Trauma And Shock Flashcards

1
Q

What is shock

A

Shock is a life-threatening manifestation of circulatory failure.

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2
Q

Physiology

A

The major physiologic determinants of
tissue perfusion (and systemic blood pressure [BP]) are
cardiac output (CO) and systemic vascular resistance
(SVR):
BP = CO X SVR
CO is the product of heart rate (HR) and stroke volume
(SV):
CO = HR X SV
The stroke volume is determined by:
●Preload
●Myocardial contractility
●Afterload

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3
Q

SVR is governed by:

A

●Vessel length
●Blood viscosity
●Vessel diameter (ie, vessel tone)

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4
Q

Stages of shock
Pre-shock or compensated shock:

A

Characterized by compensatory mechanisms to
counter the decrease in tissue perfusion,
including tachycardia, peripheral
vasoconstriction, and changes in
systemic blood pressure

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5
Q

Stages of shock
Shock

A

During this stage, most of the classic
signs and symptoms of shock appear due to
early organ dysfunction, resulting from the
progression of the pre-shock stage as the
compensatory mechanisms become insufficient

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6
Q

Stages of shock
Decompensated shock/End-organ dysfunction -

A

This is the final stage, leading to irreversible
organ dysfunction, multiorgan failure, and death

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7
Q

TYPES OF SHOCK

A

Hypovolemic: haemorrhagic vs nonhaemorrhagic
▪ Cardiogenic
▪ Extracardiac obstructive
▪ Distributive

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8
Q

Haemorrhagic

A

Reduced intravascular volume
from blood loss can result in shock. There are
multiple causes of hemorrhagic shock, of which
blunt or penetrating trauma
Trauma patient:
4 and 1 on the
floor
chest, abdomen,
pelvis, long
bones and on
the floor
▪ The shock index assists in grading
shock: SI =pulse/systolic BP
▪ Predicts outcome
▪ <0.7, no shock
▪ 0.7-0.9 mild shock
▪ 0.9-1.1 moderate shock
▪ >1.1 severe shock

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9
Q

Distributive

A

Distributive shock is characterized by severe
peripheral vasodilatation (vasodilatory shock). Molecules that
mediate vasodilatation vary among the etiologies

Septic shock:
Treatment includes:
fluid bolus, reassessment
of end
points of resus,
broad spectrum
Abos, source
control
Distributive — Distributive shock is characterized by severe
peripheral vasodilatation (vasodilatory shock). Molecules that
mediate vasodilatation vary among the etiologies
1. Septic shock
2. SIRS
3. Anaphylactic
4. Neurogenic

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10
Q

DIAGNOSIS/RECOGNITION

A

DIAGNOSIS/RECOGNITION
ORGAN SYSTEM SIGNS/SYMPTOMS CAUSE
CVS Mental status changes
(Agitation/anxiety/coma)
Decreased cerebral perfusion
CVS Tachycardia,
Atrial/Ventricular
dysrrhythmias
Hypotension
Decreased CVP
Adrenergic stimulation
Coronary ischaemia
-coronary ischaemia
-right heart failure
-decreased systemic, vascular
resistance
-decreased venous return
Hypovolaemia
Resp Tachypnoea
Cyanosis
Pulmonary oedema, sepsis
Compensation for metabolic
acidosis
Hypoxia
Renal Oliguria Decreased perfusion, afferent
arteriolar vasoconstriction
Skin Cool, clammy,
warm, dry
Vasoconstriction
Vasodilation

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11
Q

Why is it important to identify the
type of shock?

A

Management
differs for each
category

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12
Q

Fluid therapy

A

Minimum of 2 large bore (14 to 16 gauge) intravenous catheters
▪ Isotonic fluid infusion (up to 200ml/min) Ringers lactate/normal saline
▪ Fluid challenge of 10 – 25ml/kg and then reassessment (+ 2000ml to 70kg pt)
▪ Blood for arterial blood gas analysis, screening and typing
▪ If blood pressure returns to normal, the volume loss was small & the only Rx
required may be infusion of isotonic fluid.
▪ If the increase in bp is transient, there might be a need for blood transfusion.
▪ Those who continue to require large amounts of fluid and blood, have ongoing
bleeding and require surgical intervention
▪ Endpoint of resuscitation: urine output of 0.5 – 1ml/kg/hr, any improvement in organ
perfusion, hypotension, tachycardia, GCS, clearance of lactate etc.

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