Literature DB >> 3608537

Circulatory mechanisms of shock and their mediators.

W C Shoemaker.   

Abstract

Traditional concepts of shock therapy have been based on conventional monitoring. However, the availability of invasive monitoring systems has provided the means to describe the patterns of oxygen transport in various acute life-threatening illnesses. Surgical trauma provides a useful model for investigation of other shock syndromes, because measurements may be made in the preoperative control period, during the hemodynamic crisis intraoperatively, and sequentially throughout the postoperative period for survivors and nonsurvivors. This provides a time-related pattern of physiologic events that may form the basis for the physiologic evaluation of mechanisms operative in survivors and nonsurvivors. Physiologic alterations which are compensatory may be identified from the survivor pattern and differentiated from decompensations associated with the lethal course. The DO2 pattern reflects circulatory functional changes which may limit body metabolism as reflected by VO2. The body compensates for tissue hypoxia and increased metabolic needs by increased flow and DO2 in sepsis and trauma, and by increased oxygen extraction in hemorrhagic and cardiogenic shock where flow is limited. The interactions of survivors' hemodynamic and oxygen transport patterns define compensatory responses which primarily are increased cardiac output, DO2, and VO2. Inadequate compensations and decompensations of shock are clearly manifest by the nonsurvivor pattern. Therapeutic goals may be defined by the values of the survivor patterns; reduced mortality and morbidity result when these goals are vigorously applied prospectively (17-19).

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3608537     DOI: 10.1097/00003246-198708000-00018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Med        ISSN: 0090-3493            Impact factor:   7.598


  7 in total

Review 1.  Management of urinary tract infection and vesicoureteric reflux in children. 2. The case for surgery.

Authors:  B O'Donnell
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1990-05-26

2.  Continuous measurement of oxygen consumption using the reversed fick method.

Authors:  Michihiko Fukui; Maho Imoto; Nobuaki Shime; Tetsuo Hatanaka; Hideaki Tojo
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  1997-03       Impact factor: 2.078

3.  Changes of oxygen transport variables and serum lactate during open-chest cardiac massage in dogs.

Authors:  Michihiko Fukui; Tetsuo Hatanaka; Masami Yoshioka; Tsutomu Yan; Nobuaki Shime; Yoshifumi Tanaka
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  1994-03       Impact factor: 2.078

4.  Muscle lactate concentration during experimental hemorrhagic shock.

Authors:  Myun Yang
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  1998-06       Impact factor: 2.078

5.  Adverse effects of prostacyclin administered directly into patients with combined renal and respiratory failure prior to dialysis.

Authors:  A Davenport; E J Will; A M Davison
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1990       Impact factor: 17.440

6.  The effects of norepinephrine on hemodynamics and renal function in severe septic shock states.

Authors:  E M Redl-Wenzl; C Armbruster; G Edelmann; E Fischl; M Kolacny; A Wechsler-Fördös; P Sporn
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  1993       Impact factor: 17.440

7.  A physiological model to evaluate drug kinetics in patients with hemorrhagic shock followed by fluid resuscitation. Application to amoxicillin-clavulanate.

Authors:  Michel Tod; Franck Lagneau; Vincent Jullien; Olivier Mimoz
Journal:  Pharm Res       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 4.200

  7 in total

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