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Physiology mcq 4 Questions 46-60 Physiology multiple choice questions for the primary FRCA examination. Discuss answers and explanations area

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51) .VENOUS ADMIXTURE - 03-29-2005, 07:09 PM

a) Is a response to oxygen therapy
b) Is increased in shock
c) In increased in pulmonary embolism
d) Is caused by atelectasis
e) Increases under general anaesthesia


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Re:51) .VENOUS ADMIXTURE - 03-29-2005, 07:09 PM

F shunt is refractive to oxygen therapy. With 100% oxygen atelectasis may occur causing shunt
T VENTILATION/PERFUSION mismatching
T “
T “
T loss of the normally protective hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction


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02-21-2006, 04:13 PM

can somebody tell me is venous admixture just shunt or does it include alveolar dead space as well. how is it increased in PE.
 
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Lightbulb shunt - 02-22-2006, 09:53 AM

namita

2 questions:

1) shunt = venous admixture. it does not include any element of alveolar dead space

2) why does shunt increase in a case of pulmonary embolism:

The best answer to this that i could find is:

Quote:

Pulmonary physiology during pulmonary embolism

CG Elliott
Pulmonary Division, LDS Hospital, Salt Lake City, UT 84143.

Acute pulmonary thromboembolism produces a number of pathophysiologic derangements of pulmonary function. Foremost among these alterations is increased pulmonary vascular resistance. For patients without preexistent cardiopulmonary disease, increased pulmonary vascular resistance is directly related to the degree of vascular obstruction demonstrated on the pulmonary arteriogram. Vasoconstriction, either reflexly or biochemically mediated, may contribute to increased pulmonary vascular resistance. Acute pulmonary thromboembolism also disturbs matching of ventilation and blood flow. Consequently, some lung units are overventilated relative to perfusion (increased dead space), while other lung units are underventilated relative to perfusion (venous admixture). True right-to-left shunting of mixed venous blood can occur through the lungs (intrapulmonary shunt) or across the atrial septum (intracardiac shunt). In addition, abnormalities of pulmonary gas exchange (carbon monoxide transfer), pulmonary compliance and airway resistance, and ventilatory control may accompany pulmonary embolism. Thrombolytic therapy can reverse the hemodynamic derangements of acute pulmonary thromboembolism more rapidly than anticoagulant therapy. Limited data suggest a sustained benefit of thrombolytic treatment on the pathophysiologic alterations of pulmonary vascular resistance and pulmonary gas exchange produced by acute pulmonary emboli.
The reference can be found here http://www.chestjournal.org/cgi/cont...act/101/4/163S
 
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Tags: admixture, venous



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