107 - Hypovolaemia Flashcards

1
Q

What is hypovolaemic shock?

A

Loss in 20% of circulating blood volume

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2
Q

What are the signs of shock?

A
Collapse
Reduced conscious level
Rapid breathing
Tachycardia
Hypotension
Poor peripheral perfusion
Low urine flow
Increased blood lactate levels
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3
Q

What is the ‘tennis score’ estimation of blood loss?

A

0-15% lost - thirst
15-30% lost - tachycardia
30-40% - hypotension
40% + - game over

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4
Q

What is a darrow-yannet diagram?

A

Graph that shows ICF and ECF, its osmolarity and volume

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5
Q

How is fluid distributed throughout the body?

A

20% of bodyweight = extracellular fluid
40% of bodyweight = intracellular fluid
60% of body weight = total body water volume

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6
Q

What does it mean if something is isomotic?

A

It is the same osmolality as plasma

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7
Q

Which fluid compartment has low sodium and high potassium?

A

ICF - the others have the opposite

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8
Q

What is Extracellular fluid subdivided into?

A
interstitial fluid (11l)
plasma (3l)
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9
Q

How is osmoregulation controlled?

A

Hypothalamic osmoregulatores detect change, and stimulate ADH and thrust - so water excretion and intake is effected.

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10
Q

How is volume of fluid regulation controlled?

A

Less well understood - the effective circulating vol is sensed by carotid sinus, afferent arterioles and atria.

This stimulates:

  • renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
  • sympathetic NS
  • Atrial natriuretic peptide
  • Pressure naturisis
  • ADH production
  • affects the body’s Na concentration
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11
Q

what is starling’s hypothesis?

A

The flow of fluids across capillary walls depends on the balance between hydrostatic and oncotic forces.

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12
Q

What are the 3 pathophysiological stages/types of shock?

A

Nonprogressive Shock
Pregressive shock
Irreversible phase

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13
Q

What is non progressive shock?

A

Recovers without treatment

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14
Q

What is progressive shock?

A

Can recover but only with rapid treatment - causes damage such as cardiac depression, increased vascular permeability, sickle cell syndrome

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15
Q

What is irreversible shock?

A

They may temporarily recover but will still die
Have SIRS - systemic inflammatory response syndrome
and DIC : disseminated intravascular coagulation

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