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Shock. Sarah A. Murphy, MD Pediatric Critical Care Fellow MassGeneral Hospital for Children Boston, MA. What is shock??. Shock. State of acute energy failure, in which there is not enough ATP production to support cellular function To make ATP (body’s energy source) you need: Oxygen
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Shock Sarah A. Murphy, MD Pediatric Critical Care Fellow MassGeneral Hospital for Children Boston, MA
Shock • State of acute energy failure, in which there is not enough ATP production to support cellular function • To make ATP (body’s energy source) you need: • Oxygen • Glucose
Shock: three mechanisms • Lack of oxygen delivery • Anemia • Need RBC to carry O2) • Hypoxia • Not enough O2 in blood • Ischemia • Blood not getting to tissues
Shock: three mechanisms 2. Lack of glucose delivery • Hypoglycemia • DKA • Unable to use glucose in blood
Shock: three mechanisms 3. Mitochondrial dysfunction • After cellular damage from hypoxia or ischemia mitochondria may not work and cannot produce ATP • “cytopathic hypoxia” • Cyanide poisoning
Shock • Final common effect: inadequate tissue perfusion/ oxygenation
Shock • Initially, effects are reversible • But prolonged tissue deprivation leads to cellular hypoxia and secondary injury from derangement of biochemical processes • Abnormalities become irreversible with time, resulting in cell death, end-organ dysfunction, multi-system organ failure and death
Shock • Aggressive treatment to restore perfusion within the first few hours may prevent the invariable progression that is the natural course of untreated shock: • end-organ damage • failure of multiple organ systems • death
Physical Signs of Shock • Tachycardia • Early indicator, non-specific • Poor perfusion/cool extremities • Cap refill > 2 seconds, mottled skin • Or, flushed, hyperemic extremities • Weak pulses
Physical Signs of Shock • Signs of impaired organ perfusion: • Poor mentation, lethargy • Poor urine output • Lactic Acidosis
Physical Signs of Shock • Autonomic response to poor perfusion: • Tachycardia (most important early sign) • Tachypnea • Blood pressure – normal initially as body vasoconstricts to maintain perfusion
Physical Signs of Shock • Signs of decreased tissue perfusion • Color: Pale, ashen grey • Capillary refilling time (>2-3sec) • Decreased skin surface temperature • Increased difference between core and peripheral temperature >2o C
Physical Signs of Shock • Signs of major organ dysfunction • Brain:Agitation, stupor-coma, ischemic brain injury • Kidneys: Acute renal failure, Oliguria • GI: Erosive gastritis, ischemic pancreatitis • Liver:Ischemic hepatitis-elevation of transminases and biliurbin • Hematologic:Coagulation abnormality, elevated PT, PTTK in all forms of shock, also can see severe DIC and thrombocytopenia
Understanding Shock: Pathophysiology • What factors determine oxygen delivery? • Blood flow (cardiac output) • Oxygen content of blood (oxygen carrying capacity) • Balance between oxygen supply and metabolic demand
Shock Physiology • Cardiac Output = Stroke Volume x Heart Rate • Stroke Volume = function of (Preload, Cardiac Contractility, Afterload)
Shock Physiology • Body’s Compensatory Mechanisms: Autonomic Response • Increase Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR) • to shunt blood to heart and CNS and maintain perfusion pressure • Increased venous tone to increase preload and improve CO • Increased cardiac contractility also improves CO
Shock Physiology • As a result of these compensatory mechanisms, children may initially have normal blood pressure! • Hypotension is a late finding in the development of shock in children
Shock: Stages • Shock is often classified in stages: • Compensated • Decompensated • Irreversible
Stages of Shock • Compensated Shock • Autonomic mechanisms compensate for impaired perfusion • Blood pressure is maintained within normal range • Tachycardia, often evidence of vasoconstriction • Decompensated/Hypotensive Shock • Compensatory mechanisms are overwhelmed and BP drops • Signs of organ dysfunction (UOP, MS changes, etc) • Irreversible Shock • Progressive end-organ dysfunction
Laboratory Findings • Bicarbonate Level • low with lactic acidosis may indicate shock/ and body using anaerobic metabolism • May also have: • Coagulopathy • Hypoglycemia • Hypocalcemia • Anemia • Hypoxia
Shock • Three basic kinds of shock: • Hypovolemic : not enough blood • Dehydration • Hemorrhage • Distributive : blood doesn’t stay in vessels • Sepsis • Anaphylaxis • Cardiogenic: heart not able to pump enough blood to body • Cardiac disease • Can be seen in Sepsis
Hypovolemic Shock • Most common form of shock • See from either: • Extravascular fluid loss (ex: diarrhea, vomiting, diuresis) • Intravascular fluid loss (capillary leak or hemorrhage)
Causes of Hypovolemic Shock • Fluid and electrolyte loss: • Diarrhea, vomiting, excessive sweating, pathologic renal loss, diuretics, heart stroke Blood loss: External-Laceration, Internal-Ruptured visceras, GI bleed, Intracranial bleed (esp. Neonates), Postsurgery
Distributive Shock • Vasodilation results in abnormal distribution of blood flow • Causes: • Sepsis : capillary leak syndrome • Anaphylaxis • Neurogenic shock: spinal cord injury results in loss of sympathetic tone
Sepsis and Septic Shock • Sepsis: clinical syndrome characterized by systemic inflammation and tissue injury in the setting of known or suspected infection • Septic Shock: Sepsis with persistent cardiovascular dysfunction after 40cc/kg of fluid resuscitation
Sepsis • Capillary leak from infection and inflammatory mediators • may see “flash” capillary refill • hyperemia • warm skin • edema
Sepsis • Sepsis can present as “warm shock” • Toxins and inflammatory mediators cause vasodilation and capillary leak • Causes “flash capillary refill”, hyperemia, warm, flushed skin
Cardiogenic Shock • Decreased systolic function and depressed cardiac output • Cardiomyopathy (including myocardial depression from late sepsis) • Arrhythmia (ventricular or atrial arrhythmias, SVT, bradycardia) • Obstructed output (tension pneumothorax, cardiac tamponade, massive pulmonary embolism)
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock • Myocardial insufficiency: • Congestive heart failure (Congenital, or acquired heart disease), Cardiomyopathies, myocarditis, Arrhythmias: Supraventricular tachycardia. • Metabolic: • Hypothermia, drugs, toxins, myocardial depressant effect of hypoglycemia, acidosis, hypoxia, poor myocardial perfusion - Kawasaki disease, congenital coronary abnormalities • Outflow obstruction: • Cardiac tamponade, Pneumopericardium, Tension pneumothorax, Pulmonary embolism
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock * Congenital heart disease = an important cause of shock in the neonate! Commonly, from left-sided obstructive lesions (ex: hypoplastic left heart and coarctation of aorta) These may present up to two weeks of age, when ductus arteriosis closes
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock In neonate presentating with shock, check: • Femoral pulses • 4 extremity blood pressures • Murmur • EKG with extreme right axis (150) for HLHS
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock • SVT (supraventricular tachycardia) • Why does SVT cause cardiogenic shock?
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock • How to diagnose SVT? • Rate > 210 (>180 in teen) • P wave usually absent or flipped • Rate extremely constant • How to treat SVT? • Valsalva, ice pack to face • Or, adenosine: 0.1mg/kg IV • Or, synchronized cardioversion, 0.5-1 joule/kg
Causes of Cardiogenic Shock • Tamponade, pericardial effusion, tension pneumothorax • Check for pulsus paradoxicus, narrowed pulse pressure, liver enlarged, muffled heart sounds, JVD on inspiration (Kussmaul’s sign)
Pulsus Paradoxus • A drop in greater than 15-20mm Hg in SBP with inspiration • Auscultate for pulse with BP cuff inflated • Note pressure at which you can hear SOME beats • Then release until you here ALL beats • Difference >10-15 mm hg = abnormal • If greater than 20mmHg, difference can be appreciated by palpation of pulse as well • Signifies cardiac impairment with tamponade or asthma • May need more fluids to help heart fill
Treatment of child presenting with shock • Goal is to maintain/improve cardiac output to restore perfusion to tissues • Remember, CO = HR X SV
Maintaining cardiac output • Children with sepsis/shock need volume! • Quickly! • Most children with shock will respond to volume resuscitation • Re-evaluate frequently for effect of volume, if worsening, consider cardiogenic origin of shock • Goal with treatment is to maintain perfusion pressure above point at which flow to vital organs is compromised
Treatment of Sepsis/Shock • “Goal-directed Therapy” • Principle of early aggressive treatment of shock state with goal of restoring BP and perfusion to vital organs within 6 hours of presentation • Has been shown to improve survival and decrease morbidity in adults (Rivers, et al. “Early goal-directed therapy in the treatment of severe sepsis and septic shock” NEJM 2001) • No studies looking at goal-directed therapy in non-septic shock, but data extrapolated • No studies looking at children, but consensus guidelines for children agreed upon by expert committee
Treatment of Sepsis/Shock • IV access • Begin Fluid resuscitation • Central Line and Arterial Line if not fluid responsive and if possible • Initiate antibiotics ASAP if suspecting sepsis/infection
Treatment of Sepsis/Shock • Fluid resuscitation: • 20/kg boluses NS or 5% albumin • Repeat, q 5-10 mins until: • Normal pulse • Cap refill <2 sec • Mental status • Urine output >1cc/kg/hr • Normal BP • MAP – CVP : • 55-60 for Newborn • 60 for >1yr • 65 for >2 yrs
Treatment of Sepsis/Shock • Fluid resuscitation: • Note: large fluid boluses do NOT increase risk of cerebral edema, ARDS • Monitor for signs of fluid overload or poor cardiac function: • Rales • Gallop • Hepatomegaly • Increased WOB
Treatment of Sepsis/Shock • Start Dopamine for refractory shock after 60-80cc/kg of fluid resuscitation • Add Epinephrine (warm shock) or Norepinephrine (cold shock) • Consider hydrocortisone if BP still inadequate
Fluid refractory shock • Vasopressors • Dopamine • Norepinephrine • Epinephrine
Alpha receptors • arterioles
Beta 1 receptors • heart