shock foundation
Hemodynamics & Stages
pharmacology in shock
sepsis& complications
neuro emergencies
100

What is the fundamental problem in all types of shock?

Inadequate tissue perfusion and oxygen delivery to meet metabolic demand

100

Which stage of shock is typically irreversible?

Refractory/irreversible stage

100

Which vasopressor is first-line for septic shock?

Norepinephrine (Levophed)

100

What is the first step in the sepsis bundle when hypotension or lactate > 4 mmol/L?

Administer 30 mL/kg fluids

100

What infection requires droplet isolation and immediate IV antibiotics?

Bacterial meningitis

200

Which compensatory mechanism activates when baroreceptors sense decreased blood pressure?

The SNS triggers vasoconstriction and releases epinephrine and norepinephrine

200

What clinical sign differentiates early from late septic shock?

Early: warm flushed skin; Late: cool pale skin


200

A patient remains hypotensive after fluids. Which order should the nurse expect next?

Start vasopressor to maintain MAP > 65

200

When should antibiotics be given in sepsis?

Within the first hour, after cultures are drawn

200

What finding differentiates bacterial from viral meningitis in CSF results?

Bacterial: glucose < 40 mg/dL; viral: normal glucose

300

During the compensatory stage, what finding indicates effective neural compensation?

Narrow pulse pressure due to vasoconstriction and maintained MAP


300

A patient has HR 115, BP 110/85, and urine output 15 mL/hr. What stage of shock are they likely in?

Compensatory stage

300

In cardiogenic shock, which drug should the nurse question?

Metoprolol – decreases contractility

300

A patient develops pink frothy sputum during resuscitation. What complication do you suspect?

Pulmonary edema from fluid overload


300

What is the nurse’s priority during spinal shock?

Maintain spinal immobilization

400

Why does lactic acid rise during shock?

The body shifts to anaerobic metabolism due to decreased oxygen delivery

400

What assessment indicates progression to the progressive stage of shock?

Hypotension despite fluids and metabolic acidosis

400

What finding shows dopamine is effective?

Urine output increases from 15 → 35 mL/hr


400

What labs confirm DIC in septic shock?

Elevated D-dimer, prolonged PT/PTT, decreased platelets

400

A patient with a spinal cord injury suddenly develops severe hypertension, bradycardia, and flushing. What emergency is this?

Autonomic dysreflexia

500

Which nursing assessment best determines tissue perfusion?

Mean arterial pressure (MAP ≥ 65 mmHg)

500

What is the priority nursing goal during the refractory stage?

Provide comfort care and psychosocial support

500

Why should fluids be given cautiously in neurogenic shock?

Hypotension is caused by vasodilation, not fluid loss

500

What does a lactate level of > 4 mmol/L indicate?

Severe tissue hypoxia and need for fluids and vasopressors

500

How can nurses prevent increased ICP in bacterial meningitis?

Avoid rectal meds, minimize stimulation, keep environment quiet