Title: Pediatric Shock
1Pediatric Shock
Recognition, Classification and Initial
Management
Critical Concepts Course
2Introduction
- Shock is a syndrome that results from inadequate
oxygen delivery to meet metabolic demands - Oxygen delivery (DO2 ) is less than Oxygen
Consumption (lt VO2) - Untreated this leads to metabolic acidosis, organ
dysfunction and death
3Oxygen Delivery
- Oxygen delivery Cardiac Output x Arterial
Oxygen Content - (DO2 CO x CaO2)
- Cardiac Output Heart Rate x Stroke Volume (CO
HR x SV) - SV determined by preload, afterload and
contractility - Art Oxygen Content Oxygen content of the RBC
the oxygen dissolved in plasma - (CaO2 Hb X SaO2 X 1.34 (.003 X PaO2)
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5Stages of Shock
- Compensated
- Vital organ function maintained, BP remains
normal. - Uncompensated
- Microvascular perfusion becomes marginal. Organ
and cellular function deteriorate. Hypotension
develops. - Irreversible
6Clinical Presentation
- Early diagnosis requires a high index of
suspicion - Diagnosis is made through the physical
examination focused on tissue perfusion - Abject hypotension is a late and premorbid sign
7Initial Evaluation Physical Exam Findings of
Shock
- Neurological Fluctuating mental status, sunken
fontanel - Skin and extremities Cool, pallor, mottling,
cyanosis, poor cap refill, weak pulses, poor
muscle tone. - Cardio-pulmonary Hyperpnea, tachycardia.
- Renal Scant, concentrated urine
8Initial Evaluation Directed History
- Past medical history
- heart disease
- surgeries
- steroid use
- medical problems
- Brief history of present illness
- exposures
- onset
9Differential Diagnosis of Shock
- Cardiogenic
- Myocardial dysfunction
- Dysrrhythmia
- Congenital heart disease
- Obstructive
- Pneumothorax, CardiacTamponade, Aortic Dissection
- Dissociative
- Heat, Carbon monoxide, Cyanide
- Endocrine
- Hypovolemic
- Hemorrhage
- Fluid loss
- Drugs
- Distributive
- Analphylactic
- Neurogenic
- Septic
10Differential Diagnosis of Shock
- Precise etiologic classification may be delayed
- Immediate treatment is essential
- Absolute or relative hypovolemia is usually
present
11Neonate in Shock Include in differential
- Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- Inborn errors of metabolism
- Obstructive left sided cardiac lesions
- Aortic stenosis
- Hypoplastic left heart syndrome
- Coarctation of the aorta
- Interrupted aortic arch
12Management-General
- Goal increase oxygen delivery and decrease
oxygen demand - For all children
- Oxygen
- Fluid
- Temperature control
- Correct metabolic abnormalities
- Depending on suspected cause
- Antibiotics
- Inotropes
- Mechanical Ventilation
13Management-General
- Airway
- If not protected or unable to be maintained,
intubate. - Breathing
- Always give 100 oxygen to start
- Sat monitor
- Circulation
- Establish IV access rapidly
- CR monitor and frequent BP
14Management-General
- Laboratory studies
- ABG
- Blood sugar
- Electrolytes
- CBC
- PT/PTT
- Type and cross
- Cultures
15Management-Volume Expansion
- Optimize preload
- Normal saline (NS) or lactated ringers (RL)
- Except for myocardial failure use 10-20ml/kg
every 2-10 minutes. Reasses after every bolus. - At 60ml/kg consider ongoing losses, adrenal
insufficiency, intestinal ischemia, obstructive
shock. Get CXR. May need inotropes.
16Fluid in early septic shock Carcillo, et al,
JAMA, 1991
- Retrospective review of 34 pediatric patients
with culture septic shock, from 1982-1989. - Hypovolemia determined by PCWP, u.o and
hypotension. - Overall, patients received 33 cc/kg at 1 hour and
95 cc/kg at 6 hours. - Three groups
- 1 received up to 20 cc/kg in 1st 1 hour
- 2 received 20-40 cc/kg in 1st hour
- 3 received greater than 40 cc/kg in 1st hour
- No difference in ARDS between the 3 groups
17Fluid in early septic shock Carcillo, et al,
JAMA, 1991
Group 1 (n 14) Group 2 (n 11) Group 3 (n 9)
Hypovolemic at 6 hours -Deaths 6 6 2 2 0 0
Not hypovolemic at 6 hours -Deaths 8 2 9 5 9 1
Total deaths 8 7 1
18Inotropes and Vasopressors
- Lack of history of fluid losses, history of heart
disease, hepatomegaly, rales, cardiomegaly and
failure to improve perfusion with adequate
oxygenation, ventilation, heart rate, and volume
expansion suggests a cardiogenic or distributive
component. - Consider Appropriate inotropic or vasopressor
support.
19Hypovolemic Shock
- Most common form of shock world-wide
- Results in decreased circulating blood volume,
decrease in preload, decreased stroke volume and
resultant decrease in cardiac output. - Etiology Hemorrhage, renal and/or GI fluid
losses, capillary leak syndromes
20Hypovolemic Shock
- Clinically, history of vomiting/diarrhea or
trauma/blood loss - Signs of dehydration dry mucous membranes,
absent tears, decreased skin turgor - Hypotension, tachycardia without signs of
congestive heart failure
21Hemorrhagic Shock
- Most common cause of shock in the United States
(due to trauma) - Patients present with an obvious history (but in
child abuse history may be misleading) - Site of blood loss obvious or concealed (liver,
spleen, intracranial, GI, long bone fracture) - Hypotension, tachycardia and pallor
22Hypovolemic/Hemorrhagic Shock Therapy
- Always begin with ABCs
- Replace circulating blood volume rapidly start
with crystalloid - Blood products as soon as available for
hemorrhagic shock (Type and Cross with first
blood draw) - Replace ongoing fluid/blood losses treat the
underlying cause
23Septic Shock
SIRS/Sepsis/Septic shock
Mediator release exogenous endogenous
Maldistribution of blood flow
Cardiac dysfunction
Imbalance of oxygen supply and demand
Alterations in metabolism
24Septic Shock Warm Shock
- Early, compensated, hyperdynamic state
- Clinical signs
- Warm extremities with bounding pulses,
tachycardia, tachypnea, confusion. - Physiologic parameters
- widened pulse pressure, increased cardiac ouptut
and mixed venous saturation, decreased systemic
vascular resistance. - Biochemical evidence
- Hypocarbia, elevated lactate, hyperglycemia
25Septic Shock Cold Shock
- Late, uncompensated stage with drop in cardiac
output. - Clinical signs
- Cyanosis, cold and clammy skin, rapid thready
pulses, shallow respirations. - Physiologic parameters
- Decreased mixed venous sats, cardiac output and
CVP, increased SVR, thrombocytopenia, oliguria,
myocardial dysfunction, capillary leak - Biochemical abnormalities
- Metabolic acidosis, hypoxia, coagulopathy,
hypoglycemia.
26Septic Shock
- Cold Shock rapidly progresses to mutiorgan system
failure or death if untreated - Multi-Organ System Failure Coma, ARDS, CHF,
Renal Failure, Ileus or GI hemorrhage, DIC - More organ systems involved, worse the prognosis
- Therapy ABCs, fluid
- Appropriate antibiotics, treatment of underlying
cause
27Cardiogenic Shock
- Etiology
- Dysrhythmias
- Infection (myocarditis)
- Metabolic
- Obstructive
- Drug intoxication
- Congenital heart disease
- Trauma
28Cardiogenic Shock
- Differentiation from other types of shock
- History
- Exam
- Enlarged liver
- Gallop rhythm
- Murmur
- Rales
- CXR
- Enlarged heart, pulmonary venous congestion
29Cardiogenic Shock
- Management
- Improve cardiac output
- Correct dysrhthymias
- Optimize preload
- Improve contractility
- Reduce afterload
- Minimize cardiac work
- Maintain normal temperature
- Sedation
- Intubation and mechanical ventilation
- Correct anemia
30Distributive Shock
- Due to an abnormality in vascular tone leading to
peripheral pooling of blood with a relative
hypovolemia. - Etiology
- Anaphylaxis
- Drug toxicity
- Neurologic injury
- Early sepsis
- Management
- Fluid
- Treat underlying cause
31Obstructive Shock
- Mechanical obstruction to ventricular outflow
- Etiology Congenital heart disease, massive
pulmonary embolism, tension pneumothorax, cardiac
tamponade - Inadequate C.O. in the face of adequate preload
and contractility - Treat underlying cause.
32Dissociative Shock
- Inability of Hemoglobin molecule to give up the
oxygen to tissues - Etiology Carbon Monoxide poisoning,
methemoglobinemia, dyshemoglobinemias - Tissue perfusion is adequate, but oxygen release
to tissue is abnormal - Early recognition and treatment of the cause is
main therapy
33Hemodynamic Variables in Different Shock States
34Recognition and Classification
35Initial Management of Shock
36Final Thoughts
- Recognize compensated shock quickly- have a high
index of suspicion, remember tachycardia is an
early sign. Hypotension is late and ominous. - Gain access quickly- if necessary use an
intraoseous line. - Fluid, fluid, fluid - Administer adequate amounts
of fluid rapidly. Remember ongoing losses. - Correct electrolytes and glucose problems
quickly. - If the patient is not responding the way you
think he should, broaden your differential, think
about different types of shock.
37References, Recommended Reading, and
Acknowledgments
- Uptodate Initial Management of Shock in
Pediatric patients - Nelsons Textbook of Pediatrics
- Some slides based on works by Dr. Lou DeNicola
and Dr. Linda Siegel for PedsCCM - American Heart Association PALS guidelines