Shock Flashcards

1
Q

define shock

A

“A syndrome in which tissue perfusion is inadequate for the tissue’s metabolic requirement.”

“A state of cellular and tissue hypoxia due to either reduced oxygen delivery, increased oxygen consumption, inadequate oxygen utilisation,

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2
Q

three things normal tissue perfusion relies on

A

cardiac function

intact and functioning vascular system

circulating blood volume

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3
Q

MAP calculation

A

cardiac output x systemic vascular resistance

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4
Q

why is perfusion important

A

for oxygen delivery

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5
Q

4 ways in which shock can be classified

A

cardiogenic
hypovolemic
obstructive - blockage
distributive
endocrine- 5th

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6
Q

hypovolaemic shock cause

A

acute haemorrhage

due to loss of plasma/ blood volume

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7
Q

cardiogenic shock and its causes

A

pump failure - reduced cardiac output

ischaemia induced myocardial dysfunction , cardiomyopathies, valvular problems and dysrhthmias

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8
Q

obstructive shock and causes

A

Mechanical obstruction
to normal cardiac output
in an otherwise normal heart

causes; PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax

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9
Q

distributive shock and its causes

A

septic, anaphylaaxis

Due to disruption of normal vascular autoregulation, and profound vasodilatation.

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10
Q

endocrine shock causes

A

Severe uncorrected hypothyroidism, Addisonian crisis – both reduced CO and vasodilation

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11
Q

investigations in shock

A
  • Surrogate markers used to measure normal perfusion:
    • Blood pressure
    • Consciousness (brain perfusion)
    • Urine output (renal perfusion)
    • Lactate (general tissue perfusion)
  • Pulse contour analysis used to measure cardiac output
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12
Q

examples of hypovolemic shock

A

acute haemorrhage, fluid deplete states (severe dehydration, burns)
- Volume depletion leads to reduced SVR
- Reduced volume returning to the heart → reduced pre-load and hence reduced CO

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13
Q

common clinical feature in all types of shock

A

hypotension

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14
Q

clinical signs in cardiogenic

A

signs of myocardial failure

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15
Q

signs in obstructive

A
  • Raised JVP
  • Pulsus paradoxus
  • Signs of cause
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16
Q

signs in distributive shock

A
  • Septic: pyrexia, vasodilation, rapid capillary refill
  • Anaphalaxis: profound vasodilation, erythema, bronchospasm, oedema
17
Q

signs in hypovolemic

A

Pale, cold skin, prolonged capillary refill

18
Q

management of hypovolemic shock

A
  • Assessment of bleeding - estimation of volume loss and speed of ongoing loss
  • Establish source - may require imaging if stable
  • Temporisation - direct pressure, tourniquets
  • Damage limitation resuscitation - until definitive control
  • Damage limitation surgery
19
Q

what are the mechanical support options

A
  • When drugs fail
  • In cardiogenic shock: balloon pumps, L-VADs, R-VADs, VA-ECHMO (severe cases)
20
Q

what is the pharmacological management of shock when fluids dont work

A
  • Adrenaline - alpha/beta adrenergic agonist, at low dose primarily beta (heart rate, contractility, vasodilation)
  • Noradrenaline - predominantly alpha agonist
  • Others:
    • Vasopressin - ADH
    • Dopamine - natural predursor to the above, complex dose-dependent effects
    • Dobutamine/dopexamine - analogues of domapine
21
Q

first management of shock

A

fluids

22
Q

what is the common end pathway in shock

A

Cascade of inflammatory mediators as a consequence of cellular ischaemia cause a vicious cycle of vasoconstriction and oedema

23
Q

what are shock patients more susceptible to

A

pulmonary oedema

24
Q

first choice pharma management in most cases

A

noradrenaline

25
Q
A