Title: Shock 848th Forward Surgical Team
1Shock848th Forward Surgical Team
2Introduction
- Combat-Related trauma may present with classical
symptoms of hemorrhagic shock following rapid
exsanguination from major vascular structures - Hemorrhagic shock is the most common cause of
death among combat casualties - Early recognition, control of the hemorrhage
source by effective first aid, and rapid volume
resuscitation with IV fluids are the ideal
preparation for definitive surgical repair -
3Physiological Consequences of Hemorrhage
- Adverse effects of hemorrhage on young, healthy
soldiers are directly related to two primary
factors - 1.) Decreased intravascular volume
- 2.) Inadequate oxygen-carrying
capacity
4Cardiovascular Response
- The immediate response to the fall in venous
return to the heart, and decrease in pressure to
the aortic arch and carotid baro-receptors is a
diffuse activation of the sympathetic nervous
system - Release of catecholamines from adrenal medulla
- Increase in heart rate and contractility
- Increase in systematic vascular resistance due to
vasoconstriction of skeletal muscles and viscera - This response preserves central organs
- Heart brain at the expense of peripheral organs
5Fluid Compartment Shifts
- After a combat casualty sustains a major
hemorrhage, restoration of the intravascular
fluid compartment may require many hours as
interstitial fluid (extra-vascular) is drawn into
the intravascular compartment
6Extra-vascular Fluid Loss
- Combat casualties presenting for care several
hours after being injured may suffer from - Hemorrhage-induced intravascular volume depletion
- Preexisting depletion of the extra-cellular fluid
compartment that is caused by concomitant
dehydration, secondary to environmental or
nutritional factors
7Extra-vascular Fluid Loss Cont.
- Because crystalloids (Normal Saline (NS)
/Lactated Ringers (LR)) are distributed through
the body water, a 1950's dog study showed 3-4
ml/1 ml blood loss is required to replace
intravascular volume - Recommendations for replacing the third-space
fluid sequestration is four, six, and eight
ml/kg/hr for minimal, moderate, and severe trauma
(respectively) in addition to estimated hourly
maintenance fluids
8Oxygen Transport
- Hemorrhage interferes with normal tissue
oxygenation by two mechanisms - 1.) The anemic (Inadequate oxygen carrying
capacity) - 2.) The hemorrhagic (Inadequate tissue perfusion)
- In the setting of severe hemorrhage, however,
reduced hemoglobin content is rarely the cause of
tissue hypoxia - A 20-year-old healthy soldier can lose 40-50 of
his blood volume and hemodynamically compensate
with cardiac output and vasoconstriction to
maintain adequate tissue perfusion
9Oxygen Transport
- This example demonstrates blood replacement is
frequently unnecessary and volume restoration is
the key - If the circulating plasma volume is maintained
then the metabolic consequences of severe
hemorrhage can be minimized
10Hypovolemia
- Bld Loss Blood Vol. Heart
Blood Pulse Resp Urine Mental - Hemorrhage (L.) Lost () Rate Pressure Pressu
re Rate ml./hr. Status - Class I lt1 lt15 lt100 Normal Normal or
14-20 gt30 Slight Increased Anxiety - Class II 0.75-1.5 15-30 gt100 Normal Decreased
20-30 20-30 Mild - Anxiety
- Class III 1.5-2.0 30-40 gt120 Decreased Decrease
d 30-40 lt15 Anxious
Confused - Class IV gt2.0 gt40 gt140 Decreased Decreased
Rapid Neg Confused - Shallow Lethargic
- (Committee on Trauma, American College of
Surgeons. Advanced Trauma Life Support for
Physicians Chicago, Ill. American College of
Surgeons 1989 72. )
11Hypovolemia
- Class I (lt15) Suspected blood loss in absence of
tachycardia or hypotension - Resuscitate with clear fluids (crystalloids (NS /
LR) - Class II (15-30) Tachycardia without
hypotension - Transfuse with crystalloid or colloid, transfuse
early with continual bleeding - Class III (30-40) or Class lV (gt40)
Hypotension and tachycardia require immediate
blood volume replacement with crystalloid,
colloids, and or packed red blood cells
12Venous Access
- Optimal sited for venous cannulation
- Severe hemorrhagic shock may require surgical
cut-down - Central venous access
- Penetrating abdominal injuries may involve the
inferior venacava
13Intravenous Fluid-Delivery System
- Large-caliber, high-efficiency, blood-warming
units are essential for large-vol. resuscitation - Level-I (one) can deliver warm fluids at a rate
of 500 ml/min with an 18 g IV 1000 ml/min with a
14 g IV - There is an in-line air vent to prevent an air
embolus when fluid bag is pressurized
14Resuscitation Fluid Selection
- Best initial therapy for mild to moderate
hemorrhage 10-30 - Blood products administered to keep pace with
blood loss and keep hemoglobin gt 7 gm/dl - Fresh whole blood or Packed Red Blood Cells
(PRBC)
15Crystalloid Solutions
- 0.9 Normal Saline (NS) or Lactated Ringers (LR)
- Glucose containing fluids
- Dextrose
16Colloid Solutions (Dextran, Hespan, Albumin)
- Rapidly replenishes intravascular compartment
with smaller fluid volume than crystalloids - Gives more prolonged expansion of the plasma
volume and less peripheral edema - Has Disadvantages
17Supplemental Therapeutic Measures
- Control of bleeding and rapid infusion of
crystalloids and blood are essential in combat
casualty treatment of shock - Other Treatments
18Patient Position
- Trendelenberg's position
- Raised legs may increase blood return to heart
without increasing intracranial pressure
19Pneumatic Antishock Garment
- A compression device first known as the Military
Anti-Shock Trousers (MAST) introduced by the U.S.
Army during the Vietnam War
20Pneumatic Antishock Garment
- Studies have demonstrated significantly reduced
survival in patients treaded with MAST garments
for chest hemorrhage not compressed by the
trousers - MAST garments in combat may be useful in
stabilizing fractures of pelvis and long bones of
the legs
21Supplemental Oxygen
- Beneficial in multiple or massive injury
- Flail chest, fat embolus and other injuries
associated with impaired oxygenation - Expectations of tissue oxygenation in the
presence of hypovolemic shock is unrealistic - Hemoglobin oxygenation in young combat casualties
is already maximally saturated from
hyperventilation from the injury
22Vasopressors
- Transiently supporting blood pressure with
vasoconstrictors until volume replacement or
control of bleeding is possible - Intense vasoconstriction is typical hemostatic
response to hemorrhagic shock and may be
primarily responsible for adverse consequences of
hypovolemia (acidosis and tissue hypoxia)
23Hyperthermia and Dehydration
- Physical exertion and inadequate supplies on the
battlefield combine to develop heat injury and
dehydration - Coincidental trauma and hemorrhage
- Rapid replacement of intravascular and
intracellular fluids
24Hypothermia
- Problem afflicting trauma victims
- Decreases renal blood flow 75
- Temperatures lt30 Degrees C
- Restoration of fluid deficits
- Re-warming the patient frequently develops
metabolic acidosis - Fluid resuscitation maintenance will correct
acidotic state - Treat acidosis with sodium bicarbonate
25Hemorrhagic Shock and Head Injury
- Hypovolemia and head injury is ominous
- Increased intracranial pressure and hypotension,
secondary to hypovolemia, further decreases
cerebral perfusion pressure and potentiates
cerebral ischemic injury - When colloid solutions have been advocated, the
blood-brain barrier may have been damaged
contributing to worsening edema with fluid
resuscitation
26Questions
James Malson CPT