Pulmonary shunt

A pulmonary shunt is a physiological condition which results when the alveoli of the lungs are perfused with blood as normal, but ventilation (the supply of air) fails to supply the perfused region. In other words, the ventilation/perfusion ratio (the ratio of air reaching the alveoli to blood perfusing them) is zero.[1] A pulmonary shunt often occurs when the alveoli fill with fluid, causing parts of the lung to be unventilated although they are still perfused.[2]

Intrapulmonary shunting is the main cause of hypoxemia (inadequate blood oxygen) in pulmonary edema and conditions such as pneumonia in which the lungs become consolidated.[2] The shunt fraction is the percentage of blood put out by the heart that is not completely oxygenated.

In pathological conditions such as pulmonary contusion, the shunt fraction is significantly greater and even breathing 100% oxygen does not fully oxygenate the blood.[1]

Anatomical shunt

A small degree of shunt is normal and may be described as an 'anatomical shunt'. Anatomical shunting occurs when too much of the blood supplying the lung tissues via the bronchial arteries is being returned via the pulmonary veins without undergoing gas exchange. In addition, some of the coronary veins drain directly into the left ventricle of the human heart. This is why the arterial PO2 is slightly lower than the alveolar PO2.

Pathophysiology

Shunt refers to perfusion without ventilation. More specifically, intrapulmonary shunt refers to areas in the lung where perfusion exceeds ventilation.

Pulmonary shunting is minimized by the normal reflex constriction of pulmonary vasculature to hypoxia. Without this hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, shunt and its hypoxic effects would worsen. For example, when alveoli fill with fluid, they are unable to participate in gas exchange with blood, causing local or regional hypoxia, thus triggering vasoconstriction. Blood is then redirected away from this area, which poorly matches ventilation and perfusion, to areas which are being ventilated.

Because shunt represents areas where gas exchange does not occur, 100% inspired oxygen is unable to overcome the hypoxia caused by shunting.

A decrease in perfusion relative to ventilation (as occurs in pulmonary embolism, for example) is an example of increased dead space.[3] Dead space is a space at which gas exchange does not take place, such as the trachea. It is ventilation without perfusion.

Pulmonary shunting causes the blood supply leaving a shunted area of the lung to have lower levels of oxygen and higher levels of carbon dioxide (i.e., the normal gas exchange does not occur).

A pulmonary shunt occurs as a result of blood flowing right-to-left through cardiac openings or in pulmonary arteriovenous malformations. The shunt which means V/Q = 0 for that particular part of the lung field under consideration results in de-oxygenated blood going to the heart from the lungs via the pulmonary veins. If giving pure oxygen at 100% for five-ten minutes doesn't raise the arterial pressure of O2 more than it does the alveolar pressure of O2 then the defect in the lung is because of a pulmonary shunt. This is because although the PO2 of alveolar gas has been changed by giving pure supplemental O2, the PaO2 ( Arterial gas pressure ) will not increase that much because the V/Q mismatch still exists and it will still add some de-oxygenated blood to the arterial system via the shunt.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Garay S, Kamelar D (1989). "Pathophysiology of trauma-associated respiratory failure". In Hood RM, Boyd AD, Culliford AT. Thoracic Trauma. Philadelphia: Saunders. pp. 328–332. ISBN 0-7216-2353-0.
  2. 1 2 Fraser, Robert (1988). Diagnosis of Diseases of the Chest. Philadelphia: Saunders. p. 139. ISBN 0-7216-3870-8.
  3. Prentice D, Ahrens T (August 1994). "Pulmonary complications of trauma". Critical Care Nursing Quarterly 17 (2): 24–33. doi:10.1097/00002727-199408000-00004. PMID 8055358.
  4. Egan's Fundamentals of Respiratory Care, p. 951

External links

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