3+ Circulatory Shock Flashcards
What is circulatory shock?
A life-threatening, generalised form fo circulatory failure with inadequate oxygen delivery to, and consequentially utilisation by, the cells
What are the 4 types of shock?
- Cardiogenic (pump dysfunction)
- MI, arrythmia etc - Distributive shock (failure of vasoregulation)
- Sepsis, anaphylaxis, brainstem injury/spinal injury (neurogenic) - Hypovolaemic shock (loss of intravascular volume)
- Haemorrhagic causes: GIT bleeding, trauma, dehydration
- Non-haemorrhagic: burns, ketoacidosis - Obstructive shock (barriers to cardiac flow or filling)
- PE restricts pulmonary flow, cardiac tamponade, pneumothorax can cause cardiac filling restriction
What are the causes of cardiogenic shock?
- Most commonly after an MI
- Tachyarrhythmias (AF, ventricular tachycardia)
- Bradyarrhythmia
- Toxic substances
- Infection: infective endocarditis, sepsis
- Acute mechanical causes: myocardial rupture, chest trauma, acute valvular incompetence
What is the pathophysiology of cardiogenic shock?
- Tissue hypoperfusion from loss of cardiac output induces tissue inflammation
- Shock can self-perpetuate by inducing additional cellular-level shock response cytokines –> SIRS
How does cardiogenic shock present?
- Hypotension
- Tachycardia
- Cool, clammy peripheries
- Mottled appearance
- Sweating
- Cyanosis
- Oliguria (low urine output)
- Mental state changes
- Fever if septic
- Dyspnoea, tachypnoea
What Ix do you do for cardiogenic shock?
Bedside:
- ECG
- UA
- BSL
Labs:
- ABG: check lactate: if over 2mmol/l = shock
- VBG: metabolic acidosis
- FBC: Hb for bleeding, WCC for infection
- UEC: urea + creatinine = renal hypoperfusion
- Coags: trauma, DIC
- CRP
- High procalcitonin = sepsis
Imaging:
- CXR: consolidation, pleural effusion from HF, PE
- CT if suspect AAA
- CTPA if suspect PE
How do you manage cardiogenic shock?
Airway: open, suction if needed, intubate if severe
Breathing: target O2 of 94-96 in patients not at risk of hypercapnia
Circulatory:
- Treat underlying cause
IV fluids in all patients except with cardiogenic pulmonary oedema (fluid challenge: bolus 500mL)
- Loop diuretic if pul oedema and fluid overload (frusemide)
- Vasopressor (NA) if hypotension despite fluids
- Inotrope (dobutamine) if impaired cardiac function and low CO + signs of tissue hypoperfusion after SV and HR have increased
What are the complications of cardiogenic shock?
Volume overload-induced pulmonary oedema
Organ failure
Vasopressor induced gangrene