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shock

shock. Lt. col. Dr. Zaman Ranjha Associate prof. of Surgery. Shock Objectives. To understand the structured approach to cerculatory problems To recognize and manage shock. Shock. Inadequate organ perfusion and tissue oxygenation Most often due to hypovolaemia in surgery and trauma.

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shock

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  1. shock Lt. col. Dr. Zaman Ranjha Associate prof. of Surgery

  2. ShockObjectives • To understand the structured approach to cerculatory problems • To recognize and manage shock

  3. Shock • Inadequate organ perfusion and tissue oxygenation • Most often due to hypovolaemia in surgery and trauma

  4. ShockAssessment Blood pressure Heart rate Capillary refill Peripheral temperature Peripheral colour Urine output

  5. Types of Shock • Hypovolaemic • Cardiogenic • Obstructive • Neurogenic • Endocrine • Anaphylactic • septic

  6. Severity of shock • Compensated Vasomotor response At the cost of skin, muscles and GIT. Acidosis beyond 12 Hrs- MOD • Decompensated 30-40% volume loss Cadiopulmonary and renal compensation is knocked out

  7. ShockPathophysiology • Cellular Autodigestive enzyme-cell lysis • Microvascular o2 free radical- endothelial damage • Mode of death rapid-cadiopulmonary delayed-organ ischemia/reperfusion

  8. Hypovolumic shock • Fluid loss less intake, increased loss- vomiting, GIT, Renal third space- pancreatitis Blood loss

  9. ShockSites of blood loss Closed Femoral # 1.5-2 litres Closed Tibial # 500 ml Pelvic # 3 litres Rib # (each) 150 ml Haemothorax 2 litres Hand sized wound 500 ml Fist sized clot 500 ml

  10. ShockConcealed blood loss • Abdominal Cavity • Pleural Cavity • Femoral Shaft • Pelvic Fractures • Scalp (children)

  11. Types Of Bleeding • Compressible - usually peripheral • Non-compressible - e.g. intra-abdominal - Surgery required

  12. Shocksystemic effects • CVS.-Sympathomymatic tachycardia-vasoconstriction Resp. -compensatory respiratory alkalosis Renal. Reduced perfusion, GFR, Urine Na , H2o , conservation Endocrine.Adrenal,cortisone =Na +water catecholamine Hypothalamus- vasopressin

  13. ShockClinical Signs • Altered mental state : anxiety to coma • Pulse present ? - radial systolic > 80 mmHg - femoral systolic >70 mmHg - carotid systolic > 60 mmHg • Tachycardia • Pulse pressure narrowed

  14. ShockClinical Signs • Skin - cold, pale, sweaty, cyanosed • Capillary refill time > 2 seconds • Blood pressure • JVP • Urine output < 0.5 ml/kg/hr • Respiratory rate

  15. Clinical Signs In Shock

  16. Blood Loss < 750ml

  17. Blood Loss 750-1500ml

  18. Blood Loss >1500ml

  19. Cardiogenic Shock • myocardial contusion • cardiac tamponade • tension pneumothorax • penetrating wound of heart • myocardial infarction • Valvular heart disease • arrhythmya

  20. ShockObstructive shock • Cardiac temponade • Tension pneumothorax • Pulmonary embolism Reduced preload Reduced cardiac out put Engorged neck veins + oedma

  21. ShockEndocrine shock • May be combination of three • Adrenal- hypovolumic • Hypothyroid- neurogenic • Hyperthyroid – high out put

  22. ShockDistributive shock No volume depletion 1-Septic shock Endotoxin-vasodilation-AV shunting-cellular hypoxia 2- Anaphylactic shock Histamine- vasidilatation 3- Neurogenic- vasomotor

  23. Shock ?

  24. Shock Management • A + B, oxygen (if available) • Two large bore intra-venous cannulae • Stop obvious bleeding • Fluid replacement • Maintain temperature • Analgesia

  25. ShockStop bleeding • Chest • Drain tube and re-expand lung • Emergency thoracotomy rarely • Abdomen • Laparotomy if hypotensive after fluids • Limbs • Pressure dressing • Tourniquet is last resort

  26. ShockFluid replacement • Warm fluids if possible • Colloids or crystalloids? • Consider hypotensive resuscitation if haemostasis not secure- parallel with surgery • Consider oral resuscitation • Resuscitation beneficial –dehydration

  27. ShockFluid replacement - How much? 1000-2000ml 0.9% Saline or Ringer’s Reassess 1000-2000ml 0.9% Saline or Ringer’s Reassess Consider blood Consider surgery Aim for systolic BP>90 + HR <100

  28. Shock Consider blood Tx • Haemodynamic instability in spite of fluids • Haemoglobin <7g/dl and patient still bleeding

  29. Shock ?

  30. ShockSummary • Careful assessment • Stop the bleeding • Replace volume • Correct the cause

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