Physiologic Patterns in Surviving and Nonsurviving Shock Patients
- 1 May 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 106 (5) , 630-636
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1973.01350170004003
Abstract
Physiologic events were observed before, during, and after extensive surgical procedures for life-threatening illnesses in a series of 98 patients. Although there was a wide spectrum of illnesses, operations, and associated clinical factors, fairly well defined patterns that began early after onset of the causative event were associated with survival and death, but were not well related to the degree of hypotension. We described the cardiorespiratory pattern of the 67 survivors, which to a first approximation represents the optimal therapeutic goals, and contrasted these with the pattern of the 31 patients who died. Alterations in the latter group may be used as early warning, and include lower cardiac output and other measures of cardiac performance, higher pulmonary vascular resistance, reduced oxygen transport, acidosis, higher arterial carbon dioxide tension, and greater reductions in hematocrit reading and blood volume.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Circulatory and Metabolic Alterations Associated with Survival or Death in PeritonitisAnnals of Surgery, 1966
- HEMODYNAMIC STUDIES DURING THIOPENTAL SODIUM AND NITROUS OXIDE ANESTHESIA IN HUMANSAnesthesiology, 1955
- THE CARDIAC OUTPUT AND OXYGEN CONSUMPTION OF NINE SURGICAL PATIENTS BEFORE AND AFTER OPERATION 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1938
- OBSERVATIONS ON THE DISTURBANCE OF METABOLISM PRODUCED BY INJURY TO THE LIMBSQJM: An International Journal of Medicine, 1932