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Emergency Nursing CHAPTER 33 PART 2
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2 Clinical Signs of Pain Vocalization Depression Anorexia Tachypnea Tachycardia Abnormal blood pressure Pale mucous membranes Aggression Abnormal postures Hypersalivation Dilated pupils
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3 Abdominal Pain Classic “praying” or “play bowing” position Hypersalivation Inability to lay down or sleep
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4 Untreated Pain Causes stress Triggers harmful physiological changes that prolong recovery Signs not always obvious Monitor for absence of normal behavior
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5 DIC Definition A syndrome The natural balance between clot formation and clot prevention/resolution is altered
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6 DIC Consequences Massive activation of coagulation Coagulation overwhelms body’s normal regulatory function Systemic clot formation begins on a widespread scale Clot formations will set up multiple-organ microthrombosis Subsequent multiple organ failure
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7 DIC Causes Vascular injury Severe trauma Severe inflammation Sepsis Toxins Poor perfusion
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8 DIC Pathogenesis Patient commonly moves from a hypercoagulable to a hypocoagulable state Die from thrombotic or hemorrhagic episodes
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9 DIC Common physical examination findings Petechia Ecchymosis Cold extremities Abnormal mentation Abnormal body temperature Increased respiratory effort
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10 Treatment of DIC Primary goal Remove the stimulus initiating intravascular coagulation Treat the primary disease
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11 Treatment of DIC Secondary goal Prevent secondary complications Maintain organ perfusion Fluids Blood products Anticoagulants
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12 Shock Definition Poor blood flow creating impaired oxygen delivery to the tissues
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13 Categories of Shock Compensatory or hyperdynamic Earliest phase of shock Clinical signs Increased heart rate and respiratory rate Rapid capillary refill time Brick red mucous membranes Bounding pulses
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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
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15 Categories of Shock Shock can be further divided based on underlying cause Hypovolemic shock Distributive shock Cardiogenic shock Septic shock
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16 Hypovolemic Shock Most common form of shock Primary perfusion failure Results from a reduction in circulating blood volume Bleeding Dehydration Effusive fluid loss
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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
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18 Cardiogenic Shock Associated with decreased cardiac output Can occur from heart failure Cardiomyopathy Valvular disease Cardiac arrhythmias
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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
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20 SIRS Systemic inflammatory response syndrome Parallels septic shock Triggered by systemic inflammation
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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
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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
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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
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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
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25 Vessel Injury Leads to thrombosis and edema DIC, SIRS, and multi-organ dysfunction can develop
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