Lecture 10: Hemorrhage & Shock Flashcards

1
Q

What does the severity of a hemorrhage depend on?

A

Amount of blood lost

Speed of loss (severe = more than 1L)

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2
Q

Why does arterial pressure fall more than ventricular pressure?

A

Thinner walls

More compliant

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3
Q

What does a reduction in LV EDV cause?

A

Fall in SV
Low CO
Low arterial pressure

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4
Q

What does low arterial pressure cause?

A

Reduced baroreceptor firing
Increased chemoreceptor firing (O2 drops)
Activation of pressore centre neurons in medulla
Activation of sympathetic nerves

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5
Q

What does sympathetic stimulation cause?

A
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
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6
Q

Why does heart rate increase?

A

To increase CO

Is limited by diminishing diastolic filling time

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7
Q

What are the two responses to hemorrhage?

A

Respiratory stimulation

Restoration of circulating volume

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8
Q

What is shock?

A

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)

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9
Q

What is hypovolemic shock?

A

Blood loss - hemorrhage
Fluid deficiency - dehydration
Protein-rich fluid loss - burns

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10
Q

What is cardiogenic shock?

A
Systolic failure:
- myocardial death
- myocardial inflammation/infection
- rhythm disturbance
- valve failure
Diastolic failure:
- cardiac compression
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11
Q

What is vasogenic shock?

A

Profound vasodilation
Neural - spinal cord injury
Toxins - sepsis
Drugs

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12
Q

What are the 3 stages of shock?

A

Compensated - able to stop it from happening
Decompensated
Irreversible

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13
Q

What is the compensated stage of shock?

A

Early phase
Physiological responses activated
Tissue perfusion maintained

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14
Q

What is the decompensated stage of shock?

A
Uncorrected cause
Failing compensatory responses
Functional deterioration 
- loss of vascular function
- impaired tissue metabolism
- compromised organ function
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15
Q

What is the irreversibility stage of shock?

A
Failed responses 
Failed organs 
Progressive acidosis
Renal, pulmonary, hepatic failure
Gastrointestinal death & toxin release
Brain failure
Cardiac failure
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16
Q

What is septic shock?

A

Bacterial infection
Cell wall LPS - endotoxin:
- binds to macrophages
- causes the release of cytokines, autacoids, coagulation factors, complement, interferon

17
Q

What is anaphylaxis?

A
Rapid, progressive, fulminant
Antigen-antibody reaction
Basophil and mast cell release of 
- histamine
- bradykinin
- lerukotrienes
- prostaglandins 
which cause vasodilation, increased capillary permeability, bronchial smooth muscle contraction