Metabolic Response to Trauma and Critical Illness Flashcards
what are the causes of hypermetabolic response?
sepsis fractures stress major surgery burns trauma
what is the neurohormonal arm?
catecholamines glucocorticoids glucagon ADH aldosterone
what is the inflammatory arm?
cytokines
complement
eicosanoids
PAF
what does aldosterone do?
cause renal sodium retention
what does antidiuretic hormone (ADH) do?
stimulates renal tubular water absorption
what does ACTH do?
acts on adrenal cortex to release cortisol (glucocorticoids) to stimulate lipolysis and mobilize aa from skeletal muscles
what do catecolamines do?
epinephrine and norepinephrine - from adrenal medulla to stimulate hepatic glycogenolysis
fat mobilization
gluconeogenesis
what cytokines are released by phagocytes in response to tissue damage, infection, inflammation?
interleukins
tumor necrosis factor (TNF)
eicosanoids
what type of effect do eicosanoids have?
local (paracrine) effect
what do cytokines promote and how?
wound healing by ingrowth of fibroblasts
what do cytokines stimulate?
angiogenesis
what do cytokines increase and facilitate?
increase white cell count and facilitate white cell migration
cytokines localize what?
the wound!
what does mobilization of aa from cytokines do?
stimulate the acute phase of protein synthesis by the liver
what is responsible for fever (increased metabolic rate)?
cytokines
what are the three phases following trauma?
ebb phase / unresuscitated phase
flow phase - adrenergic-corticoid phase
recovery phase / convalescent phase / anabolic phase
in the ebb phase what are the immediate responses following injury?
hypovolemia
shock
tissue hypoxia
in the ebb phase, decreased CO can result in?
lactic acidosis (metabolic acidosis) due to decrease tissue oxygenation
in the ebb phase, what does decreased oxygen consumption lead to?
decreased metabolic rate
in the ebb phase, what does lower metabolic rate correspond to?
lowered body temp