Last symptoms of shock are depressed body functions; low pulse, low heart rate, shallow breathing, unresponsive.
Depending on the primary etiology for shock, signs/symptoms will vary. Usually, evidence of profound or severe shock, without medical interventions, consist of severe neurological deficits (obtunded, coma), however, this is more likely secondary to the effects of shock (uremia, acidosis, hypoxia). Purely speaking, the late sign/symptom of shock is death. Shock in of itself is already a late sign/symptom (progression) of a primary insult to the body (cardiogenic: myocardial infarction or heart attack, heart failure; distributive: Infection, anaphylaxis, neurogenic; Hypovolemic: hemorrhage). So, the answer is death.
Difficulty breathing
Rapid, uncontrolled breathing.
Unconsciousness is the last sign of shock. Followed by death.
Depending on the primary etiology for shock, signs/symptoms will vary. Usually, evidence of profound or severe shock, without medical interventions, consist of severe neurological deficits (obtunded, coma), however, this is more likely secondary to the effects of shock (uremia, acidosis, hypoxia). Purely speaking, the late sign/symptom of shock is death. Shock in of itself is already a late sign/symptom (progression) of a primary insult to the body (cardiogenic: myocardial infarction or heart attack, heart failure; distributive: Infection, anaphylaxis, neurogenic; Hypovolemic: hemorrhage). So, the answer is death. The signs/symptoms of shock (late sign/symptom of primary insult): Cardiogenic: heart failure (shortness of breath, cough, swelling of lower extremities) Distributive: Infections (fever, elevated breathing rate, elevated heart rate, warm extremities), anaphylaxis (allergy to a recent insult, shortness of breath, elevated heart rate, warm extremities, hives), neurogenic (recent trauma to spinal cord, normal-low heart rate, quadriplegia, warm extremities), other inflammatory: pancreatitis Hypovolemic: Hemorrhagic (bleeding from a source), dehydration (cool skin clamy skin, passing out on walking or feeling like passing out on standing, dry lips/mouth, inadequate drinking of fluids)
Yes, being expressionless can be a symptom of shock. During a state of shock, an individual may appear dazed, have a blank stare, or exhibit a lack of emotional response or expression due to the body's physiological response to a traumatic event.
pale cool skinThere is NO real question asked in the above run-on sentence. Please rephrase the question.- Pale cool skin- Confused and disoriented behavior
Babies with late-term disease typically have meningitis (inflammation of the brain and spinal tissues).
Generally the first symptom would be a late period.
yes, that was the only symptom i had with my baby..
because it takes longer time for the stomach to digest mushroom
I'm 6days late and I got a facial rash