Lecture 10: Hemorrhage & Shock Flashcards
What does the severity of a hemorrhage depend on?
Amount of blood lost
Speed of loss (severe = more than 1L)
Why does arterial pressure fall more than ventricular pressure?
Thinner walls
More compliant
What does a reduction in LV EDV cause?
Fall in SV
Low CO
Low arterial pressure
What does low arterial pressure cause?
Reduced baroreceptor firing
Increased chemoreceptor firing (O2 drops)
Activation of pressore centre neurons in medulla
Activation of sympathetic nerves
What does sympathetic stimulation cause?
Noradrenaline release Cardiac b-adrenergic receptors: - Increase HR to increase CO - Increased cardiac contractility Arterial a-adrenergic receptors" - Redistribution of CO - Redistribution of blood volume
Why does heart rate increase?
To increase CO
Is limited by diminishing diastolic filling time
What are the two responses to hemorrhage?
Respiratory stimulation
Restoration of circulating volume
What is shock?
Persistently low BP causes failure to deliver blood to support organ function
Capillaries break down & tissue factors are released
May be irreversible
2 types:
- reduced blood volume (hypovolemic)
- reduced CO (cardiogenic)
- reduced TPR (vasodilation)
What is hypovolemic shock?
Blood loss - hemorrhage
Fluid deficiency - dehydration
Protein-rich fluid loss - burns
What is cardiogenic shock?
Systolic failure: - myocardial death - myocardial inflammation/infection - rhythm disturbance - valve failure Diastolic failure: - cardiac compression
What is vasogenic shock?
Profound vasodilation
Neural - spinal cord injury
Toxins - sepsis
Drugs
What are the 3 stages of shock?
Compensated - able to stop it from happening
Decompensated
Irreversible
What is the compensated stage of shock?
Early phase
Physiological responses activated
Tissue perfusion maintained
What is the decompensated stage of shock?
Uncorrected cause Failing compensatory responses Functional deterioration - loss of vascular function - impaired tissue metabolism - compromised organ function
What is the irreversibility stage of shock?
Failed responses Failed organs Progressive acidosis Renal, pulmonary, hepatic failure Gastrointestinal death & toxin release Brain failure Cardiac failure