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Chapter 29: Bleeding and Shock

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Chapter 29: Bleeding and Shock

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Chapter 29: Bleeding and Shock
Topics
●​ The Circulatory System
●​ Shock
●​ Bleeding

The Circulatory System
Main Components
●​ Heart
●​ Blood vessels
●​ Blood
●​ Heart
○​ Job is to pump blood
■​ Supplies oxygen and nutrients to body’s cells
■​ Must pump at an adequate rate and rhythm
●​ Arteries
○​ Carry oxygenated blood away from the heart
○​ Have thick, muscular walls that enable dilation and constriction
●​ Capillaries
○​ Microscopic blood vessels
○​ Vital exchange site
■​ Oxygen, nutrients passed through capillary walls in exchange for carbon
dioxide from cells
●​ Veins
○​ Carry oxygen-depleated blood rich in carbon dioxide back to the heart
○​ Contain one-way valves to prevent back flow of blood
●​ Functions of blood
○​ Transportation of gases
○​ Nutrition
○​ Excretion
○​ Protection
○​ Regulation
●​ Perfusion
○​ Adequte circulation of blood throughout body
●​ Hypoperfusion
○​ Inadequate perfusion of body’s tissues and organs

Shock
●​ Inadequate tissue perfusion
●​ If hypoperfusion persists, cells and organs will die

Pathophysiology of Shock
●​ Four causes
○​ Volume problems

, ○​ Pump problems
○​ Blood vessel tone problems
○​ Obstruction of blood flow

Volume Problems
●​ Hypovolemia
○​ Blood is lost (absolute hypovolemia)
○​ Plasma is removed from circulatory system (relative hypovolemia)
○​ Not enough blood volume in blood vessels, so pressure falls
○​ Both absolute and relative hypovolemia are called hypovolemic shock
○​ Hemorrhage shock is loss of blood

Pump Problems
●​ Caused by failure of the heart to pump blood
●​ Usually related to a mechanical problem of the heart
●​ Blood cannot be moved vause of a drop in blood pressure
●​ Categorized as cardiogenic shock

Blood Vessel Tone Problems
●​ All blood vessels dilate at the same time
○​ Blood cannot fill entire circulatory system
○​ Referred to as distributive shock
●​ Types of distributive shock
○​ Anaphylactic shock
○​ Neurogenic shock
○​ Septic shock

Obstruction of Blood Flow
●​ Blood flow is blocked
○​ Called obstructive shock
●​ Caused by conditions such as:
○​ Pulmonary embolism
○​ Cardiac tamponade
○​ Tension pneumothorax

Fight or Flight
●​ Baroreceptors stimulate release of epinephrine and norepinephrine
○​ Blood vessels constrict
○​ Skin becomes cool and pale
○​ Skin becomes sweaty
○​ Kidneys produce less urine
○​ Nausea and vomiting
○​ Increased heart rate and contractility

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Uploaded on
January 11, 2026
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Heidi hess
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Emt-basic
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