• Source: Vasodilatory shock
  • Vasodilatory shock, vasogenic shock, or vasoplegic shock is a medical emergency belonging to shock along with cardiogenic shock, septic shock, allergen-induced shock and hypovolemic shock. When the blood vessels suddenly relax, it results in vasodilation. In vasodilatory shock, the blood vessels are too relaxed leading to extreme vasodilation and blood pressure drops and blood flow becomes very low. Without enough blood pressure, blood and oxygen will not be pushed to reach the body's organs. If vasodilatory shock lasts more than a few minutes, the lack of oxygen starts to damage the body's organs. Vasodilatory shock like other types of shock should be treated quickly, otherwise it can cause permanent organ damage or death as a result of multiple organ dysfunction.
    Treatment typically involves uses of vasopressor, inotropes, fluid boluses, and introduction of resuscitation. In case vasodilatory shock fails to respond to high doses of vasopressors (defined as ≥ 0.5 mg/kg/min norepinephrine-equivalent dose), meaning it's vasopressor-resistant and advances to being called refractory vasodilatory shock or simply refractory shock. Adjunctive therapies include angiotensin II, hydrocortisone, thiamine, catecholamines, ascorbic acid and combinations of thereof.


    Signs and symptoms



    Confusion or lack of alertness
    Loss of consciousness
    A sudden and ongoing rapid heartbeat
    Sweating
    Pale skin
    A weak pulse
    Rapid breathing
    Decreased or no urine output
    Cool hands and feet


    Cause


    A bacterial infection in the bloodstream, a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis), systemic inflammatory response syndrome, or damage to the nervous system (brain and nerves) may cause vasodilatory shock. Besides, nearly all kinds of distributive shock such as septic shock, neurogenic shock, anaphylactic shock, drug and toxin-induced shock, endocrine shock can turn out into refractory vasodilatory shock when the original shock becomes more severe.
    The most common cause of vasodilatory shock is sepsis. Except sepsis, other causes comprise severe acute pancreatitis, post cardiopulmonary bypass vasoplegia and other triggers for a systemic inflammatory response syndrome. Low serum calcium values might take a role in vasodilatory shock.


    Pathophysiology


    In the cases of cardiogenic shock resulting from heart failure or acute hemorrhagic shock caused by a large volume of blood loss, the body constricts peripheral vessels to reverse the low arterial pressure that causes inadequate tissue perfusion. With vasodilatory shock, it is difficult for the peripheral vascular smooth muscle to constrict. In refractory vasodilatory shock, peripheral vascular smooth muscle responds poorly to therapy with vasopressor drugs.
    Vasopressin deficiency may play an important role in vasodilatory shock. In refractory vasodilatory shock, the patient has both vasopressin secretion deficit and an advanced resistance to vasopressin-induced blood-pressure changes. Some have hypothesized that patients with vasopressin deficiency, including a decrease in baroreceptor stimulation, appear to have impaired autonomic reflexes. Tone may be inhibited by atrial stretch receptors and vasopressin release may be inhibited by nitric oxide or high circulating levels of norepinephrine.
    Vasodilatory shock is often involved with the dysfunction of physiologic compensatory mechanisms such as the sympathetic nervous system, vasopressin arginine system and renin-angiotensin aldosterone system.


    Diagnosis



    The definition of refractory shock or vasodilatory shock varies. In 2018, the American College of Chest Physician stated that it is presents if there is an inadequate response to high-dose vasopressor therapy defined as ≥ 0.5 mg/kg/min norepinephrine-equivalent dose.


    Management


    Reversing the underlying causes of vasodilatory shock, stabilizing hemodynamic, preventing renal, myocardial, and other organs from injuries due to hypoperfusion and hypoxia, and taking necessary measures to safeguard against complications including venous thromboembolism are served as the top priorities during the treatment.
    The initial treatment aiming at restoring effective blood pressure in patients that have refractory shock typically starts with introducing norepinephrine and dopamine. Vasopressin comes as the second-line agent.
    However, high-dose therapy is linked to excessive coronary, splanchnic vasoconstriction, and hypercoagulation. Excessive vasoconstriction can cause cardiac output reduction or even fatal heart complication particularly in those with weak myocardial function.

    In those whose vasodilatory shock is caused by hypocalcemic cardiomyopathy in the context of dilated cardiomyopathy with documented both reduced heart ejection fraction and contractile performance, the uses of calcium and active vitamin D or recombinant human parathyroid hormone treatment are viable since there were many successful cases reported while given the physiological role of calcium on muscle contraction.
    A successful treatment requires leveraging the respective unique contributions of a multi-disciplinary team not only critical care doctors and often, infectious disease specialists but also respiratory therapy, nursing, pharmacy and others in collaboration.


    Epidemiology


    Observational studies suggest that, about 6% to 7% of critically ill people may end up developing refractory shock.


    Prognosis


    Early recognition and rapid treatment initiation are crucial to saving life. If vasodilatory shock being left untreated, even brief hypotensive periods can result in myocardial and renal injury. It can also increased mortality in the critically ill. Refractory shock has an all-cause mortality rate greater than 50% within a month.


    References

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