Cardiogenic Shock
- Etiology:- Deficiencies or impairment contractility
 
- Presentation:- Cold shock
- diminished peripheral perfusion
- Mottled appearance
- cold skin
- narrow pulse pressure
- decreased pulses
- prolonged capillary refill
- elevated pulmonary vascular pressures and venous pressures
- hepatomegaly
 
- Diagnosis:- a differential gradient can indicate impairment in cardiovascular function
- assessment of urine output
 
- Management:- Early recognition- Identify and treat compensated shock before it becomes uncompensated
 
- 1st line therapy is inotropic agents:- dopamine
- dobutamine
- low dose epinephrine
 
- Agent to afterload reduce the patient and to lower the systemic vascular resistance- milrinone (an inodilator)
- lusitropic agents
 
 
- Early recognition
Distributive Shock
- Etiology:- Low systemic vascular resistance
- effective circulating volume is maldistributed in the vascular space
 
- Presentation:- Warm shock
- bounding pulses
- capillary refill will be brisk
- wide pulse pressure (wide differential between systolic and diastolic pressures)
 
- Management:- Vasopressor options:- high dose dopamine
- high dose epinephrine
- norepinephrine
- phenylephrine (Neo-synephrine)
- vasopressin
 
 
- Vasopressor options:
Hypovolemic Shock
- Etiology:- Deficiencies in preload
 
- Presentation:- History of volume loss- GI losses
- hemorrhage and bleeding
 
- Dry mucous membranes
- Oliguria
- Low CVP (central venous pressure)
 
- History of volume loss
- Management:- Fluid resuscitation
 
Obstructive Shock
- Etiology:- obstruction to blood flow
- due to pulmonary embolism or cardiac tamponade
 
Septic Shock
- Etiology:- 60% of patients:- cardiac index is reduced
- systemic vascular resistance is high
 
- 20-25% of patients:- high cardiac index
- low systemic vascular resistance
 
- 20% of patients:- reduced cardiac output
- normal systemic vascular resistance
 
 
- 60% of patients:
Case Study
Case 1
- Presentation:- 1 Yo patient
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- HR: 190 beats/minute, sinus tachycardia
- CVP (central venous pressure): 20 mmHg
- BP: 60/30 mmHg
- Lactate is increasing
- Mixed venous saturation from superior vena cava is 55%
- Capillary refill > 5 seconds
 
- Assessment:- Very high heart rate- indicative of compensated shock
 
- High central venous pressure- indicative of an adequate vascular volume
- but may reflect a significant cardiogenic failure
 
- Low blood pressure
- Patient is in cold shock- high systemic vascular resistance
- afterload is high
 
- Evidence of evolving shock - lactic acidosis
- low SVO2 state
 
 
- Very high heart rate
- Management:- Next appropriate management:- Inotropic agent with epinephrine
 
 
- Next appropriate management:
- NOT appropriate: - NOT Inodilator bolus with milrinone- bc concern for hypotension
- reconsider with a higher blood pressure possibly add later
 
- NOT Vasopressor (phenylephrine or vasopressin)- bc high SVRI (systemic vascular resistance index)
 
- NOT Fluid bolus- bc given a central venous pressure of 20 mmHg the addition of an inotrope is a higher priority
- this case is more of a cardiogenic failure
 
- NOT Beta-blocker (Esmolol) to slow heart rate- bc it takes away the compensatory mechanism that the patient is using to augment oxygen delivery
- impairment of cardiovascular function
 
 
- NOT Inodilator bolus with milrinone
Case 2
- Presentation:- 1 Yo patient
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- HR: 190 beats/minute, sinus tachycardia
- CVP (central venous pressure): 5 mmHg
- BP: 60/30 mmHg
- Lactate is increasing
- Mixed venous saturation from superior vena cava is 55%
- Capillary refill > 5 seconds
 
- Management:- Initial step:- Fluid bolus- bc to view the amount of fluid responsiveness before inotropic agent
 
 
- Fluid bolus
 
- Initial step:
Case 3
- Presentation:- 1 Yo patient
- Dilated cardiomyopathy
- HR: 190 beats/minute, sinus tachycardia
- CVP (central venous pressure): 20 mmHg
- BP: 110/90 mmHg
- Lactate is increasing
- Mixed venous saturation from superior vena cava is 55%
- Capillary refill > 5 seconds
 
- Management:- 1st choice:- Inodilator bolus with milrinone- inodilator and vasopressin (dilating) agent
 
 
- Inodilator bolus with milrinone
 
- 1st choice:
Case 4
- Presentation:- 1 Yo patient
- Hyperdynamic Septic Shock
- HR: 190 beats/minute, sinus tachycardia
- CVP (central venous pressure): 5 mmHg
- BP: 60/30 mmHg
- Lactate is increasing
- Mixed venous saturation from superior vena cava is 55%
- Capillary refill: 1 second
 
- Management:- Vasopressor (Norepinephrine or vasopressin)- bc warm shock needing augment the systemic vascular resistance
 
 
- Vasopressor (Norepinephrine or vasopressin)


