Circulatory shock: Difference between revisions
From WikiLectures
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
[[Kategorie:Patofyziologie]] | [[Kategorie:Patofyziologie]] | ||
{{Soubor | |||
|popis = Cirkulační šok | |||
|zdroj = {{Citace | typ = web | příjmení1 = Vízek | jméno1 = Martin | url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130512032641/http://pf.lf2.cuni.cz/vyuka/repetitorium.html | název = Repetitorium | citováno = 2011-11-02 }} | |||
|datum = 2011-11-10 | |||
|autor = Martin Vízek | |||
|licence = {{cc|by|3.0|cz}} | |||
}} |
Revision as of 20:00, 13 March 2023
Inability to maintain adequate blood flow through peripheral tissues and arterial blood pressure.
Cause:
- The imbalance between the volume of blood and the volume of the vascular bed caused by:
- reduced blood volume (hypovolemic shock, cold shock)
- by increasing the capacity of the vascular bed (distributive shock, warm shock)
- Hypovolemic shock:
- Hemorrhage
- Burns (hematocrit, toxins, pain)
- Dehydration (AB balance)
- Distribution shock:
- Anaphylaxis (bronchoconstriction)
- Sepsis (fever, toxins)
- Neurogenic vasodilation
The shock phase:
- initial (activation of compensatory mechanisms)
- Progressive (failure of compensatory mechanisms)
Consequences:
- Tissue ischemia and microcirculation
- Consequences of damage to individual organs
Treatment:
- Maintaining the volume of circulating fluid
- Sympathomimetics
- Corticosteroids
Links:
Related articles:
External links:
Source:
- VÍZEK, Martin. Repetitorium [online]. [cit. 2011-11-02]. <https://web.archive.org/web/20130512032641/http://pf.lf2.cuni.cz/vyuka/repetitorium.html>.