CVS S12 - Shock Flashcards

1
Q

Give a general definition of shock

A

Acute condition of inadequate blood flow throughout the body

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2
Q

What are the causes of shock? (not any specific type)

A

Catastrophic fall in BP

Can be due to fall in:

  • TPR
  • CO

(BP = CO x TPR)

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3
Q

What types of shock are due to a fall in CO?

What are the general causes for each type?

A
Cardiogenic shock (pump failure):
- Ventricle cannot empty properly
Mechanical shock (obstructive):
- Ventricles cannot fill properly

Hypovolaemic shock
- Reduced blood volume leads to poor venous return

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4
Q

What are some of the causes of cardiogenic shock?

A

Following massive MI (>40% of myocardium infarcted)

Serious arrhythmia

Acute worsening of heart failure

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5
Q

What are some of the features of cardiogenic shock?

A

Central venous pressure can be raised or normal

Dramatic drop in arterial BP

Tissues poorly perfused:

  • Coronary artery ischaemia exacerbates problem
  • Kidney GFR drop = oliguria
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6
Q

Give 2 examples of conditions that can cause mechanical shock

A

Cardiac tamponade:

  • Blood/fluid in pericardial space builds up
  • Restricts right heart filling, limits end diastolic volume
  • Affects left and right heart

Pulmonary embolism:
- Embolus occludes a large pulmonary artery

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7
Q

Describe the features of mechanical shock due to cardiac tamponade

A

High central venous pressure
Low arterial BP
Heart attempts to beat despite compression

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8
Q

Describe the features of mechanical shock due to pulmonary embolism

A

Raised PA pressure

Right ventricle cannot empty

Central venous pressure high

Reduced filling of left heart

Left atrial pressure and arterial blood pressure low

(Also chest pain dyspnoea)

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9
Q

Describe the features of hypovolaemic shock

What are the most common causes?

A

Reduced blood volume

<20% blood loss unlikely to cause shock

20 - 30% loss causes some signs of shock response

30 - 40% causes drastically lowered aBP and serious shock

Common causes:

  • Haemorrhage (most common)
  • Severe burns
  • Severe diarrhoea or vomiting and Na+ loss
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10
Q

What mechanisms help compensate for or correct hypovolaemia?

A

Baroreceptor response

Internal transfusion

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11
Q

Describe the nervous response to haemorrhage

A

Low venous pressure due to haemorrhage

CO and arterial pressure fall

Detected by baroreceptors which increase SNS stimulation

Tachycardia, increased contractile force and peripheral vasoconstriction/venoconstriction result

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12
Q

Describe how Starling’s forces are affected by hypovolaemic shock

A

Increased peripheral resistance due to vasoconstriction (baroreceptor response) causes:

  • Reduced capillary hydrostatic forces
  • Net movement of fluid into capillaries
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13
Q

What are the symptoms of hypovolaemic shock?

A

Tachycardia
Weak pulse
Pale skin
Col, clammy extremities

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14
Q

What is decompensation in hypovolaemic shock?

A

Peripheral vasoconstriction imparis tissue function

Tissue is damaged due to hypoxia

Release of chemical vasodilators causes TPR to fall

BP falls

Vital organs no longer perfused

Multi-system failure

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15
Q

What is distributive shock?

A

Also known as low resistance (normovolaemic) shock

Profound peripheral vasodilation

Volume is constant but volume of circulation increased

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16
Q

What are the two types of distributive shock?

A

Toxic shock

Anaphylactic shock

17
Q

Describe how toxic shock comes about

A

Septicaemic patient

Endotoxins released by circulating bacteria

Cause profound vasodilation and dramatic fall in TPR

Fall in aBP

Impaired perfusion of organs (leading to multi-system failure)

Also, capillaries become leaky (reduce blood volume)

18
Q

Describe the SNS response to toxic shock

A

Decreased aBP detected by baroreceptors

Increased SNS output

Vasoconstrictor effect over-riden by local vasodilators

Heart rate and stroke volume increase

19
Q

Describe how a patient in toxic shock presents

A

Tachycardia

Warm, red extremities

20
Q

Describe how anaphylactic shock comes about

A

Severe allergic reaction causes release of histamine from mast cells

Powerful vasodilatory effect, TPR falls

Drop in aBP

Increased SNS output cannot overcome vasodilation

Impaired perfusion

Mediators also cause bronchoconstriction and laryngeal oedema (difficulty breathing)

21
Q

Describe how a patient in anaphylactic shock presents

A

Difficulty breathing
Collapsed
Tachycardia
Red, warm extremities

22
Q

What is the treatment for anaphylactic shock?

A

Adrenaline:

- Causes vasoconstriction via A1 adrenoceptors