Neurogenic Shock for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Neurogenic Shock for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Outline
Neurogenic Shock
Definition/Etiology:
- Shock is circulatory collapse, and inadequate tissue perfusion/oxygenation.
- Neurogenic shock is a diagnosis of exclusion in trauma, and hypovolemic shock should be considered and ruled out first.
- 8,000-10,000 traumatic spinal cord injuries occur each year in the United States.
- 19% of cervical spine injuries result in neurogenic shock.
- 7% of thoracic spine injuries result in neurogenic shock.
- Neurogenic shock occurs in 25-50% of brain/spinal cord injury patients, and usually in the first 5 weeks after injury.
- In neurogenic shock, sympathetic input is lost, and parasympathetic input is unopposed.
- Vasodilation occurs, and a distributive shock results due to pooling of blood in the periphery.
- The body is unable to compensate for the hypotension by increasing heart rate because sympathetic response is disrupted, This results in uncompensated hypotension with bradycardia.
- Sympathetic control is from T1-L2 (fight or flight)
- Parasympathetic control is from mostly cranial nerves and a little bit from S4 (rest and digest)
- When cervical or thoracic injury occurs, only the sympathetic system is interrupted
Pathophysiology:
Spinal cord injury or brain injury produces neurogenic shock:
- Vertebral fracture
- T6 or above
- Dislocation of vertebra
- Torn vertebral ligament
- Disruption or herniation of intravertebral disc
- Loss of sympathetic nervous system input
Clinical Presentation:
Vasodilation:
- Hypotension
- Warm, flushed skin
- Priapism
- Good urine output
Unable to compensate for hypotension:
- Normal heart rate or bradycardia
- Altered mental status
Euvolemic:
- Normal skin turgor
- Moist mucous membranes
- No edema
- No jugular venous distention
Neuro deficits distal to injury:
- Loss of motor
- Loss of sensation
- Loss of reflexes
Collaborative Management:
Labs: CBC, CMP, lactate, ABG, coags, type and cross
Imaging:
- FAST exam to rule out concomitant hypovolemic shock
- MRI or CT spine/brain
- Vasopressors to keep MAP 85-90 mmHg to minimize secondary spinal injury from hypotension. Norepinephrine is the preferred vasopressor. If profoundly bradycardic, Dopamine or Atropine may be of benefit.
- Monitor fluid status and avoid excess IV fluids because edema in the injured spinal column worsens the injury.
- Get a good history. If on beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, or digoxin, then they could be clouding the picture by suppressing compensatory tachycardia.
Evaluation | Patient Monitoring | Education:
- Continuous cardiac and SaO2 monitoring
- Central venous catheter if vasopressors are needed
- Frequent NIBP vs arterial line
- Foley catheter to monitor urine output
- Neuro ICU admission
Linchpins: (Key Points)
- Early identification/treatment can prevent secondary injury.
- Rule out hypovolemic shock first.
- Neurogenic shock is a diagnosis of exclusion.
- Suspect neurogenic shock with T6 injury or above.
Transcript
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References:
- Colwell, C. (2022, September 30). Approach to shock in the adult trauma patient. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/approach-to-shock-in-the-adult-trauma-patient
- Gaieski, D. F. (2022, March 22). Definition, classification, etiology, and pathophysiology of shock in adults. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/definition-classification-etiology-and-pathophysiology-of-shock-in-adults
- Gaieski, D. F. (2022, May 9). Evaluation of and initial approach to the adult patient with undifferentiated hypotension and shock. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/evaluation-of-and-initial-approach-to-the-adult-patient-with-undifferentiated-hypotension-and-shock
- Hansebout, R. R. (2018, July 18). Acute traumatic spinal cord injury. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/acute-traumatic-spinal-cord-injury
- Kaji, A. (2021, October 4). Evaluation and initial management of cervical spinal column injuries in adults. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/evaluation-and-initial-management-of-cervical-spinal-column-injuries-in-adults
- Sagar, D. (2022, February 10). Neurogenic shock. Stat Pearls. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK459361/