Emergency Nursing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Emergency Nursing

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... shock known as obstructive shock is associated with obstruction of blood flow. Common causes include pericardial disease, heartworm disease, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Emergency Nursing


1
Emergency Nursing
  • Chapter 33 Part 2

2
Clinical Signs of Pain
  • Vocalization
  • Depression
  • Anorexia
  • Tachypnea
  • Tachycardia
  • Abnormal blood pressure
  • Pale mucous membranes
  • Aggression
  • Abnormal postures
  • Hypersalivation
  • Dilated pupils

3
Abdominal Pain
  • Classic praying or play bowing position
  • Hypersalivation
  • Inability to lay down or sleep

4
Untreated Pain
  • Causes stress
  • Triggers harmful physiological changes that
    prolong recovery
  • Signs not always obvious
  • Monitor for absence of normal behavior

5
DIC
  • Definition
  • A syndrome
  • The natural balance between clot formation and
    clot prevention/resolution is altered

6
DIC
  • Consequences
  • Massive activation of coagulation
  • Coagulation overwhelms bodys normal regulatory
    function
  • Systemic clot formation begins on a widespread
    scale
  • Clot formations will set up multiple-organ
    microthrombosis
  • Subsequent multiple organ failure

7
DIC
  • Causes
  • Vascular injury
  • Severe trauma
  • Severe inflammation
  • Sepsis
  • Toxins
  • Poor perfusion

8
DIC
  • Pathogenesis
  • Patient commonly moves from a hypercoagulable to
    a hypocoagulable state
  • Die from thrombotic or hemorrhagic episodes

9
DIC
  • Common physical examination findings
  • Petechia
  • Ecchymosis
  • Cold extremities
  • Abnormal mentation
  • Abnormal body temperature
  • Increased respiratory effort

10
Treatment of DIC
  • Primary goal
  • Remove the stimulus initiating intravascular
    coagulation
  • Treat the primary disease

11
Treatment of DIC
  • Secondary goal
  • Prevent secondary complications
  • Maintain organ perfusion
  • Fluids
  • Blood products
  • Anticoagulants

12
Shock
  • Definition
  • Poor blood flow creating impaired oxygen delivery
    to the tissues

13
Categories of Shock
  • Compensatory or hyperdynamic
  • Earliest phase of shock
  • Clinical signs
  • Increased heart rate and respiratory rate
  • Rapid capillary re?ll time
  • Brick red mucous membranes
  • Bounding pulses

14
Categories of Shock
  • Uncompensated or hypodynamic shock
  • Second phase of shock
  • Blood flow is shunted vital organs (brain, heart)
    at the expense of other tissues
  • Clinical signs
  • Weak pulses
  • Rapid heart rate
  • Increased capillary refill time
  • Pale mucous membranes
  • Hypothermia
  • Dull mentation

15
Categories of Shock
  • Shock can be further divided based on underlying
    cause
  • Hypovolemic shock
  • Distributive shock
  • Cardiogenic shock
  • Septic shock

16
Hypovolemic Shock
  • Most common form of shock
  • Primary perfusion failure
  • Results from a reduction in circulating blood
    volume
  • Bleeding
  • Dehydration
  • Effusive fluid loss

17
Distributive Shock
  • Maldistribution of blood flow associated with
    vasodilation
  • Consequent decrease in effective blood volume
  • Regardless of intravascular volume or cardiac
    output
  • Common causes
  • Trauma
  • Heatstroke
  • Envenomation
  • Anaphylaxis

18
Cardiogenic Shock
  • Associated with decreased cardiac output
  • Can occur from heart failure
  • Cardiomyopathy
  • Valvular disease
  • Cardiac arrhythmias

19
Septic Shock
  • Caused by massive systemic infection or primary
    infectious diseases
  • Opportunistic infections can also trigger septic
    shock
  • Typically associated with severe tissue damage
  • Trauma
  • Heatstroke
  • Envenomations
  • Pancreatitis

20
SIRS
  • Systemic inflammatory response syndrome
  • Parallels septic shock
  • Triggered by systemic inflammation

21
SIRS
  • Similar to shock in that there is an early
    hyperdynamic phase followed by uncompensated or
    hypodynamic phase
  • Clinical signs
  • Abnormal temperature fluctuations
  • Depression
  • Tachypnea
  • DIC

22
SIRS
  • Primary treatment
  • Oxygen therapy
  • Aggressive fluid therapy
  • Shock doses
  • 90 ml/kg/hr dog
  • 45-60 ml/kg/hr cat
  • Fluid administration goal oriented!
  • Correction of underlying problem

23
Reperfusion Injury
  • Cellular injury that develops as blood flow
    returns to an area or tissue previously deprived
    of perfusion
  • Poor perfusion causes oxygen-starved tissues to
    develop an anaerobic metabolism and become
    depleted of cellular energy stores
  • These conditions alter certain enzyme systems,
    which destabilize white blood cell membranes

24
Reperfusion Injury
  • Once perfusion is restored, altered enzyme
    systems generate harmful molecules called
    oxygen-free radicals
  • Simultaneously, membrane-damaged white blood
    cells release inflammatory mediators that
    contribute to a reactive environment
  • Oxygen-free radicals and inflammatory mediators
    cause inflammation and vessel injury leading to
    thrombosis and edema

25
Vessel Injury
  • Leads to thrombosis and edema
  • DIC, SIRS, and multi-organ dysfunction can
    develop
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