Nurses Helping Nurses
allnurses Network: Central | Jobs | Books | Newsletter
allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses
Home General News Blogs Articles Students Region Specialty Degrees F.A.Q.
Critical Care Nursing /

Understanding GTN and shunting



Did You Know?
allnurses is the largest community for nurses on the web. We now have over 385,829 members! Join today to network with other nurses, laugh, share, and much more.

Mar 31, 2009 09:06 AM

Understanding GTN and shunting


I work in ICU and we have numerous patients on GTN infusions, frequently on very high doses. We notice that sometimes once the GTN has been commenced the patients oxygenation drops, senior staff refer to this as "shunting". Can anyone explain what they mean by this?


Share: Submit Thread to Facebook Submit Thread to Twitter Submit Thread to Technorati Submit Thread to Google Submit Thread to Reddit

Search Tags
None
Top

 
Advertisement
Sponsored Links
 
Reply
1 Comment
No. 1
from ghillbert
Old Apr 01, 2009, 05:58 AM

Default Re: Understanding GTN and shunting
Nitroglycerin (NTG/GTN) causes vessel dilation by increasing nitric oxide at vascular level. In patients with lung disease, you increase blood flow to non-oxygenated areas and thus you get a drop in O2 sat - this is called "intrapulmonary shunting".
Top
 
Reply




Thread Tools


Who's Online
228 members
2,236 guests
2,464

8

Doctors-in-short-supply-responsibilities-for-nurses-may-expa...

7

Less regular sleep for ICU nurses may lead to errors

14

Nurse sends unused medical supplies to needy nations

23

Premature Births Are Fueling Higher Rates of Infant...

6

MRSA Strain Linked to High Death Rates

22

RI hospital fined $150,000 in 5th wrong-site surgery since...

64

Nursing: One of the 6 Thriving Jobs that are Here to Stay???

89

Dad Fights Hospital to Keep Baby on Life Support

12

A nurse can dream...about awesome nursing

16

California Nursing Situation - CINHC's plan to help New...






Currently Reading This Page: 1 (0 members & 1 guests)

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the Nurse-zine Newsletter.
Enter email address: