Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

16 Critical Care Emergencies


SHOCKED PATIENT

end in cardiac arrest with pulseless electrical activity. Once shock
deteriorates to this degree, it is difficult or impossible to reverse.
2 Aim to identify abnormal tissue perfusion early, ideally before the systolic
blood pressure (SBP) drops, treat aggressively and avoid the irreversible
phase. Investigation and treatment are concurrent – get senior help early.
(i) A normal blood pressure does not exclude the diagnosis of shock.
(ii) The absolute value of the SBP associated with poor perfusion
varies greatly, but an SBP <90 mmHg is usually insufficient to
maintain adequate vital organ perfusion.
3 Consider causes in four broad categories (see Fig. 1.2). Often more than one
mechanism is present:

Cardiogenic shock
Depressed contractility
Acute coronary syndrome
Myocarditis
Cardiomyopathy
Drug toxicity
Acute valvular dysfunction
Arrhythmia
Bradyarrhythmia
Tachyarrhythmia

Obstructive shock
Pulmonary embolism
Tension pneumothorax
Traumatic
Non-traumatic
Cardiac tamponade
Traumatic
Non-traumatic
Dynamic hyperinflation

Hypovolaemic shock (most common)
Haemorrhage
Traumatic
&YUFSOBM SFWFBMFE

*OUFSOBM DPODFBMFE

Non-traumatic
External (revealed)
Internal (concealed)
Non-haemorrhagic
External fluid loss

Distributive shock
Anaphylaxis
Sepsis
Neurogenic
Drug related
Acute adrenal
insufficiency

Figure 1.2 Different types of shock.
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