1 / 24

SHOCK

SHOCK. Dr Begashaw M (MD). Introduction. i s a life-threatening condition occurs when the circulatory system fails to deliver oxygen and nutrients to the body tissues & becomes unable to remove waste products

colm
Télécharger la présentation

SHOCK

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SHOCK Dr Begashaw M (MD)

  2. Introduction • is a life-threatening condition • occurs when the circulatory system fails to deliver oxygen and nutrients to the body tissues &becomes unable to remove waste products • may rapidly progress to an irreversible state with subsequent multi-organ failure and death

  3. DEFINITION • a pathological state causing inadequate oxygen delivery to the peripheral tissues and resulting in lactic acidosis, cellular hypoxia &disruption of normal metabolic condition

  4. CLASSIFICATION 1. Hypovolemic 2. Cardiogenic 3. Obstructive 4. Distributive - Septic shock - Neurogenicshock - Anaphylactic shock

  5. Shock Hypovolemic Hemorrhage Anemia Fluid loss Obstructive Aortic valve stenosis Distributive Sepsis Thyrotoxicosis Anaphylaxis Cardiogenic Decompensated CHF Acute coronary syndrome Dysrhythmia Myocarditis

  6. Hypovolemic • Hemorrhage • Anemia Preload • Cardiogenic • CHF • ACS • Dysrhythmia Shock Inotropy MAP = (SV x HR) x SVR • Distributive • Sepsis • Thyrotoxicosis • Obstructive • Aortic valve stenosis Afterload

  7. Cardiac Performance Left ventricular size Peripheral resistance Preload Stroke volume Arterial pressure Myocardial fiber shortening Cardiac output Contractility Heart rate Afterload

  8. Cardiovascular &metabolic characteristics of shock

  9. Hypovolemic shock • inadequate vascular volume • results from loss of fluid from circulation, either directly or indirectly E.g ▪ Hemorrhage • Loss of plasma due to burn • Loss of water &electrolytes in diarrhea • Third space loss

  10. Where do ptbleed enough to die? • Remember, there are only 5 places into which a person can bleed enough to cause hemodynamic instability • Chest • Peritoneum • Retroperitoneum • Thighs • World Not the mediastinum

  11. Cardiogenic shock • impaired cardiac function • myocardial infarction • pericardial tamponade

  12. Obstructive Shock • Resistance to cardiac outflow • ↑ afterload • Aortic stenosis • Tension pneumothorax

  13. Septic Shock (vasogenic shock) • as a result of the systemic effect of infection • result of a septicemia with endotoxin and exotoxin release by gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria • impaired extraction as a result of impaired metabolism

  14. Neurogenic shock • disruption of the sympathetic nervous system - to pain - loss of sympathetic tone, as in spinal cord injuries

  15. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF SHOCK • stimulates a physiologic response - conserve perfusion to the vital organs (heart and brain) - vasoconstriction of skin, splanchnic & renal vessels leads to renal cortical necrosis and acute renal failure

  16. Hypovolemic shock: physiology • Reduced blood volume • Reduced preload • Reduced stroke volume • Reduced cardiac output • Response to shock - physiology • Cathecholamines , ADH • Vasoconstriction, tachycardia • Improve venous return and CO

  17. CLINICAL FEATURES • Tachycardia • Feeble pulse • Narrow pulse pressure • Cold extremities (except septic shock) • Sweating, anxiety • Breathlessness / Hyperventilation • Confusion leading to unconscious state

  18. Classification of Hemorrhage

  19. MANAGEMENT OF SHOCK • restoring oxygen delivery to the cells of vital organs

  20. General Management • Priority-ABC • Stop bleeding • Fluid resuscitation-crystalloids • Head down position-flat • Transfusion • Oxygen , inotropic • Monitoring -determine hourly urine output, BP, pulse rate

  21. Specific Management • Hypovolemic Shock • Restore vascular volume • Fluid and blood replacement • Oxygen support

  22. Specific Management Septic Shock • antibiotics • Inotropic–adrenaline,dopamine • Surgical eradication of the infection focus Cardiogenic shock • Inotropes Neurogenicshock • Pain relief • Treat the causes, give supportive measures - inotropic support

  23. COMPLICATIONS OF SHOCK 1. Shock lung (ARDS) 2. Acute renal failure 3. Gastrointestinal ulceration 4. Disseminated intravascular coagulation 5. Multiorgan failure 6. Death

  24. Questions?

More Related