expired dilution | FECO2 low compared with PaCO2/ETCO2 expectations |
| Exercise (moderate) | May increase slightly or stay near stable | Higher VCO2 with matched ventilatory increase | Interpret with VO2, VCO2, and ventilatory equivalents |
Common Sources of Error
- Wrong sampling location: side-stream ETCO2 used as if mixed expired.
- No humidity correction: forgetting PH2O yields inflated denominator error.
- Altitude oversight: using 760 mmHg where local PB is significantly lower.
- Unit mismatch: kPa entered while equation assumed mmHg.
- Leaks: circuit leaks in ventilated patients can underestimate true expired concentrations.
- Time misalignment: VCO2 and VE not averaged over matching intervals during non-steady states.
Clinical Interpretation Framework
Interpret FECO2 with a layered approach. First, assess absolute value and trend. Second, compare FECO2 against ETCO2 and PaCO2 if available. Third, integrate clinical context: sedation depth, ventilator settings, perfusion state, fever, metabolic demand, and airway resistance. Fourth, look for coherence across related metrics such as respiratory rate, tidal volume, VE/VCO2, and lactate (if shock is suspected). The biggest mistake in respiratory interpretation is treating one number as definitive while ignoring physiology.
For example, a patient with rising PaCO2 but falling FECO2 may indicate worsening dead space, severe V/Q mismatch, or abrupt perfusion deterioration. By contrast, low FECO2 with low PaCO2 in an anxious patient likely reflects simple hyperventilation. Same direction, very different clinical meaning.
When to Use This Calculator
- Bedside respiratory assessment with known PECO2 and pressure conditions
- Exercise or metabolic testing with VCO2 and VE data
- Education and quality checks for capnography and ventilator analytics
- Preliminary dead-space trend estimation when PaCO2 is available
This calculator is designed for fast operational use. It does not replace blood gas interpretation, full pulmonary function testing, or clinician judgment. Use it as a quantitative anchor inside a broader physiologic assessment.
Authoritative References
- NIH/NCBI: Respiratory Physiology and Dead Space (Bookshelf)
- NIH/NCBI: Capnography Clinical Physiology
- NOAA (.gov): Atmospheric CO2 Trends
Bottom Line
To calculate fraction of expired CO2 correctly, choose the right method, normalize units, and account for humidity and pressure context. FECO2 is simple mathematically but rich physiologically. When tracked over time and interpreted with PaCO2, ETCO2, and ventilation data, it provides high-value insight into ventilation efficiency, metabolic load, and dead-space behavior. Use the calculator above for rapid computation, then apply the result in a disciplined clinical framework.