There are several different types of shock. They are Anaphylactic, Cardiogenic, Hypovolemic, Respiratory Insufficency, Neurogenic, Psychogenic (fainting),and Septic. I am training to be an EMT and we learned to assess the general signs of compensated shock as: Agitation, Anxiety, Restlessness, Feeling of Impending Doom, Altered Mental Status Weak, Rapid (thready) or absent Distal Pulses Clammy (pale, cool, moist) Skin Pallor (paleness) with Cyanosis (blue color) of the Lips Shallow, Rapid Breathing Air Hunger (shortness of breath), especially if there is a chest injury Nausea or Vomiting Capillary refill of longer than 2 seconds in infants and children Marked Thirst DECOMPENSTAED SHOCK (later stage) is when the blood pressure begins to fall and patients soon move into IRREVERSIBLE SHOCK in which no interventions or transfusions will reverse the effects and death is imminent. The best option is to treat people once the first signs of compenstated shock develop and to seek medical treatment ASAP. PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THE VERY FIRST SIGN OF COMPENSTATED SHOCK IS AGITATION OR ALTERED MENTAL STATUS. Every type of shock is triggered differently, presents differently, and needs to be treated differently. However rapid transport, maintaining an airway, controlling bleeding, thermal management (keep them warm), and elevation of the legs so long as no spinal injuries are suspected seem to be a key theme. The signs of DECOMPENSTATED SHOCK are as follows: Falling Blood pressure (systolic blood pressure of 90 mm Hg or lower in an adult) Labored or irregular breathing Ashen, mottled, or cyanotic skin Thready or absent pulses Dull eyes, dialated pupils Poor urinary output. Hope this was able to help! :)
Shock is a life threatening medical emergency.
Signs & symptons include, but may not be seen in every case:
Signs & symptons include, but may not be seen in every case:
Shock is a life threatening medical emergency.
Signs & symptons include, but may not be seen in every case:
Shock is a life threatening medical emergency.
Signs & symptons include, but may not be seen in every case:
Sudden drop in blood pressure
Hypotension
Cold skin
Clammy skin
Pale
Cyanosis
Sweaty skin
Weak pulse
Rapid pulse
Irregular breathing
Rapid breathing
Shallow breathing
Weakness
Dilated pupils
Anxiety
Confusion
Lethargy
Reduced urination
Loss of conciousness
Rapid, weak pulse (heartbeat).
Cool, clammy skin.
Sweaty skin.
Rapid, shallow breathing.
Altered level of consciousness.
Pale skin, sweaty body, nervousness, hyperactivity, dizziness, and tiredness.
rapid breathing, cold sweats and feeling faint
They will be cold, pale and clammy due to poor circulation. they may be nauseous or dizzy as well.
shallow breathing confussion
There are no signs
If no shock is indicated by the AED, check for signs of life. Continue CPR if no signs of life are present.
ConfusionShallow breathing .
Signs of traumatic shock include weak and rapid pulse, shallow and rapid breathing, and pale, cool, clammy skin
Signs and symptoms are both used in diagnosis. Signs are the objective observations that can be sensed, measured, or recorded by another person. Symptoms are the subjective experience that has to be reported.
Shallow breathing Confusion
Confusion Shallow breathing
shallow breathing and confusion
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hypotension, tacycardia and low Bp
Blood pressure drop, breathing difficult
If no shock indicated, check for signs of life; and if none continue CPR until the AED analysis's again.