Pathophys FTW
Is it shock?
Name that patient
What do we do about it?
Continued Care
100

What is shock?


Bonus: What are the 5 components of oxygen delivery?

PaO2, SaO2, Hgb, HR, SV (preload, afterload, and contractility)

100

7 year old MN Beagle presenting with a 24 hour history of profuse vomiting. QAR, HR 150, RR 30, MM pink + tachy, CRT 1-2 sec, Temp 100.2F, strong synchronous pulses, MAP 68.

  • Answer: Not shock 

  • Borderline MAP alone does not = shock. Other perfusion parameters are adequate. 

100

Hit by car dog with pale MM, weak pulses, HR 190, CRT 3 sec, MAP 72.

  • Answer: Compensated hypovolemic shock

  • Volume loss resulting in decreased preload and CO.

100

3 year old FS mixed-breed dog presents with acute hemorrhagic diarrhea. HR 180, pale MM, CRT 3 sec, MAP 35, lactate 5.6 mmol/L.

Fluids - isotonic crystalloid at 20mL/kg (1/4 shock bolus) and reassess

100

List four perfusion parameters you should monitor in a hospitalized shock patient.

 HR, MM/CRT, lactate, urine output, MAP, mentation, temperature, pulse quality

200

Discuss the mechanism of the most common type of shock.

Hypovolemic - not enough circulating volume to deliver oxygen to the tissues

200

5 year old FS DSH cat presenting for unexplained lethargy. Temp 98.1F, HR 150, dull mentation, MAP 72.

  • Answer: Yes, decompensated shock

  • Hypothermia with bradycardia 

200

Puppy presents after acutely collapsing following their vaccine appointment.

  • Distributive shock (vasodilatory shock d/t anaphylaxis) 

  • Low SVR from vasodilation.

200

A dog in early hypovolemic shock has an improved MAP after a shock bolus, but pulses are still weak, he remains dull, and lactate remains elevated. What’s the next best step?

 Administer another 1/4 shock bolus (20mL/kg) and reassess perfusion parameters

200

Which parameter is often the last to normalize during a successful shock resuscitation?

Lactate

300

Define septic shock. How is it unique in its response to treatment?

Shock secondary to an infectious nidus that is UNRESPONSIVE to volume resuscitation and requires pressor support.

300

8 year old MN Lab presenting in post-ictal phase after cluster seizures. HR 165, MM pink, CRT <1sec, strong pulses, MAP 100, lactate 5.1 mmol/L.

  • Answer: Not shock

  • Seizure related Type B hyperlactemia, not due to hypoperfusion 

300

Cat with historic HCM presenting with hypotension and pulmonary edema.

Cardiogenic shock

300

A 10 year old dog presents for acute collapse with tachycardia and hypotension. On the physical he had distended jugular veins, weak pulses, and muffled heart sounds. What is the best treatment for his shock?

Pericardiocentesis - This is obstructive shock due to compression of the heart; fluids will not fix him until you relieve the obstruction.

300

What is the urine output goal for dogs and cats in shock recovery?

Greater than or equal to 1mL/kg/hr

400

 Briefly discuss the mechanisms for obstructive, cardiogenic, and vasodilatory shock. Give an example of each.

  • Obstructive: Blood is not able to return to the heart, decreasing CO (GDV, thromboembolism, mesenteric volvulus, cardiac tamponade)

  • Cardiogenic: The heart is unable to produce enough CO (decreased contractility or the afterload is too high) - CVD, DCM, HCM in cats

  • Vasodilatory: Inability to keep vascular tone = tanked BP, blood unable to return to heart (anaphylaxis, SIRS, neurogenic)

400

6 year old FS Golden Retriever presenting after being hit by car injury. HR 190, pale MM, CRT 3 sec, weak pulses. Map 78. PCV 46%, TP 7.0, Lactate 6.3 mmol/L

  • Answer- yes compensated hypovolemic shock 

  • Normal PCV/TS does not rule out acute hemorrhage

400
  • Hemangiosarcoma dog with muffled heart sounds and hypotension 

Obstructive shock (cardiac tamponade)

400

A septic dog remains hypotensive (MAP 58) after receiving 90 mL/kg of crystalloids. Lactate remains elevated. Pulses are weak but lungs are clear.

Vasopressors (ex: norepinephrine)

400

Name three patient populations that are at increased risk of developing pulmonary edema during shock fluid resuscitation

Cardiac disease patients, hypoproteinemic patients, kidney disease patients, and SIRS/Septic patients

500

List the acute, moderate, and chronic compensation mechanisms of shock and mechanism of action.

  • Acute: Catecholamines (increase HR, contractility, vasoconstriction), cortisol (volume retention, augment catecholamines)

  • Moderate: angiotensin II (volume retention, vasoconstriction), vasopressin (ADH- vasoconstriction)

  • Chronic: Aldosterone (volume retention, vasoconstriction), ADH (volume retention)

500

10 year old MN Boxer who is currently under general anesthesia for a splenectomy. HR 70 bpm, MAP 55, ETCO2 48 mmHg, temp 99.6, warm extremities, strong pulse.

Not shock, this is anesthetic hypotension

500

A cat presents obtunded after falling from a 3rd story window. HR: 100, CRT 2sec, MAP 210, RR 50 and irregular respiration

Not in shock, this is a Cushing reflex (hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respirations) - this patient likely has brain trauma and increased ICP

500

A Doberman with known DCM presents. HR 200, weak pulses, MAP 55, cold extremities, pulmonary crackles are present.

Ionotropes (improve contractility and CO - dopamine, dobutamine, norepinephrine)

500

What lactate trend indicates adequate response to therapy?

Greater than or equal to 20% decrease in 2-4 hours

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