Lecture 7: Shock (Exam I) Flashcards

1
Q

For a normal person, how much can CO increase when needed?
What if the person trains?
What if the person is a world-class athlete?

A
  • 23 - 25 L/min (400% increase)
  • 30 - 35 L/min
  • 40 - 45 L/min (600% increase)
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2
Q

What expands cardiac reserve?
What diminishes it?

A
  • Exercise expands cardiac reserve whilst pathology diminishes it.
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3
Q

What two disease processes result in no cardiac reserve?

A
  • Severe valvular disease
  • Severe MI
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4
Q

Describe what is occurring in this graph.

A
  • A myocardial infarction has detrimentally impacted someone’s cardiac output curve resulting in A.
  • B - E are body’s attempt to maintain CO by increasing volume (RAP).
  • F is eventual fluid overload resulting in worsening CO & death.
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5
Q

In the figure below, which state would pulmonary edema be most likely to develop in?

A

F

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6
Q

Describe what is occurring in the graph below.

A
  • Severe MI leads to inadequate CO initially.
  • Inadequate CO is overcome with volume retention and autonomic compensation.
  • Either recovery of cardiac tissue or pharmaceutical help.
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7
Q

What curve shift would be seen from a digoxin-treated heart post severe myocardial infarction?

A

Left shift

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8
Q

Can MAP be utilized alone to determine tissue perfusion? Why or why not?

A

Gap between MAP and CO demonstrates lack of tissue perfusion despite decent MAP.

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9
Q

What is the gold standard for CO measurement? What are other ways it can be measured?

A
  • Swan-Ganz catheter
  • Flo-track (meh)
  • Blood gasses
  • Manual CO w/ cold injectate
  • SvO₂
  • Impedance changes
  • Echocardiogram
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10
Q

When assessing cardiac output via manual cold saline injectate, what would a more diluted sample at the sensor indicate?

A
  • A higher CO

slow dilution = ↓CO
fast dilution = ↑CO

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11
Q

What is the formula for the Fick equation?

A

CO = (O₂ absorbed per min by lungs mL/min)
÷
(Arteriovenous O₂ difference mL/dL of blood)

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12
Q

How many mL/dL of O₂ return to the heart from systemic circulation?

A
  • 15 mL/dL
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13
Q

How many mL/dL of O₂ leave the heart?

A
  • 20 mL/dL
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14
Q

Calculate cardiac output from the following parameters:
- V̇O₂ = 240 mLO₂
- Arterial O₂ = 20 mLO₂
- Venous O₂ = 14 mLO₂

A

4 L/min

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15
Q

What is V̇O₂?
How is it measured?

A
  • O₂ absorbed per minute by the lungs.
  • Via spectrometer (gas in vs gas out)
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16
Q

How does coronary ΔO₂ (essentially O₂ consumption) compare to that of systemic?

A
  • Coronary consumption of O₂ is much greater than that of systemic with ΔO₂ = 15mL/dL
17
Q

Below is a CO measurement obtained from ultrasonic flowmeter. What is indicated by the green circle?

A
  • Retrograde perfusion as the aortic valve closes funneling blood into the coronary arteries.
18
Q

Below is a CO measurement obtained from ultrasonic flowmeter. What general concept is important to note from this graph?

Disregard the green circle for this question

A

Pulsatile nature of CO (CO isn’t a steady state of 5 L/min, its formed from pulses up to 20 L/min with periods of ~ 0 L/min).

19
Q

When is an echocardiogram most useful in the assessment of cardiac output?

A
  • Best for monitoring changes in CO over time.
20
Q

How many heart beats are in a normal respiratory cycle?

A
  • 8 beats per respiratory cycle.
21
Q

What is the normal pulse pressure variation noted with the respiratory cycle called?

A
  • Pulsus paradoxus
22
Q

What would a systolic blood pressure drop of greater than 10mmHg during inspiration indicate?

A
  • Hypovolemic status (the patient needs a bolus or passive leg raise).
23
Q

Increasing preload will have what effect on PPV (pulse pressure variation)?

A
  • ↑ preload = ↓ PPV
24
Q

What component of shock results in direct cardiac depression?

A
  • Toxin release from tissue ischemia
25
Q

What occurs when capillaries become ischemic?

A
  • Necrosis via lysosomes resulting in loss of colloids and edema.
26
Q

How is capillary necrosis secondary to shock treated?

A
  1. Prevention
  2. Steroids (↓necrosis)
27
Q

What are the treatment options for shock?

A
  • Pressors (preserving perfusion to VRGs)
  • Inotropes
  • Steroids
  • Fluid replacement
  • Colloids
  • Positioning
  • O₂ (not super helpful, Hgb is usually saturated)
28
Q

What will eventually happen with colloid replacement for shock?

A
  • Colloid overload will stress the kidneys and eventually just become excreted.
29
Q

What stimulates SNS reflexes?

A
  • Poor perfusion to the medulla of the brain stem.
30
Q

What organ is a reservoir of Hgb?
Where is the largest reservoir of blood?

A
  • Spleen
  • GI tract
31
Q

What is the strongest CV reflex in the body?

A
  • CNS Ischemic Response - all blood vessels squeeze to maintain perfusion to the brainstem.
32
Q

Which capillary pressure forces favor filtration?

A
  • PCAP
  • PISF
  • πISF
33
Q

Which capillary forces disfavor filtration?

A

πCAP

34
Q

How would arterial NFP (net filtration pressure) be calculated?

A

NFP = (PCAP + PISF + πISF) - πCAP

35
Q

Which capillary force changes when talking about the capillary forces on the venous end of the capillary beds?
How does it change?
How does this affect NFP?

A
  • PCAP changes from 30 to 10.
  • NFP becomes -7. Filtration becomes disfavored