Physiology of Perfusion
Heart & Blood Flow
Types & Causes of Shock
Pathophysiology, Compensation & Stages
Assessment & Emergency Management
100

Blood flow that brings oxygen to tissues?

What is perfusion?

100

Amount of blood the heart pumps with one beat

What is stroke volume?

100

Shock from big excessive blood loss or dehydration

What is hypovolemic shock?

100

Cells switch to making energy without oxygen and produce this acid

What is lactic acid (lactic acidosis)?

100

Two quick signs to check if someone may be in shock (any two)

What is low blood pressure, fast heart rate, low urine output, cool skin, altered mental status, low or irregular breathing?

200

Nervous system part that raises heart rate and tightens blood vessels

What is the sympathetic nervous system?


Extra Nuggets of Knowledge: Known as fight or flight response system. 

Releases norepinephrine and epinephrine into the blood stream. Increases cardiac contractility. Speeds conduction velocity (how fast messages travel through the nerves to tell the body something). Dilates pupils. Shows the gut and dilates the bronchi.

200

The heart’s ability to squeeze and push out blood

What is heart contractility?

200

Shock from the heart not pumping well (like after a heart attack)?

What is cardiogenic shock?

200

The body speeds up heart rate and tightens vessels to try and keep blood pressure up. Name one of these responses.

What is increased heart rate or vasoconstriction?

200

First simple treatment for many shock patients to increase blood volume

What is give IV fluids?

300

The number used to estimate how well organs are getting blood (pressure)

What is mean arterial pressure (MAP)?


Extra Nuggets of Knowledge: “MAP is ultimately the blood pressure required to sustain organ perfusion and is roughly 60 mm Hg in the typical resting adult.” - AEMT Textbook

MAP ~ Diastolic blood pressure + 1/3 pulse pressure (systolic pressure - diastolic pressure) 

This equation is meant to only approximate MAP

300

Blood coming into the heart before it pumps out. Affected by volume

What is preload?

Preload increase means the volume of blood within the ventricles increases which means the cardiac muscles are stretched, increasing the strength of contraction thus increasing cardiac output



300

Shock from something blocking blood flow (like a big clot)?

What is obstructive shock?

300

When many organs start failing after prolonged poor blood flow.

What is multiple organ dysfunction (MODS)?


Symptoms: Fever, chills, rapid/irregular heartbeat, confusion, difficulty breathing, & severe abdominal pain

300

If first simple treatment does not fix low blood pressure, start this medication to tighten vessels

What is a vasopressor? ex. Norepinephrine
400

Formula: stroke volume x heart rate = ?

What is cardiac output?

400

The pressure the heart must push against to eject blood

What is afterload?

400

Shock from a huge blood vessel widening (like severe infection or allergic reaction).

What is distributive shock?

400

There main stages of shock?

What is compensated, decompensated, and refractory?

Compensated: Initial stage. Body successfully maintains blood pressure and vital organ perfusion despite reduced blood volume or cardiac output

Decompensated: Late stage. Critical. The body’s compensatory mechanisms fail (fast heart rate and vasoconstriction) resulting in inadequate blood pressure and organ perfusion

Refractory: Advanced stage. Cardiovascular failure where blood pressure and tissue perfusion remain critically low causing cellular hypoxia and anaerobic metabolism leading to MODS.

400

Two patient problems that make you give fluids with more caution

What are heart failure and kidney failure?


Special considerations: Aggressive fluid therapy increases the workload on the heart, worsening cardiogenic shock and increasing internal bleeding by breaking up clots that are forming or increasing the pressure in the vessels

500

The resistance blood meets in the body’s vessels

What is systemic vascular resistance (SVR)?



500

One thing that lowers cardiac output

What is low blood volume (or poor heart pumping)?

500

Name one common cause of low heart output

What is heart attack, severe bleeding, or bad heart rythym?


High afterload, low preload, poor contractility; or any combination of the three

500

A sign the body is not getting enough blood to organs 

What is high lactate?

500

The immediate steps in order for a patient who may be in shock

What are check ABCs, get IV access, give fluids, start pressors, find cause?

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