Shock Flashcards

1
Q

What is Shock?

A

„a serious and potentially fatal condition characterised by acute failure of the cardiovascular system to adequately perfuse the tissues of the body (hypoperfusion).

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2
Q

what is the normal circulating blood volue?

A

70mls/kg

so a 70 kg man has 70x70 = 4900 mls

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3
Q

What is compensation/decompensation as it relates to shock?

A

compensation =hypoxic and metabolic effects of under perfusion - initially cause only reversible cellular damage due to compensatory response of the body

decompensated = persistence of the underperfused state eventually causes irreversible tissue damage and death

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4
Q

what is ‘cardiogenic shock’?

A

failure of the heart to pump resulting in shock

ex) electrical fault of hear, failure to contract in congestive heart failure, ischaemic damage, MI, cardiac tamponade

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5
Q

what is ‘distributive shock’?

A

changes in vascular tone leading to underperfusion

ex) septic shock, spinal injury, drug overdose, anaphylaxis

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6
Q

what is hypovolaemic shock?

A

reduction in circulating fluid volume either whole blood, plasma, extracellular or intracellular fluid

ex) blood loss due to haemorrhage, plasma loss following burns, fluid loss due to vomiting or diarrhoea

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7
Q

what are the four classes of hypovolaemic shock?

A

depends on the rate of loss as well - acute/chronic

class 1 = lose less than 15%

class 2= lose 15-30%

class 3 = lose 30-40%

class 4= lose more than 40%

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8
Q

what sort of compensatory response do we see in hypovolaemic shock?

A

in acute loss we see

  • increased heart rate
  • decreased urine flow
  • pale/cold extremities
  • increased respiratory rate
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9
Q

the compensatory signs/symptoms can mostly be explained by two responses to blood loss - what are they?

A
  • hypothalamic - pituitary adrenal axis = stimulates cortisol relsease from adrenal cortex
  • sympatho-adrenal axis
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10
Q

what is the bodies ‘priority organ’ during shock?

A

protection of the cerebral and myocardial circulations is priority at the expense of reduced perfusion of most major organs

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11
Q

what are some neural/hormonal compensatory responses to hypovolaemic shock?

A

activation of sympathetics - cardiovascular control, effects on adrenal medulla and restoration of blood volume

secretion of hormones to increase cardiovascular control, provide enough metabolic fuel, and restore volume

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12
Q

what are some hormones released during hypovolaemia?

A

vasoactive hormones: angiotensin 2, ADH, catecholamines (adrenaline/noradrenaline)

metabolically active: cortisol, glucagon, adrenaline,

volume conserving: ADH, aldosterone

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13
Q

why do we see an increase in ADH, aldosterone and thirst during acute hypovolaemia?

A

blood loss leads to

decreased arterial pressure leads to

decreased glomerular filtration rate leads to

increased renin release leads to

increased angiotensin 2 -

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14
Q

how does our body utilize tissue fluid during hypovolaemia?

A

“internal transfusion”

  • due to fall in capillary hydrostatic pressure associated with arterial vasoconstriction, fluid from the interstitium/intracellular space is reabsorbed into the capillaries
  • restores volume but dilutes plasma proteins and RBCs
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15
Q

what is ‘Starlings hypothesis’?

A

the following forces determine capillary exchange

  • Pressure in capillary
  • Pressure in intersitial fluid
  • colloid osmotic pressure of capillary
  • colloid osmotic pressure of interstitial fluid
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16
Q

how does the body restore blood volume after hypovolaemia?

A
  • restore water/electroytes = decrease filtration in glomerulus, increase reabsorption (ADH and aldosterone stimulate water/sodium reabsorption respectively) , increase intake of water
  • synthesis of proteins and RBCs - albumin synthesized in liver, RBCs synthesized in bone marrow
17
Q

which compensatory responses come first?

A
  • sympathetics first = within 30 s
  • angiotensin/ADH mechanism = 10min-1hr
  • fluid reabsorption= 1-48 hours
18
Q

how do we treat shock?

A
  • TREAT THE CAUSE
    • maintain circulating blood volume with blood/fluids
    • give synthetic catecholamines (adrenaline, noradrenaline)
    • antibiotics
    • anti-arrhythmica
    • steroids in the case of sepsis
    • support the organs (breathing, renal replacement, cardiac support)
19
Q

Mentioned as Potential SNQ

„Know the three classifications of Shock

„Know the three causes of shock

„Know how to treat the cause- or call the priest – you’re job is to reverse the cause, not prolong death

A