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ATLS | Shock
Description
đ Trauma Shock & Thorax Emergencies
I) 𩸠Hemorrhagic (Hypovolemic) Shock
Patho: Acute blood loss âpreload â âSV/CO; early tachycardia + vasoconstriction; prolonged hypoperfusion â lactic acidosis; lethal triad = đ§ hypothermia + 𩸠coagulopathy + acidosis. Fluids/Blood:
- Warm crystalloids (1 L adult, 20 mL/kg peds) â avoid excess; consider permissive hypotension.
- MTP: pRBCs/Plasma/Plts (warm). O neg for childbearing-age females; AB plasma if unknown type.
- TXA: within 3 hrs (bolus then 8-hr infuse).
- Calcium: guide by ionized Ca²âş. No vasopressors first-line. Team: MD leads definitive bleed control (OR/angio); RN gets 2 large-bore IVs/IO, gives warmed fluids/blood, binder/pressure, tracks response; Lab preps products. Priority cues: Marked tachy + hypotension + narrow PP + âLOC (Class IV); cool, pale skin; âUO. Elderly may lack tachy on β-blockersâSBP 100 can be shock. RN priorities: Categorize response (rapid/transient/non-), direct pressure/binder, target UO âĽ0.5 mL/kg/hr, warm patient & fluids to 39 °C, trend lactate/base deficit. High-yield: Donât rely on SBP aloneâwatch pulse pressure; stop bleeding + balanced resus; vasopressors đŤ initial.
II) đŞď¸ Tension Pneumothorax (Obstructive Shock)
Patho: One-way valve air â âpleural pressure â lung collapse + mediastinal shift â âvenous return. Management: Immediate decompression (needle/finger) â chest tube. Donât wait for X-ray. Cues: Hypotension/CO drop, severe dyspnea/air hunger, absent unilateral breath sounds, hyperresonance, tracheal shift (late), JVD. RN: Set up decompression ASAP, then assist sterile tube; monitor hemodynamic rebound. Pearl: Think triadâhypotension + unilateral absent sounds + hyperresonance.
III) â¤ď¸ Cardiac Tamponade (Obstructive Shock)
Patho: Blood in pericardium â impaired filling â âCO. Often penetrating trauma. Management: Definitive surgery; pericardiocentesis = temporizing. FAST to detect fluid. Cues: Beckâs triad = hypotension, muffled heart sounds, JVD; tachy; poor response to fluids. RN: Prep for OR, support FAST, note non-response to resus; educate that surgery removes pericardial blood.
IV) đ§ Neurogenic Shock (Distributive)
Patho: Cervical/upper thoracic SCI â loss of sympathetic tone â vasodilation & hypotension; may coexist with bleeding. Isolated head injury doesnât cause shock unless brainstem involved. Distinct cues: Hypotension without tachycardia, warm/dry skin (no vasoconstriction), normal/wide PP. Management: Treat as hypovolemic first; if unresponsive to fluids, pursue neurogenic cause with advanced monitoring. Maintain full C-spine precautions. High-yield: Key differential = low BP + no tachy + warm skin.