Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base
Winter's Formula ONLY applies to Metabolic Acidosis. Do not apply it to respiratory disorders or metabolic alkalosis. Always confirm the primary disorder first (pH, HCO3, PaCO2 trend).
| Measured PaCO2 = Expected |
| Measured PaCO2 > Expected |
| Measured PaCO2 < Expected |
In metabolic acidosis, peripheral chemoreceptors sense the fall in blood pH and drive hyperventilation, which eliminates CO2 (a volatile acid) to partially restore pH. This is Kussmaul breathing. The compensation is predictable and linear within the physiological range, allowing the expected PaCO2 to be calculated precisely.
Salicylate toxicity directly stimulates the respiratory centre, causing a Respiratory Alkalosis independent of metabolic changes. Patients with salicylate poisoning often have a mixed HAGMA + Primary Respiratory Alkalosis. If PaCO2 is lower than expected, always consider salicylate toxicity.
Quantitative displacement of acid-base equilibrium in metabolic acidosis.
Robert W. Winters was a pioneer in paediatric acid-base physiology at Columbia University in the 1960s. His formula — derived from systematic observations of PaCO2 in patients with pure metabolic acidosis — provided clinicians with a quantitative tool to distinguish a single disorder from a complex mixed picture. It remains one of the simplest and most reliable clinical equations in nephrology over 50 years later.