Tropes and Pressors
Part 1 of 3 # KYJ (Knowing your jargon)
To kick off this KYJ we first need to unpack a bit of terminology. So this is Part 1 of 3
Shock
is a state of oxygen deficit
(hypoxia) to tissues; all tissues – and of particular concern, vital organs
(heart , brain, lungs, kidneys). Shock is global cellular hypoxia. Whilst shock can be caused by a lack of
oxygen in the blood itself, most shock is actually a drop in perfusing pressure
of what blood is available. SHOCK VIDEO
MAP is Mean arterial pressure. It is, in its most basic of descriptors the average
blood pressure (mean) that perfuses vital organs. A low MAP will therefore be consistent with
shock, irrespective of how oxygenated the blood is. Magic MAP number to aim for is 60 mmHg. Below 60, and we struggle to perfuse our
Kidneys.
MAP is determined by two things.
Cardiac output, and Systemic vascular resistance.
Cardiac output is the volume of blood
you pump out in any given minute (normally 4200-7000ml). It is made up of how much you heart pumps in
one beat (Stroke volume (SV)) x the number of times/in that you beat (Heart
Rate (HR)).
The maths looks like this: CO = SV x HR.
Stroke Volume
Your ventricles are a muscular bag of
blood. When they contract (systole),
blood is ejected in a volume called a stroke volume (SV). We don’t eject all of our blood with every
contraction, infact your heart fills with about 100ml, and pumps out 70ml.
This stroke volume represents 70% of
the ventricle’s filling volume. That
percentage (70%) is called an ejection fraction (EF).
Stroke volume (SV) is determined by a
few factors.
·
Strength of your heart beat, (Inotropy)
·
how much blood was in your heart, (Preload)
·
the pressure inside the artery that your heart is pumping into (Systemic
Vascular Resistance – also called Afterload) and,
·
the stiffness of the ventricle. (Compliance)
Inotropy
This is a concept that refers to the
strength of a heart’s contraction.
So what if I could give you a drug that
increased the force of your contraction?
Then you’d fill with 100ml, but pump out a greater SV by increasing your
EF. That drug is therefore referred to
as a positive Inotrope.
Positive Inotropes are hormones or
drugs that increase the strength (force) of the heart contraction
(Inotropy). Typical Inotropes include
Dopamine, digoxin, adrenaline, dobutamine and others; we will discuss in detail
in Part 2.
Loss of inotropy occurs after
infaction, ischaemia, or with an aging stiff heart. Collectively this is called Heart Failure.
Preload
Fundamentally, preload is about the
filling and the stretching of your ventricles.
Passively the Left ventricle fills up to about 70 ml, then the atria
contracts squeezing (pushing ) in another 25-30 ml. Like, you’re your suit case is full, but some
muppet says, “hey Dad, can you fit my jacket in”? so you are there squeezing a jacket into an
already full case. The case isn’t full
its now Preloaded. It is stretched and
bulging. Preload in the heart is
determined by a couple of factors. The
force of an atrial contraction (lost in AF or flutter), and the volume of blood
returning to the left heart from the lungs.
So, atrial arrythmias, and hypovolaemia can dramatically lead to a
reduced SV, CO, MAP and subsequently shock.
Systemic Vascular Resistance (Afterload)
As a pipe carrying fluid is compressed
(narrowed), the pressure inside the pipe increases. Thus, squeezing blood
through a narrower artery leads to increased in pressure. This is called systemic vascular resistance
(SVR). Increasing the SVR leads to increased blood pressure, mean arterial
pressure (MAP) and increased perfusion to organs.
Vasopressors are natural hormones, or drugs
that cause an increase vasoconstriction.
Commonly these are just referred to as “pressors”. Common drugs that fall into these categories
include Noradrenaline(norepinephrine), Metaraminol, phenylephrine, vasopressin,
and good old adrenaline
Now the physiology and Jargon is out
the way, stay tuned for Part 2 as we dive into the deep dark world of the "Tropes and Pressors"
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You are the best teacher, always so succinct and clear.
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