Cardiogenic shock: Difference between revisions
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*Leading cause of death in pts w/ MI who reach the hospital alive | *Leading cause of death in pts w/ MI who reach the hospital alive | ||
=== | ===Etiologies=== | ||
*[[Myocardial infarction]] | *[[Myocardial infarction]] | ||
**Pump failure | **Pump failure | ||
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**Aortic insufficiency | **Aortic insufficiency | ||
==Clinical | ==Clinical Features== | ||
===Physical Exam=== | ===Physical Exam=== | ||
*Assess for signs of CHF | *Assess for signs of [[CHF]] | ||
**elevated JVD, pulmonary edema, S3 | **elevated JVD, pulmonary edema, S3 | ||
*Assess for valvular disease (MR, critical AS, or aortic regurgitation) | *Assess for [[valvular disease]] ([[MR]], critical [[AS]], or aortic regurgitation) | ||
*Assess | *Assess for end-organ hypoperfusion | ||
**cool/mottled extremities, weak pulses, AMS, decreased UOP | **cool/mottled extremities, weak pulses, AMS, decreased UOP | ||
*Assess for pulsus paradoxus (cardiac tamponade) | *Assess for pulsus paradoxus ([[cardiac tamponade]]) | ||
== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Shock DDX}} | |||
==Diagnosis== | |||
*Labs | *Labs | ||
**Troponin | **[[Troponin]] | ||
**Lactate | **Lactate | ||
**CBC | **CBC | ||
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*CXR | *CXR | ||
*TTE | *TTE | ||
==Treatment== | ==Treatment== | ||
*General | *General | ||
**Intubation | **[[Intubation]] | ||
***Decreases O2 demand BUT may worsen preload | ***Decreases O2 demand BUT may worsen preload | ||
*Coronary perfusion | *Coronary perfusion | ||
| Line 94: | Line 94: | ||
*[[Ultrasound in Shock and Hypotension]] | *[[Ultrasound in Shock and Hypotension]] | ||
== | ==References== | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
[[Category:Cards]] | [[Category:Cards]] | ||
[[Category:Critical Care]] | [[Category:Critical Care]] | ||
Revision as of 20:41, 5 October 2015
Background
- Leading cause of death in pts w/ MI who reach the hospital alive
Etiologies
- Myocardial infarction
- Pump failure
- Mechanical complications
- Acute MR (papillary muscle rupture)
- VSD
- Free-wall rupture
- RV infarction
- Decreased forward flow
- Sepsis
- Rate-related
- Bradycardia
- Tachycardia
- Myocarditis
- Myocardial contusion
- Cardiomyopathy
- Mechanical obstruction to forward flow
- Aortic stenosis
- HOCM
- Mitral stenosis
- Pericardial
- LV regurgitation
- Chordal rupture
- Aortic insufficiency
Clinical Features
Physical Exam
- Assess for signs of CHF
- elevated JVD, pulmonary edema, S3
- Assess for valvular disease (MR, critical AS, or aortic regurgitation)
- Assess for end-organ hypoperfusion
- cool/mottled extremities, weak pulses, AMS, decreased UOP
- Assess for pulsus paradoxus (cardiac tamponade)
Differential Diagnosis
Shock
- Cardiogenic
- Acute valvular Regurgitation/VSD
- CHF
- Dysrhythmia
- ACS
- Myocardial Contusion
- Myocarditis
- Drug toxicity (e.g. beta blocker, CCB, or bupropion OD)
- Obstructive
- Distributive
- Hypovolemic
- Severe dehydration
- Hemorrhagic shock (traumatic and non-traumatic)
Diagnosis
- Labs
- Troponin
- Lactate
- CBC
- Chem
- BNP
- <100 may rule-out cardiogenic shock
- ECG
- CXR
- TTE
Treatment
- General
- Intubation
- Decreases O2 demand BUT may worsen preload
- Intubation
- Coronary perfusion
- Small Fluid challenge
- Increase inotropy
- Titrate to clinical effect
- Dobutamine or Milrinone:
- Use milrinone if pt is on BB
- CaCl 1gm
- Give if pt is hypocalcemic
- Titrate to clinical effect
- Achieve MAP >65
Vasopressors
| Pressor | Initial Dose | Max Dose | Cardiac Effect | BP Effect | Arrhythmias | Special Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dobutamine | 3-5 mcg/kg/min | 5-15 mcg/kg/min (as high as 200) [1] | Strong ß1 agonist +inotrope +chronotrope, Weak ß2 agonist +weak vasodilatation ) | alpha effect minimal | HR variable effects. | indicated in decompensated systolic HF, Debut Research 1979[2] Isoproterenol has most Β2 vasodilatory and Β1 HR effects |
| Dopamine | 2 mcg/kg/min | 20-50 mcg/kg/min | β1 and NorEpi release | α effects if > 20mcg/kg/min | Arrhythmogenic from β1 effects | More adverse events when used in shock compared to Norepi[3] |
| Epinepherine | 0.1-1 mcg/kg/min | + inotropy, + chronotropy | ||||
| Norepinephrine | 0.2 mcg/kg/min | 0.2-1.3 mcg/kg/min (5mcg/kg/min) [4] | mild β1 direct effect | β1 and strong α1,2 effects | Less arrhythmias than Dopamine[3] | First line for sepsis. Increases MAP with vasoconstriction, increases coronary perfusion pressure, little β2 effects. |
| Milrinone | 50 mcg/kg x 10 min | 0.375-75 mcg/kg/min | Direct influx of Ca2+ channels | Smooth muscle vasodilator | PDE Inhibitor which increases Ca2+ uptake by sarcolemma. No venodilatory activity | |
| Phenylephrine | 100-180 mcg/min then 40-60 mcg/min | 0.4-9 mcg/kg/min | Alpha agonist | Long half life | ||
| Vasopressin | Fixed Dose | 0.01 to 0.04 U/min | unknown | increases via ADH peptide | should not be titrated due to ischemic effects | |
| Methylene blue[5] | IV bolus 2 mg/kg over 15 min | 1-2 mg/kg/hour | Possible increased inotropy, cardiac use of ATP | Inhibits NO mediated peripheral vasodilation | Don't use in G6PD deficiency, ARDS, pulmonary hypertension |
| Medication | IV Dose (mcg/kg/min) | Concentration |
| Norepinephrine (Levophed) | 0.1-2 mcg/kg/min | 8mg in 500mL D5W |
| Dopamine | 2-20 mcg/kg/min | 400mg in 250 D5W |
| Dobutamine | 2-20 mcg/kg/min | 250mg in 250 mg D5W |
| Epinephrine | 0.1-1 mcg/kg/min | 1mg in 250 D5W |
Other Therapies
- Transfusion
- Consider if Hb < 10
Specific Situations
- Mitral Regurg
- Need to increase forward flow
- Dobutamine (contractility)
- Nitroprusside (afterload reduction)
- MI
- PCI or thrombolysis
- Aortic Stenosis
- Do not give preload reducers such as Nitro
- Patients are flow dependent over stenotic value. Flow proportional to degree of stenosis and afterload.
- Maintain flow by decreasing afterload (use with extreme caution and in very small carefuly titrated doses)
- Nitropruside
- Dobutamine
- Hydralazine
- Toxins
See Also
References
- ↑ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8449087
- ↑ Edmund H. Sonnenblick, M.D., William H. Frishman, M.D., and Thierry H. LeJemtel, M.D. Dobutamine: A New Synthetic Cardioactive Sympathetic Amine
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 De Backer Daniel et al. Comparison of Dopamine and Norepinephrine in the Treatment of Shock. NEJM 363(9). 779-789
- ↑ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15542956
- ↑ Pasin L et al. Methylene blue as a vasopressor: a meta-analysis of randomised trials. Crit Care Resusc. 2013 Mar;15(1):42-8.
