Types of Shock:
Septic, from systemic infection
Hypovolemic, from fluid loss. Diarrhea, Burns
Hemorrhagic, from rapid bleeding either trauma internal bleeding such as GI
Cardiogenic, from pump (heart, mechanical) failure. MI CHF
Diabetic, not enough insulin to convert fat or glycogen to sugar
Anaphylactic, allergic reaction to peanuts shellfish bee sting
Neurogenic, spinal or brain injury causes blood vessels to relax and blood to pool in lower extremities.
The most common form of shock is most likely Non-hemorraghic hypovolemic shock brought on by vomiting or diarrhea.
Hypovolemic shock is fluid loss. Hemorrhagic is when you lose blood. Non-hemorragic is when you lose fluid but not blood cells usually through vomiting or diarrhea.
However it likely depends on the age group you are referring to. I would assume that geriatric people would suffer cardiac stroke problems more.
Shock indicates an imbalance between the body's oxygen need and actual supplied oxygen to cells that adds up to lack of nutrients being delivered. Its fours stages are initial stage, compensatory stage, progressive stage and refractory stage.
To better understand the greater issue of shock you should understand that all forms of shock (inadequate tissue perfusion) are attributed to a problem with either volume, container or pump.
The types of shock might be classified under:
-Distributive ( includes Anaphylaxis, Neurological, and Sepsis)
-Cardiogenic
-Hypovolemic (traumatic and non-traumatic)
Hypovolemic Shock has many causes: vomiting/diarrhea, burns, trauma/surgery, environment, GI bleed, decreased fluid intake, 3rd spacing.
Phases of shock would include Compensated, Decompensated, and Irreversible.
Compensated: signs and symptomatica include restlessness, anxiety, tachycardia (or bradycardia with cardiogenic or neurogenic shock,) normotension and narrow pulse pressure, cool/pale skin, mild tachypnea, thirst, nausea/vomiting, weakness.
Decompensated: signs and symptomatica include confusion, apathy, listlessness, tachycardia, weak thready pulse, decreased BP, tachypnea
Irreversible: signs and symptomatica include confusion, unconsciousness, slow/irregular pulse, falling BP, cold, clammy, cyanotic, shallow/irregular respirations.
That being stated, there are four classes of shock.
Class I shock is considered fully compensated with vitals in the following range:
Blood loss up to 750 cc
% BV up to 15%
HR less than 100
BP Normal
Pulse pressure normal or increased
Cap refill normal
RR 14-20
Urine output 30cc/hr+
LOC slight anxiety
Class II shock is considered partially compensated with vitals in the following range:
Blood loss 750 - 1500 cc
% BV 15 - 30%
HR over 100
BP Normal
Pulse pressure decreased
Cap refill delayed
RR 20 - 30
Urine output 20 - 30cc/hr
LOC mild anxiety
Class III shock is considered decompensating or partially decompensated with vitals in the following range:
Blood loss 1500 - 2000 cc
% BV 30 - 40%
HR over 120
BP decreased
Pulse pressure decreased
Cap refill delayed
RR 30 - 40
Urine output 5 - 15cc/hr
LOC anxiety, confusion
Class IV shock is considered decompensated with vitals in the following range:
Blood loss 2000 cc +
% BV 40%+
HR over 140
BP decreased
Pulse pressure decreased
Cap refill delayed
RR over 35
Urine output negligible
LOC confusion, lethargy
After Class IV shock....The show's over. Elvis has likely left the building.
Distributive, cardiogenic, neurogenic, septic, hypovolemic
hypovolemic shock, cardiogenic shock and septic shock
Circulatory shock, or simply 'shock' is a life-threatening medical condition. One is in shock when blood isn't sufficient to supply the brain with oxygen. The shock is progressive and it can be deadly if it is not made well quickly.
The four major types of shock are hypovolemic shock (caused by low blood volume), cardiogenic shock (caused by heart failure), distributive shock (caused by vasodilation), and obstructive shock (caused by an obstruction to blood flow).
leukemia
leukemia
They have Both single and Double circulatory sestem inVertebtres.
Vascular, due to extreme vasodilation as a result of loss of vasomotor tone
hypovolaemia? haemorrhagic shock?
False.
Think of the circulatory system as a tank with a pump and pipes. The tank is the human body, the pump is the heart, and the vessels are the pipes. You can have pump failure that causes shock - the pump just doesn't work well. Cardiogenic Shock. You can have a break in the pipe - you lose volume. Hypovolemic shock. You can have the pipes get bigger, wider. Neurological shock. You can also have a psychogenic type shock. Nothing is wrong with the pump, pipes, or volume but you see something your mind just can't handle and you faint. Neurological shock is normally an anaphalactic type response. Isolated head trauma rarely causes shock.
Total body water is normal; local edema reduces blood volume Can cause circulatory shock
linear , vibratory, circulatory and rotatory motion.
Rosemary Theby died on November 10, 1973, in Los Angeles, California, USA of circulatory shock.