Fick Calculation






Fick Calculation Calculator – Measure Cardiac Output & Oxygen Extraction


Fick Calculation Calculator

Analyze cardiac efficiency and systemic oxygen delivery using the clinical Fick Principle. Enter arterial and venous data for instant hemodynamic results.


Standard resting value is approx 3.5 mL/kg/min or 250 mL/min for average adults.
Please enter a positive value.


Calculated as (Hb x 1.34 x SaO2) + (PaO2 x 0.003).
Must be greater than Venous Oxygen Content.


Measured from the pulmonary artery. Typically 14-16 mL/dL.
Must be less than Arterial Oxygen Content.


Used for calculating indexed values.


Used for Body Surface Area (BSA) calculation.

Calculated Cardiac Output (CO)
5.00
Liters per Minute (L/min)

5.00

mL O2 / dL blood


2.70

L/min/m2


1.85

m2 (DuBois Formula)

Oxygen Extraction Visualization

Arterial (Ca) Venous (Cv) 20.0 15.0

Comparison of O2 content (mL/dL) entering vs leaving tissues.

Standard Hemodynamic Reference Ranges
Parameter Normal Range Unit
Cardiac Output (CO) 4.0 – 8.0 L/min
Cardiac Index (CI) 2.5 – 4.0 L/min/m²
Arterial Oxygen Content 17 – 20 mL/dL
Mixed Venous Content 12 – 15 mL/dL

What is Fick Calculation?

The fick calculation, based on the Fick Principle formulated by Adolf Eugen Fick in 1870, is a fundamental technique used in cardiology and physiology to determine cardiac output calculation. It operates on the law of conservation of mass, asserting that the rate at which an organ consumes a substance (like oxygen) is equal to the product of the blood flow to that organ and the difference between the arterial and venous concentrations of that substance.

Clinicians use the fick calculation primarily during right-heart catheterization to assess a patient’s hemodynamic status. It is considered the “gold standard” because it directly measures oxygen consumption rather than relying on thermal dilution techniques, which can be inaccurate in patients with tricuspid regurgitation or low-output states. Anyone managing heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, or complex congenital heart disease should use this method for high-fidelity data.

Common misconceptions about the fick calculation include the belief that it is only for elite athletes or that it requires complicated invasive machinery. While invasive sampling of mixed venous blood is necessary for the most accurate results, the oxygen consumption formula can also be estimated in clinical settings to provide a reliable window into a patient’s circulatory health.

Fick Calculation Formula and Mathematical Explanation

To perform a fick calculation, you must understand the relationship between oxygen uptake and transport. The core formula is derived from the fact that all oxygen taken up by the lungs must be transported by the blood flow (Cardiac Output).

The Core Formula:

CO = VO2 / [(CaO2 – CvO2) × 10]

The multiplication factor of 10 is used to convert the units from deciliters (dL) to liters (L), as oxygen content is typically measured per 100 mL of blood. The denominator (Ca – Cv) represents the arterial oxygen content minus the venous oxygen content, also known as the A-V Oxygen Difference.

Variables in the Fick Principle
Variable Meaning Unit Typical Range
CO Cardiac Output L/min 4.0 – 8.0
VO2 Oxygen Consumption mL/min 200 – 300 (Rest)
CaO2 Arterial Oxygen Content mL/dL 18 – 20
CvO2 Mixed Venous Oxygen Content mL/dL 13 – 15

Practical Examples (Real-World Use Cases)

Example 1: Resting Clinical Assessment

A 70kg male patient has a measured oxygen consumption (VO2) of 240 mL/min. His arterial blood gas shows an oxygen content (CaO2) of 19.5 mL/dL, and a pulmonary artery sample shows a venous content (CvO2) of 14.5 mL/dL.

  • Inputs: VO2 = 240, CaO2 = 19.5, CvO2 = 14.5
  • Difference: 19.5 – 14.5 = 5.0 mL/dL
  • Calculation: 240 / (5.0 × 10) = 240 / 50 = 4.8 L/min
  • Interpretation: This patient has a normal resting cardiac output.

Example 2: Compensated Heart Failure

A patient with known cardiomyopathy exhibits a lower venous oxygen content because their tissues are extracting more oxygen due to slow blood flow. Their CvO2 is 10.0 mL/dL, and CaO2 is 19.0 mL/dL. VO2 is 250 mL/min.

  • Inputs: VO2 = 250, CaO2 = 19.0, CvO2 = 10.0
  • Difference: 19.0 – 10.0 = 9.0 mL/dL
  • Calculation: 250 / (9.0 × 10) = 2.78 L/min
  • Interpretation: This signifies a “low output state,” where the heart is failing to circulate blood efficiently, leading to high oxygen extraction.

How to Use This Fick Calculation Calculator

Our fick calculation tool is designed for rapid clinical decision support. Follow these steps to ensure accurate hemodynamic parameters analysis:

  1. Enter VO2: If you have measured oxygen consumption from a metabolic cart, enter it directly. Otherwise, use 125 mL/min/m² multiplied by BSA as an estimate.
  2. Input Oxygen Contents: Provide the arterial oxygen content and venous oxygen content. If you only have Hemoglobin and Saturation, calculate content first using: (Hb x 1.34 x Sat) + (0.003 x PO2).
  3. Add Biometrics: Input weight and height to automatically calculate the cardiac index calculation and BSA.
  4. Review Results: The primary box will display the Cardiac Output in L/min. Check the Cardiac Index to see if the output is appropriate for the patient’s body size.
  5. Analyze the Chart: Use the SVG visualization to see the gap between arterial and venous levels—a wider gap often indicates a struggling heart.

Key Factors That Affect Fick Calculation Results

When performing a fick calculation, several physiological and technical factors can influence the final number:

  • Hemoglobin Levels: Since oxygen is primarily carried by hemoglobin, anemia drastically lowers both CaO2 and CvO2, though the difference (gradient) might remain the same.
  • Metabolic Rate: Fever, hyperthyroidism, or shivering increases VO2, which will increase the calculated cardiac output if the extraction ratio remains constant.
  • Oxygen Saturation: Low arterial saturation (hypoxemia) reduces the starting point of oxygen delivery, affecting the fick principle math.
  • Shunts: Intracardiac shunts (like an ASD or VSD) make “mixed” venous blood difficult to sample, often requiring a weighted average from the SVC and IVC.
  • Sample Site: True mixed venous blood MUST be sampled from the pulmonary artery. Sampling from a central venous line (SVC) provides an ScvO2, which is not identical to SvO2.
  • Steady State: The Fick Principle assumes the patient is in a steady state. Rapid changes in breathing or activity during the measurement will lead to errors in the oxygen consumption formula.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Why is the Fick calculation called the “gold standard”?
It is the most direct application of conservation of mass in the body and is less prone to errors in low-flow states compared to thermodilution.

What is a normal A-V oxygen difference?
A normal resting A-V O2 difference is approximately 4 to 6 mL/dL. Values higher than 6 often suggest low cardiac output.

Can I use SpO2 instead of SaO2?
Pulse oximetry (SpO2) is an estimate. For a precise fick calculation, arterial blood gas (SaO2) is preferred.

How does exercise affect the result?
During exercise, VO2 increases significantly. The cardiac output must rise to meet this demand, or the A-V difference will widen drastically.

What happens if my Venous O2 is higher than Arterial?
This is physically impossible and indicates a laboratory error, a sample swap, or an extremely high-flow left-to-right shunt.

What formula does the calculator use for BSA?
We use the DuBois and DuBois formula: BSA = 0.007184 × Weight0.425 × Height0.725.

Is the “Indirect Fick” method accurate?
Indirect Fick uses estimated VO2 (usually 125 mL/min/m²). While convenient, it can be up to 25% inaccurate compared to measured VO2.

Does high altitude affect the Fick Principle?
Yes, because lower atmospheric pressure reduces PaO2 and SaO2, which affects the arterial oxygen content calculation.

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