0% found this document useful (0 votes)
629 views11 pages

Shock Atls

Shock is defined as inadequate organ perfusion and tissue oxygenation due to abnormal circulatory system. Hypovolemia from blood loss is the most common cause of shock in trauma patients. Early signs include tachycardia and increased vascular resistance to preserve blood flow to vital organs. Treatment involves controlling bleeding, fluid resuscitation, monitoring for coagulopathy, and treating the underlying cause of shock. Nonhemorrhagic shock can be cardiogenic, due to conditions like cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, or sepsis.

Uploaded by

amira
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
629 views11 pages

Shock Atls

Shock is defined as inadequate organ perfusion and tissue oxygenation due to abnormal circulatory system. Hypovolemia from blood loss is the most common cause of shock in trauma patients. Early signs include tachycardia and increased vascular resistance to preserve blood flow to vital organs. Treatment involves controlling bleeding, fluid resuscitation, monitoring for coagulopathy, and treating the underlying cause of shock. Nonhemorrhagic shock can be cardiogenic, due to conditions like cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, or sepsis.

Uploaded by

amira
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Shock

Def = an abnormality of the circulatory system that results in inadequate organ perfusion and
tissue oxygenation.
Hypovolemia is the cause of shock in most trauma patients

ATLS
Pathophysiology :
• Early circulatory responses to blood loss are com- pensatory and include progressive
vasoconstriction of cutaneous, muscle, and visceral circulation to preserve blood flow to
the kidneys, heart & brain.

• Response to acute circulating volume depletion associated with injury is an increase in


heart rate in an attempt to preserve cardiac output.

• Tachycardia is the earliest sign in most cases

• Release of endogenous catecholamines  increases peripheral vascular resistance 


increases diastolic blood pressure and reduces pulse pressure (but does little to increase
organ perfusion)

• In cellular level, compensation occurs by shifting to anaerobic metabolism, which results in


the formation of lactic acid and the development of metabolic acidosis.

• If shock is prolonged and substrate delivery for the gen- eration of adenosine triphosphate
(ATP) is inadequate, the cellular membrane loses the ability to maintain its integrity, and
the normal electrical gradient is lost
Hemorrhagic shock

• Hemorrhage is the most common cause of shock after injury, and virtually all
patients with multiple injuries have an element of hypovolemia.
• Hemorrhage is defined as an acute loss of circulating blood volume.
• Normal adult blood volume is approximately 7% of body weight.
Several confounding factors profoundly alter the classic hemodynamic response to an
acute loss of circulating blood volume :
• Patient’s age
• Severity of injury, with special attention to type and anatomic location of injury
• Time lapse between injury and initiation of treatment
• Prehospital fluid therapy
• Medications used for chronic conditions

Therapy :
• (A&B) Supplementary oxygen is provided to maintain oxygen saturation at greater than
95%.

• ( C ) Bleeding from external wounds usually can be controlled by direct pressure to the
bleeding site, although massive blood loss from an extremity may require a tourniquet.
Surgical or angiographic control may be required to control internal hemorrhage

• ( D ) Alterations in CNS function in patients who have hypotension as a result of


hypovolemic shock do not necessarily imply direct intracranial injury and may reflect
inadequate brain perfusion.

• ( E ) patient must be completely undressed and carefully exam- ined from head to toe to
search for associated injuries.
GASTRIC DILATION-DECOMPRESSION : In unconscious pa- tients, gastric distention
increases the risk of aspiration of gastric contents, which is a potentially fatal complication.
Gastric decompression is accomplished by intubating the stomach with a tube passed
nasally or orally and attaching it to suction to evacuate gastric contents.

UrinaryCatheterization :
Bladder catheterization allows for assessment of the urine for hematuria (indicating the
retroperitoneum may be a significant source of blood loss) and con- tinuous evaluation of
renal perfusion by monitoring urinary output.

INITIAL FLUID THERAPY :


Warmed isotonic electrolyte solutions, such as lactated Ringer’s and normal saline, are
used for initial resus- citation.

CROSSMATCHED, TYPE-SPECIFIC, AND TYPE O BLOOD

WARMING FLUIDS—PLASMA AND CRYSTALLOID

MASSIVE TRANSFUSION

COAGULOPATHY

CALCIUM
Nonhemorrhagic shock (cardiogenic)

• Myocardial dysfunction can be caused by blunt cardiac injury, cardiac


tamponade, an air embolus, or, rarely, a myocardial infarction associated with
the patient’s injury.
• All patients with blunt tho- racic trauma need constant electrocardiographic
(ECG) monitoring to detect injury patterns and dysrhythmias.
• FAST in the emergency department can identify pericardial fluid and the
likelihood of cardiac tamponade as the cause of shock.

Nonhemorrhagic shock (cardiac tamponade)

• Most commonly identified in penetrating thoracic trauma, but it can occur as


the result of blunt injury to the thorax.
• Tachycardia, muffled heart sounds, and dilated, engorged neck veins with
hypotension resistant to flu- id therapy suggest cardiac tamponade.
• Tension pneumothorax can mimic cardiac tamponade, but it is differentiated
from the latter condition by the findings of absent breath sounds, tracheal
deviation, and a hyperresonant percussion note over the affected hemithorax.
• Best managed by thoracotomy
Nonhemorrhagic shock (tension pneumothorax)

• Air enters the pleural space, but a flap-valve mechanism prevents its escape.
Acute respira- tory distress, subcutaneous emphysema, absent breath sounds,
hyperresonance to percussion, and tracheal shift supports the diagnosis
• Immediate thoracic decompression without waiting for x-ray confirmation of
the diagnosis.

Nonhemorrhagic shock (cardiac tamponade)

• Classic sign : hypotension without tachycardia or cutaneous vasoconstriction.


• Should be treated initially for hypovolemia.
• The failure of fluid resuscitation to restore organ perfusion suggests either
continuing hemorrhage or neurogenic shock.

Nonhemorrhagic shock (septic shock)

• Uncommon
• Difficult to distinguish from those in hypovolemic shock, as both groups can
manifest tachycardia, cutaneous vasoconstriction, impaired urinary output,
decreased systolic pressure, and narrow pulse pressure.

You might also like