NURS 6501: Week 6 Midterm Exam Question 11/ NURS-6501N Advanced Pathophysiology
  NURS 6501: MIDTERM EXAM: Please contact Assignment Samurai for help with NURS 6501: Midterm Exam or any other assignment. Email: assignmentsamurai@gmail.com   What clinical significance does the term “pulmonary shunt” hold in the context of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)? Group of answer choices
  • It indicates the inability to improve hypoxemia with oxygen therapy.
  • It refers to altered lung compliance.
  • It signifies protein-poor exudate in the lung interstitium.
  • It suggests a cardiac type of damage to the lung.
  he correct answer is It indicates the inability to improve hypoxemia with oxygen therapy. Explanation: In the context of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), a pulmonary shunt refers to the situation where blood passes through the lungs without being oxygenated, typically due to the presence of atelectasis (collapse of alveoli), fluid-filled alveoli, or impaired gas exchange in certain parts of the lung. This results in hypoxemia (low oxygen levels in the blood) that does not respond well to increased oxygen concentrations, which is characteristic of a pulmonary shunt. Essentially, despite increasing the amount of oxygen, oxygenation remains poor because a portion of the blood is bypassing the alveoli, where gas exchange occurs. Why the other options are incorrect:
  • It refers to altered lung compliance: While ARDS does result in decreased lung compliance (making the lungs stiffer and less able to expand), this is not the definition of a pulmonary shunt. Pulmonary shunting specifically relates to the mismatch between ventilation and perfusion in the lungs, not to lung compliance.
  • It signifies protein-poor exudate in the lung interstitium: This statement refers to noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, which is a feature of ARDS, but it is not the definition of a pulmonary shunt. A pulmonary shunt refers to blood bypassing oxygenated areas, rather than an exudate issue.
  • It suggests a cardiac type of damage to the lung: Pulmonary shunting is more related to noncardiogenic causes (such as ARDS) rather than issues with the heart. A cardiac shunt (like in congenital heart defects) involves abnormal blood flow due to structural heart problems, but in ARDS, the issue is lung-related.
Conclusion: In ARDS, a pulmonary shunt signifies the inability to improve hypoxemia with oxygen therapy due to impaired gas exchange in the lungs, even with higher oxygen levels. This is a key feature of the disease that distinguishes it from other causes of hypoxemia.