shock is
inadequate tissue perfusion. A clinical state of acute circulatory failure with inadequate oxygen utilization and/or delivery to the cells resulting in cellular hypoxia”
is shock reversible
Initially reversible if treatment provided rapidly to prevent
progression to irreversible organ dysfunction.
what happen during compensatory phase
the body attempts to maintain
perfusion using its available compensation mechanisms
during decompensation phase what happen
During decompensation phase, body is unable to keep up
with demands
what is fick principle
Factors that can affect oxygen delivery to the tissues:
Things that can adversely effect oxygen delivery:
Organ Tolerance to Ischemia
HEART , BRAIN , LUNG -> 4-6min
❑ KIDNEY,LIVER,GI TRACT -> 45-90min
❑ MUSCLE, BONE, SKIN -> 4-6 hours
T/F A patient with signs of compensation is already in
shock, not “going into shock”
T
next stage after decompensated shock
death
shock progression
Compensatory defenses work well to a point…
❑ When defense mechanisms can no longer overcome volume reduction, …BP
going into DECOMPENSATION
what is hypovolemic shock
educed intravascular volume * May occur with acute blood volume loss due to
dehydration (loss of plasma)
* Hemorrhage (loss plasma + RBC), upsets the relationship of fluid volume to size of container balance.
what are the 2 types of hypovolemic shock
Absolute Hypovolemia (hemorrhagic cause)
Relative Hypovolemia (non-hemorrhagic causes)
eg: GI losses, skin losses, renal losses third-space losses (shifting of fluid into interstitial space)
how hypovolemic shock occurs with blood loss
what is distributive shock
Vascular container enlarges without proportional increase in fluid volume
* Relatively less fluid will be available for size of container.
* The amount of fluid available to the heart as preload decreases
and cardiac output falls.
how does distributive shock occurs
Resistance to flow is decreased because of vessel size leading to diastolic BP. Net effect is systolic & diastolic BPs
neurogenic distributive shock occurs when
Can occur when a cervical spine injury damages the spinal cord above where the nerves of the sympathetic nervous system exit.
* Because of loss of sympathetic control vessels dilate below level of injury.
difference btw neurogenic shock and spinal shock
neuro:Disruption of sympathetic nervous system leading to dilation peripheral arteries
(↓BP, pulse normal-slow, warm dry skin below level, alert oriented, no reflexes)
spina :lnjury to the spinal cord that results in temporary loss of sensory and motor function
can spinal and neurogenic shock occurs at the same time
yes
what is septic chock
Cytokines, which are locally active hormones
produced by WBC responding to infection cause damage to the wall of the blood vessels, causing peripheral vasodilation and a leakage of fluid from the capillaries into the interstitial space.
what is psychogenic shock
Mediated through parasympathetic
Nervous system… vagal nerve stimulation produces bradycardia. Can also lead to transient peripheral vasodilation and hypotension. If severe enough: Cardiac output and then vasovagal syncope
type of obstructive shock
mechanical
pericardial tamponade
tension pneumothorax
stage of shock
Pre-shock (compensated)
The body’s compensatory mechanisms are able to maintain
some degree of tissue perfusion.
As compensatory mechanisms fully engage, what signs and symptoms would you expect to see?