Drugs in Shock
Pathophysiology-Guided Pharmacotherapy Across Shock Types (Hypovolaemic · Cardiogenic · Septic/Distributive · Anaphylactic · Neurogenic) · Receptor-Based Rationale for Vasopressors (Noradrenaline, Adrenaline, Dopamine, Phenylephrine, Vasopressin) & Inotropes (Dobutamine) · Goal-Directed Haemodynamic Targets · Fluid Resuscitation & Adjuncts (Corticosteroids, Adrenaline in Anaphylaxis) · Indian Context
Past RGUHS + MPMSU + NTRUHS · 4
NTRUHSJun '26
RGUHSNov '21
RGUHSJul '21
MPMSUMay '19
Introduction — shock and its classification
- Shock — a clinical syndrome of inadequate tissue perfusion — an immediately life-threatening impairment of O2 and nutrient delivery to organs — usually accompanied by hypotension, altered mental state, oliguria and metabolic acidosis; untreated it becomes refractory and fatal.
- A medical emergency — urgent measures are directed to restoring and maintaining blood pressure and perfusion of vital organs (brain, heart, kidney).
- Classification by mechanism — Hypovolaemic (haemorrhage, burns, severe vomiting/diarrhoea); Cardiogenic (pump failure — MI, arrhythmia); Obstructive (pulmonary embolism, tamponade, aortic dissection); Distributive (peripheral circulatory dysfunction — septic, anaphylactic, neurogenic). Katzung frames the three major vasopressor-decision forms as septic, cardiogenic and hypovolaemic.
- Compensatory physiology — the fall in BP drives sympathetic activation → peripheral vasoconstriction + ↑ rate and force of cardiac contraction; early on this may preserve BP and cerebral flow, but renal/skin/splanchnic flow falls → impaired urine output and metabolic acidosis.
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Drugs In Shock
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