The delta-delta ratio compares the rise in anion gap to the fall in bicarbonate. It identifies mixed acid-base disorders that a simple anion gap alone can miss. Enter your lab values below.
Enter your electrolyte values to determine the delta-delta ratio and identify mixed acid-base disorders.
All values in mEq/L (mmol/L)
Enter values and click Calculate to see your results
How to calculate and use the delta-delta ratio in clinical practice.
The numerator (ΔAG) is how much the anion gap rose above normal (12). The denominator (ΔHCO₃⁻) is how much bicarbonate fell below normal (24). In a pure AG metabolic acidosis, these should change by the same amount — giving a ratio near 1.
A ratio below 1 means bicarbonate dropped more than expected — there's both an AG and a non-AG acidosis. A ratio above 2 means bicarbonate didn't drop enough — there's a concurrent metabolic alkalosis raising the bicarbonate.
Updates in real-time as you change values in the calculator above.
A tool for detecting mixed acid-base disorders hiding within a high anion gap.
The delta-delta ratio (also called the delta gap or Δ-Δ) compares two changes: how much the anion gap increased and how much the bicarbonate decreased. In a simple, pure high AG metabolic acidosis, every new unmeasured acid molecule should consume exactly one bicarbonate. So the rise in AG should match the fall in bicarb — a 1:1 relationship.
When the ratio deviates from 1:1, a second process is at work. A ratio below 1 means extra bicarbonate was lost (a concurrent non-AG acidosis like diarrhea). A ratio above 2 means bicarbonate is higher than expected (a concurrent metabolic alkalosis, perhaps from vomiting or diuretic use). Without this check, you'd miss the second disorder entirely.
How to interpret different ratio values.
| Ratio | Range | Interpretation | Clinical Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low | < 1 | Mixed AG + Non-AG acidosis | HCO₃⁻ fell more than AG rose — extra bicarb loss |
| Normal | 1 – 2 | Pure AG metabolic acidosis | AG rise matches bicarb drop — single process |
| High | > 2 | AG acidosis + metabolic alkalosis | HCO₃⁻ didn't drop enough — something raising bicarb |
This gauge shows your current delta-delta ratio.
What each ratio range means for your patient.
Answers to common questions about the delta-delta ratio.