Search Medical Lecture Notes


medicalpptonline.blogspot.com contains lecture notes in most fields of medicine. You can directly copy lectures to your laptop ,no need of downloading or streaming

Lectures are collected from various sources.I will not be responsible for any typing error and out dated medical facts.Visitors are advised to cross check the information

Please give the authors the credit they deserve and do not change the author's name

If any of of you have a good personal power point presentations
Email me i will upload it here.

Shock


Outline
 Definition
 Epidemiology
 Physiology
 Classes of Shock
 Clinical Presentation
 Management
 Controversies
Definition
 A physiologic state characterized by
 Inadequate tissue perfusion

 Clinically manifested by
 Hemodynamic disturbances
 Organ dysfunction
Epidemiology
 Mortality
 Septic shock – 35-40% (1 month mortality)
 Cardiogenic shock – 60-90%
 Hypovolemic shock – variable/mechanism
Pathophysiology
 Imbalance in oxygen supply and demand
 Conversion from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism
 Appropriate and inappropriate metabolic and physiologic responses

 Cellular physiology
 Cell membrane ion pump dysfunction
 Leakage of intracellular contents into the extracellular space
 Intracellular pH dysregulation
 Resultant systemic physiology
 Cell death and end organ dysfunction
 MSOF and death
 Characterized by three stages
 Preshock (warm shock, compensated shock)
 Shock
 End organ dysfunction

 Compensated shock
 Low preload shock – tachycardia, vasoconstriction, mildly decreased BP
 Low afterload (distributive) shock – peripheral vasodilation, hyperdynamic state
 Shock
 Initial signs of end organ dysfunction
 Tachycardia
 Tachypnea
 Metabolic acidosis
 Oliguria
 Cool and clammy skin
 End Organ Dysfunction
 Progressive irreversible dysfunction

 Oliguria or anuria
 Progressive acidosis and decreased CO
 Agitation, obtundation, and coma
 Patient death

Classification
 Schemes are designed to simplify complex physiology
 Major classes of shock
 Hypovolemic
 Cardiogenic
 Distributive
Hypovolemic Shock
 Results from decreased preload
 Etiologic classes
 Hemorrhage - e.g. trauma, GI bleed, ruptured aneurysm
 Fluid loss - e.g. diarrhea, vomiting, burns, third spacing, iatrogenic
 Hemorrhagic Shock
Cardiogenic Shock
 Results from pump failure
 Decreased systolic function
 Resultant decreased cardiac output
 Etiologic categories
 Myopathic
 Arrhythmic
 Mechanical
 Extracardiac (obstructive)
Distributive Shock
 Results from a severe decrease in SVR
 Vasodilation reduces afterload
 May be associated with increased CO
 Etiologic categories
 Sepsis
 Neurogenic / spinal
 Other (next page)
 Other causes
 Systemic inflammation – pancreatitis, burns
 Toxic shock syndrome
 Anaphylaxis and anaphylactoid reactions
 Toxin reactions – drugs, transfusions
 Addisonian crisis
 Myxedema coma
 Septic Shock
Clinical Presentation
 Clinical presentation varies with type and cause, but there are features in common
 Hypotension (SBP<90 or Delta>40)
 Cool, clammy skin (exceptions – early distributive, terminal shock)
 Oliguria
 Change in mental status
 Metabolic acidosis
Evaluation
 Done in parallel with treatment!
 H&P – helpful to distinguish type of shock
 Full laboratory evaluation (including H&H, cardiac enzymes, ABG)
 Basic studies – CxR, EKG, UA
 Basic monitoring – VS, UOP, CVP, A-line
 Imaging if appropriate – FAST, CT
 Echo vs. PA catheterization
 CO, PAS/PAD/PAW, SVR, SvO2
Treatment
 Manage the emergency
 Determine the underlying cause
 Definitive management or support
Manage the Emergency
 Your patient is in extremis – tachycardic, hypotensive, obtunded
 How long do you have to manage this?

 Suggests that many things must be done at once
 Draw in ancillary staff for support!
 What must be done?
 One person runs the code!
 Control airway and breathing
 Maximize oxygen delivery
 Place lines, tubes, and monitors
 Get and run IVF on a pressure bag
 Get and run blood (if appropriate)
 Get and hang pressors
 Call your senior/fellow/attending
Determine the Cause
 Often obvious based on history
 Trauma most often hypovolemic (hemorrhagic)
 Postoperative most often hypovolemic (hemorrhagic or third spacing)
 Debilitated hospitalized pts most often septic

 Must evaluate all pts for risk factors for MI and consider cardiogenic
 Consider distributive (spinal) shock in trauma
 What if you’re wrong?

 85 y/o M 4 hours postop S/P sigmoid resection for perforated diverticulitis is hypotensive on a monitored bed at 70/40

 Likely causes
 Best actions for the first 5 minutes?
Definitive Management
 Hypovolemic – Fluid resuscitate (blood or crystalloid) and control ongoing loss
 Cardiogenic - Restore blood pressure (chemical and mechanical) and prevent ongoing cardiac death
 Distributive – Fluid resuscitate, pressors for maintenance, immediate abx/surgical control for infection, steroids for adrenocortical insufficiency

1 comment:

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...