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ApexRespiratory

Chart — Airway Management

Capnography Waveform Patterns Chart

The shape of the capnogram tells a story the number alone cannot. A square box means a patent airway and steady ventilation; a sloped shark-fin warns of obstruction; a flat line is an emergency. This chart pairs each waveform RTs must recognize with what it means and the action it should prompt.

Written by Apex Respiratory Editorial Team

Educational use only. This material supports respiratory therapy education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional protocols, or physician orders. Always follow facility policies and current provider orders, and verify calculations independently before clinical use.

Capnography Waveforms Side by Side

Capnography waveform patterns with appearance and the cause or action for each
PatternAppearanceCause / Action
NormalRectangular waveform; EtCO2 35–45 mmHgPatent airway with adequate ventilation and perfusion
Obstruction / bronchospasm“Shark-fin” — a sloped, prolonged upstroke with loss of the alveolar plateauCOPD, asthma, or airway obstruction; treat the bronchospasm
Esophageal intubation / no ventilationFlat, absent waveformThe tube is not in the trachea (or apnea, disconnection, or complete obstruction) — confirm and act immediately
HypoventilationRising EtCO2, taller boxesDecreased rate or tidal volume; increase ventilation
HyperventilationFalling EtCO2, shorter boxesIncreased rate or tidal volume; reduce ventilation
Curare cleftA notch dipping into the plateauA spontaneous breath during paralysis — neuromuscular blockade is wearing off
Sudden loss to zeroThe waveform drops abruptly to baselineDisconnection, tube displacement or extubation, complete obstruction, or cardiac arrest — check the patient and the circuit
Rising baselineThe baseline does not return to zeroRebreathing of CO2 (a faulty valve, an exhausted absorber, or inadequate expiratory time)

Clinical Notes

  • EtCO2 reflects two things. EtCO2 reflects ventilation AND perfusion — a sudden drop can mean a circuit problem OR a fall in cardiac output (cardiac arrest, large PE).
  • It confirms the tube. Waveform capnography is the standard for confirming and continuously monitoring ETT placement.
  • Read the shape. A sloped shark-fin signals airway obstruction.

Related Resources

Sources

  1. American Association for Respiratory Care. AARC clinical practice guideline: capnography/capnometry during mechanical ventilation 2011. Respir Care. 2011;56(4):503-509.
  2. Kacmarek RM, Stoller JK, Heuer AJ. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care. 12th ed. Elsevier; 2021.