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Shock

Shock. By:Dawit Ayele MD,Internist. 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

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Shock

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  1. Shock By:DawitAyele MD,Internist

  2. Outline • Definition • Epidemiology • Physiology • Classes of Shock • Clinical Presentation • Management • Controversies

  3. Definition • A physiologic state characterized by • Inadequate tissue perfusion • Clinically manifested by • Hemodynamic disturbances • Organ dysfunction

  4. Epidemiology • Mortality • Septic shock – 35-40% (1 month mortality) • Cardiogenic shock – 60-90% • Hypovolemic shock – variable/mechanism

  5. Pathophysiology • Imbalance in oxygen supply and demand • Conversion from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism • Appropriate and inappropriate metabolic and physiologic responses Resultant systemic physiology:- • Cell death and end organ dysfunction • MSOF and death

  6. Physiology • Characterized by three stages • Preshock (warm shock, compensated shock) • Shock • End organ dysfunction

  7. Physiology • Compensated shock • Low preload shock – tachycardia, vasoconstriction, mildly decreased BP • Low afterload(distributive) shock – peripheral vasodilation, hyperdynamic state

  8. Pathophysiology • Shock • Initial signs of end organ dysfunction: • Tachycardia • Tachypnea • Metabolic acidosis • Oliguria • Cool and clammy skin

  9. Physiology • End Organ Dysfunction • Progressive irreversible dysfunction • Oliguria or anuria • Progressive acidosis and decreased CO • Agitation, obtundation, and coma • Patient death

  10. Classification • Schemes are designed to simplify complex physiology • Major classes of shock • Hypovolemic • Cardiogenic • Distributive

  11. 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

  12. Hypovolemic Shock • Hemorrhagic Shock Crit Care. 2004; 8(5): 373–381.

  13. Cardiogenic Shock • Results from pump failure • Decreased systolic function • Resultant decreased cardiac output • Etiologic categories • Myopathic • Arrhythmic • Mechanical • Extracardiac (obstructive)

  14. 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)

  15. Distributive Shock • Other causes • Systemic inflammation – pancreatitis, burns • Toxic shock syndrome • Anaphylaxis and anaphylactoidreactions • Toxin reactions – drugs, transfusions • Addisoniancrisis • Myxedema coma

  16. Distributive Shock • Septic Shock

  17. 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

  18. Evaluation • Done in parallel with treatment! • Hx&P/E – helpful to distinguish type of shock • Full laboratory evaluation (including H&H, cardiac enzymes, ABG) • Basic studies – CxR, EKG, U/A • Basic monitoring – V/S, UOP, CVP, A-line • Imaging if appropriate – FAST, CT • Echo vs. P/A catheterization • CO, PAS/PAD/PAW, SVR, SvO2

  19. Treatment • Manage the emergency • Determine the underlying cause • Definitive management or support

  20. 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?

  21. Manage the Emergency • 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

  22. 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

  23. Thanks

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