CSD Resource:Week 2 CSD — The Shocked Patient (Answered) covers the full case study discussion including ABCDE assessment, sepsis definitions, ISBAR handover, preoperative assessment, and FASTHUG BID.
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Clinical Pearl
Compensation in Shock:
If TPR falls (vasodilation), CO (Cardiac Output) must increase to maintain MAP (Mean Arterial Pressure). This is achieved by ↑HR (Heart Rate) and/or ↑SV (Stroke Volume) → heart becomes hyperdynamic.
MI (Myocardial Infarction), arrhythmias, valve disease
Obstructive
Flow obstruction
Tension pneumothorax, PE (Pulmonary Embolism), tamponade
Multifactorial (mixed)
>1 cause present
Septic cardiomyopathy
Distributive shock causes include sepsis, anaphylaxis, neurogenic (spinal), and adrenal crisis.
SBAmediumshockneurogenicspinal injury
A patient with high spinal cord injury (C5) develops hypotension with paradoxically LOW (Loss of Weight) heart rate and warm extremities. What type of shock is this?
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ATLS (Advanced Trauma Life Support) Classification of Haemorrhagic Shock
Class I
Class II
Class III
Class IV
Blood loss
Under 750 mL
750–1500 mL
1500–2000 mL
Over 2000 mL
% Blood volume
Under 15%
15–30%
30–40%
Over 40%
Heart rate
Under 100
100–120
120–140
Over 140
Blood pressure
Normal
Normal
Decreased
Decreased
Mental status
Normal
Anxious
Confused
Lethargic
Clinical Pearl
Young patients compensate extremely well — BP (Blood Pressure) may be normal despite losing up to 30% of blood volume. Watch for tachycardia, confusion, elevated lactate — they can "fall off a cliff" suddenly.
SBAeasytraumahaemorrhagic shockATLS
25y
HR
125bpm↑
BP
110/70
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Absolute hypovolaemia = actual fluid loss (hole in the bucket; vessels normal/constricted).
In septic shock, the first-line vasopressor is noradrenaline; add vasopressin if inadequate response.
In cardiogenic shock, the preferred inotrope is dobutamine.
Q: Noradrenaline receptor profile: dominant [] effect with some [] inotropy.
A: alpha-1; beta-1
Dobutamine is beta1-dominant and improves contractility.
Vasopressin acts on V1 receptors and is a non-catecholamine vasoconstrictor.
Typical Dosing (adult, local protocol)
Drug
Typical dose
Notes
Noradrenaline
0.05-0.5 mcg/kg/min
Titrate to MAP ~65 mmHg; rising dose suggests refractory shock
Vasopressin
0.03 units/min (1.8 units/hr)
Fixed-dose adjunct, not titrated
Dobutamine
2.5-20 mcg/kg/min
Inotrope for low cardiac output; monitor for tachyarrhythmias
Metaraminol
0.5-2 mg IV bolus; infusion 2-10 mg/hr
Push-dose pressor and bridge while arranging central access
Refractory shock is often considered when noradrenaline requirements are above 0.2-0.3 mcg/kg/min despite adequate fluids; add adjuncts (vasopressin, hydrocortisone) and reassess cause.
SBAmediumshockvasopressorssepsis
0y
What is the most appropriate next step?
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Vasopressin in septic shock is a fixed-dose infusion of 0.03 units/min and is not titrated.
If MAP (Mean Arterial Pressure) is adequate but cardiac output remains low, add an inotrope (e.g., dobutamine) rather than escalating pure vasoconstriction.
SBAeasyvasopressorssepsis
Which vasopressor is a non-catecholamine that acts primarily on V1 receptors?
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SBAeasyvasopressorssepsisvasopressin
In septic shock, which adjunct vasopressor is typically given as a fixed-dose infusion of 0.03 units/min?
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SBAmediumvasopressorsmetaraminolshock
BP
↓↓
What is a typical IV (Intravenous) bolus dose of metaraminol?
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SBAmediumvasopressorsnoradrenalinesepsis
What is a typical noradrenaline infusion dose range in septic shock?
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SBAmediuminotropesdobutaminecardiogenic shock
What is a typical dobutamine infusion dose range in cardiogenic shock?
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Clinical Pearl
Metaraminol advantage: Can be given peripherally through standard IV cannula — useful on wards/ED while awaiting central line.
Clinical Pearl
Peripheral noradrenaline: A well-sited large-bore peripheral IV can be used as a short bridge with close monitoring for extravasation while arranging central access.
SBAmediumvasopressorssepsisnoradrenaline
Which statement about starting noradrenaline (norepinephrine) in septic shock is most accurate?
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Q: Where should empiric sepsis antibiotic regimens come from?
A: The local antimicrobial guideline (e.g., Westmead Sepsis Kills); always adapt to local policy and renal function.
Gentamicin sepsis dosing (Westmead): 7 mg/kg IV single dose (max 640 mg).
MRSA risk: add vancomycin 25-30 mg/kg IV loading dose.
Source
Empiric regimen (adult dosing)
Unknown
Gentamicin 7 mg/kg IV single dose (max 640 mg) + flucloxacillin 2 g IV q4h; add vancomycin 25-30 mg/kg loading if MRSA risk; add clindamycin 900 mg IV q8h if toxin-mediated shock risk
CAP
Ceftriaxone 1 g IV q24h + azithromycin 500 mg IV daily
HAP (<5 days ICU/HDU)
Ceftriaxone 1 g IV q24h
HAP (>5 days ICU/HDU)
Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 g IV q6h; add vancomycin 25-30 mg/kg loading if MRSA risk
Intra-abdominal
Gentamicin 6 mg/kg IV single dose (max 640 mg) + ampicillin 2 g IV q6h + metronidazole 500 mg IV q12h
Urinary
Gentamicin 7 mg/kg IV single dose (max 640 mg) + ampicillin 2 g IV q6h; ESBL risk: meropenem 1 g IV q8h
Skin/soft tissue
Flucloxacillin 2 g IV q6h; MRSA risk: add vancomycin load; water exposure: ciprofloxacin 400 mg IV q12h; post-GI/genital surgery: gentamicin 7 mg/kg single dose
Intravascular
Gentamicin 7 mg/kg IV single dose (max 640 mg) + vancomycin loading dose
Neurological
Dexamethasone 10 mg IV before first antibiotic, then q6h x4 days; ceftriaxone 2 g IV q12h; add vancomycin load if otitis/sinusitis risk; add benzylpenicillin 2.4 g IV q4h if Listeria risk
Neuro procedure (EVD)
Ceftazidime 2 g IV q8h + vancomycin loading dose
Diabetic foot
Piperacillin-tazobactam 4.5 g IV q6h; add vancomycin load if MRSA risk
PID (non-sexually acquired)
Ampicillin 2 g IV q6h + gentamicin 7 mg/kg single dose + metronidazole 500 mg IV q12h
PID (sexually acquired)
Ceftriaxone 2 g IV q24h + azithromycin 500 mg IV q24h + metronidazole 500 mg IV q12h
SBAmediumsepsisantibiotics
A septic patient has no clear source. Which empiric regimen matches the Westmead Sepsis Kills guidance?
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SBAeasysepsisurinaryESBL
A urinary sepsis case has ESBL risk factors. Which empiric antibiotic is recommended?
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SBAmediumsepsisHAPantibiotics
7dICU
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SBAmediumsepsisHAPantibiotics
A hospital-acquired sepsis case has no clear source and no MRSA risk. Which empiric regimen best fits local guidance?
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SBAmediumsepsisCAPantibiotics
Potassium—
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SBAmediummeningitisdexamethasone
In suspected bacterial meningitis, when should dexamethasone be given?
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SBAmediumsepsismeningitisantibiotics
A septic patient presents with meningism and photophobia. Which empiric antibiotic regimen is most appropriate?
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SBAeasysepsisurinaryantibiotics
A patient with sepsis has a clear urinary source (pyelonephritis). Which empiric regimen is recommended in the curriculum?
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SBAeasyshocktraumahaemorrhage
A trauma patient is in haemorrhagic shock with active bleeding. What is the most appropriate first-line therapy?
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Transfusion: Hb can mislead early
In acute haemorrhage, treat based on physiology (shock, lactate, ongoing bleeding) — Hb can be normal early.
SBAmediumtraumahaemorrhagetransfusion
50y
HR
130bpm↑
BP
85/50↓
Temp
NaN°C
Haemoglobin145(130-170)
What is the best interpretation?
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In most haemodynamically stable upper GI bleeding, use a restrictive strategy: transfuse PRBCs when Hb (Haemoglobin) < 70 g/L (target 70–90 g/L).
Clinical Pearl
In suspected variceal bleeding, avoid over-transfusion because it can increase portal pressure and worsen rebleeding risk.
SBAmediumGI bleedingtransfusioncirrhosis
65y
HR
85bpm
BP
110/70
Haemoglobin65↓↓(130-170)
Haematemesis
What is the most appropriate transfusion target?
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SBAmediumTransfusionBlood ProductsTrauma
130y
BP
↓↓
Haemoglobin130(130-170)
Which statement is most accurate?
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8. Delirium in Critical Care
5 Criteria for Delirium (DSM-5):
Disturbance of attention and awareness
Acute onset (hours–days), change from baseline
Additional cognitive disturbance
Not explained by pre-existing dementia, not in coma
Evidence of organic cause
Delirium is acute, fluctuating, and features inattention - unlike dementia (chronic progressive) or primary psychosis (attention usually preserved).
SBAeasydeliriumcognition
An 82-year-old post-operative patient is agitated and confused. Earlier in the day they were oriented and calm. Which feature most strongly supports delirium over dementia?
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DELIRIOUS Mnemonic
DELIRIOUS - Causes of Delirium
D - Drugs (anticholinergics, sedatives, opioids)
E - Environmental (hearing aids, glasses, sleep-wake cycle)
L - Labs (electrolytes, glucose, metabolic acidosis)
I - Infection/Inflammation
R - Respiratory (hypoxia, hypercarbia)
I - Immobility
O - Organ failure
U - Unrecognised dementia
S - Cardiovascular/Steroids
Warning
Antipsychotics do NOT improve delirium outcomes.
They may convert hyperactive → hypoactive delirium (easier to manage, but patient still delirious).
Avoid benzodiazepines — they cause/worsen delirium.
SBAmediumdeliriumpharmacologyICU
A delirious ICU (Intensive Care Unit) patient is agitated and pulling at lines. The nurse requests sedation. What is the most accurate statement about antipsychotic use in delirium?
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9. Sepsis Definitions (Sepsis-3)
Sepsis (Sepsis-3, 2016): Life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection. Operationally: suspected infection + acute SOFA score increase ≥ 2.
On an AP film (portable), the heart appears magnified — do not over-call cardiomegaly on AP radiographs.
SBAeasyCXRradiologyinterpretation
A portable AP chest X-ray shows a cardiothoracic ratio of 0.55. What is the most appropriate interpretation?
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SBAeasyCXRradiologysystematic approach
A post-operative patient in resus has a portable CXR (Chest X-Ray) showing blunting of the right costophrenic angle and right lower zone opacification. Which 'Drs ABCDE' step identifies this finding?
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12. Preoperative Assessment & ASA Classification
ASA Physical Status Classification:
ASA 1 — healthy
ASA 2 — mild systemic disease
ASA 3 — severe systemic disease
ASA 4 — severe disease that is a constant threat to life
ASA 5 — moribund, not expected to survive without surgery
ASA 6 — brain-dead organ donor
Add E suffix for emergency surgery
A septic shock patient on vasopressors requiring emergency surgery is ASA 4E — severe systemic disease (constant threat to life) plus emergency.
Preoperative Optimisation Checklist
Before emergency surgery in a shocked patient, optimise: haemodynamics (MAP target, vasopressors), bloods (FBC, coag, group & crossmatch), coagulopathy correction (FFP, cryo, platelets), glucose (target 6–10), antibiotics (redose if needed), and consent (patient or next of kin).
SBAmediumpreoperativeemergencyresuscitation
A shocked trauma patient needs emergency laparotomy in 20 minutes. Which preoperative step should NOT be delayed?
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SBAmediumASApreoperativeanaesthetics
75y
What is the most appropriate ASA classification?
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13. ICU Daily Assessment: FASTHUG BID
FASTHUG BID — ICU Daily Checklist
F — Feeding: Enteral nutrition within 24–48 hours if safe; NG tube if not tolerating oral
A — Analgesia: Pain assessment and management; avoid NSAIDs in AKI
S — Sedation: Target RASS 0 to −1; daily sedation holds
T — Thromboprophylaxis: SCDs + enoxaparin when bleeding risk allows
H — Head of bed: Elevate 30–45° (reduces VAP risk)
U — Ulcer prophylaxis: Pantoprazole if intubated + coagulopathy
G — Glycaemic control: Target BSL 6–10 mmol/L; insulin infusion if needed
B — Bowels: Monitor function, watch for ileus post-abdominal surgery
D — De-escalation: Review cultures at 48–72 hrs; narrow antibiotics; remove lines
Warning
The F in FASTHUG BID stands for Feeding, not Fluids. This is a common exam trap.
SBAmediumFASTHUG BIDICUdaily assessment
During an ICU (Intensive Care Unit) ward round, you are asked to present using FASTHUG BID. Which of the following is NOT a component of this mnemonic?
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SBAeasyFASTHUG BIDICUVAP prevention
A post-operative ICU (Intensive Care Unit) patient is intubated and on vasopressors. Which FASTHUG BID component addresses VAP (Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia) prevention?
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14. Practice Questions
SBAmediumshockhypovolaemia
45y|M
HR
110bpm↑
BP
100/70
Haemoglobin180↑(130-170)
What is the most likely cause of shock?
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SBAeasyfluidscrystalloidphysiology
After giving an isotonic crystalloid bolus (e.g., 0.9% saline), approximately what proportion remains intravascular after equilibration?
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SBAhardfluidscrystalloidresuscitation
A hypovolaemic patient needs 2 litres of intravascular volume replacement. Approximately how much isotonic crystalloid is required to achieve this?
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SBAmediumfluidsnormal salineacid-base
Which IV (Intravenous) fluid is most associated with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis when given in large volumes?
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SBAmediumfluidsdextrosephysiology
Which statement about 5% dextrose (D5W) is most accurate?
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SBAeasyfluidscalculations
Using the Holliday-Segar method, what is the daily fluid requirement for a 50 kg patient?
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SBAmediumshockvasopressorssepsis
50d
BP
85/50↓
What is the first-line vasopressor?
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SBAmediumfluidsmaintenance
Which IV (Intravenous) fluid should be used as DEFAULT maintenance in a 70 kg post-operative patient?
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SBAeasyshockcardiogenic
50y
HR
100bpm
BP
80/50↓
Oedema
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SBAhardCrystalloid
0y
What is the best explanation?
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SBAhardHemodynamics
Which haemodynamic profile best fits obstructive shock from a massive pulmonary embolism?
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Respiratory acidosis: ↓ pH with ↑ pCO2 (CO2 retention)
Respiratory alkalosis: ↑ pH with ↓ pCO2 (hyperventilation blowing off CO2)
To identify the PRIMARY disturbance: pH direction must match either HCO3 or pCO2 direction. The component that matches the pH is primary; the opposite one is compensation.
In acute respiratory acidosis, expected HCO3 rises by 1 for every 10 mmHg rise in pCO2
Source: CC Bible (acid–base compensation rules).
In chronic respiratory acidosis, expected HCO3 rises by 4 for every 10 mmHg rise in pCO2
Source: CC Bible (acid–base compensation rules).
Gap:Gap Ratio (Delta Ratio)
The delta ratio = ΔAG / ΔHCO3 where ΔAG = AG - 12 and ΔHCO3 = 24 - measured HCO3
SBAhardABGdelta ratioacidosis
A patient has AG 28, HCO3 (Bicarbonate) 12. What is the delta ratio and what does it suggest?
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Delta ratio (ΔAG/ΔHCO3) less than 0.4 indicates normal anion gap metabolic acidosis (hyperchloraemic) — the HCO3 is dropping more than the AG is rising.
Delta ratio (change in AG ÷ change in HCO3) of 0.4-0.8 indicates mixed high AG + normal AG metabolic acidosis — both anion gap and hyperchloremic acidosis are present.
Delta ratio (ΔAG/ΔHCO3) of 0.8-2.0 indicates a pure high anion gap metabolic acidosis — HCO3 drops proportionally to AG rise.
Delta ratio (change in AG ÷ change in HCO3) greater than 2.0 indicates high anion gap metabolic acidosis PLUS an overlapping metabolic alkalosis — the HCO3 hasn't dropped as much as expected given the AG rise.