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REBEL Core Cast 138.0: A Simple Bedside Approach to Shock

REBEL Core Cast 138.0: A Simple Bedside Approach to Shock

REBEL Cast

August 4, 2025

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Show Notes

🧭 REBEL Rundown

📌 Key Points

    • 🧠 Shock is a Clinical Diagnosis — Not Just a Number
      Patients can be in compensated shock with normal BP. Look for signs like AMS, cool extremities, ↓ UOP, and ↑ HR/RR.
    • 🖐️ Start with the 4 L’s
      Lucid (mental status), Limbs (warm/cold), Leak (urine output), and Lactate give you rapid bedside insight into perfusion status.
    • 💡 Pulse Pressure Helps Pinpoint the Type
      • ➡️ Narrow PP = Cardiogenic, Hypovolemic, or Obstructive shock
      • ➡️ Wide PP = Distributive shock (Sepsis, Anaphylaxis, Neurogenic)
    • 🚨 Be Systematic at the Bedside
      Quick vitals, focused history, and targeted exam can reveal the etiology faster than invasive tools.

📝 Introduction

In this episode, we will dive into a simple yet effective bedside approach to a patient in shock. By using quick physical exam findings and bedside vitals (particularly pulse pressure), you can form a quick assessment of the likely underlying etiology of a critically ill patient. 

🔑 Key Concepts

What is Shock?
      • Supply vs. Demand mismatch:
        • Inadequate perfusion relative to metabolic demands
        • Leading to tissue hypoxia and cell death 
      • DO2 = CO x (Hb x Sat + (0.003 x paO2))
        • CO = Heart Rate x Stroke Volume
        • Determinants of Stroke Volume: Preload, Contractility, and Afterload 
      • 4 L’s of Hypotension 
        • Lucid: What’s their mental status?
        • Limbs: Are they cold vs. warm? What is the cap refill?
        • Leak: Are they taking a “leak”? What is the urine output? 
        • Lactate 
      • Remember:
        • Shock DOES NOT equal hypotension 
        • A patient in shock can still have normotensive pressures in “Compensated Shock”
      • Signs of Shock
        • Increased HR, increased RR, AMS, decreased urine output, cool to touch, weak pulses, slow capillary refill
Defining Blood Pressure
    • Systolic Blood Pressure 
      • Stroke Volume: Main contributor to SBP ➡️ SV ≈ SBP 
      • Aortic/Arterial Compliance 
    • Diastolic Blood Pressure 
      • Systemic Vascular Resistance 
      • Maintains end-organ perfusion in diastole 
    • Pulse Pressure
      • SBP – DBP 
    • Mean Arterial Pressure 
      • MAP < 60-65 can lead to end-organ damage 
Narrow Pulse Pressure
  • Cardiogenic: “Cold Shock”
    • Low contractility ➡️low SV ➡️ low SBP ➡️ increased HR + increased SVR due to catecholamine release leading to increased DBP 
    • Cold limbs, weak pulses, poor capillary refill  
  • Hypovolemic 
    • Hemorrhagic vs. Dehydration 
    • Decrease preload ➡️ decreased SV ➡️ decreased SBP ➡️ increased HR  + increased SVR due to catecholamine release leading to increased DBP  
  • Obstructive
      • “Obstruction of preload” ➡️ decreased SV➡️ low SBP ➡️ increased HR + increased SVR due to catecholamine release leading to increased DBP
      • Pneumothorax
        • Increased intrathoracic pressure ➡️ decrease IVC and SVC ➡️ decreased preload 
      • Cardiac Tamponade
        • Fluid in pericardial space ➡️ decrease filling ➡️ decreased preload
        • Pulmonary Emboli: Obstruction of RV to LA flow ➡️ decreased preload
Wide Pulse Pressure: Distributive Shock
    • “Warm shock”: Vasodilatation ➡️ decreased SVR ➡️ Decreased DBP 
    • Septic: Main cause of distributive shock 
    • Neurogenic: Loss of sympathetic tone ➡️ unopposed parasympathetic / vagal tone ➡️ decreased SVR ➡️ decreased DBP 
    • Anaphylaxis: histamine and other inflammatory mediators released ➡️ increased vascular permeability ➡️ decreased SVR ➡️ decreased DBP 
    • Adrenal Crisis: Not secreting cortisol ➡️ not increasing vascular tone ➡️ decreased SVR ➡️ decreased DBP  
    • Hepatic Failure: Increase in NOS ➡️ increases NO ➡️ vasodilatation

🛌 Practical Bedside Approach

  • When called to bedside:
    • Is the patient meeting any of the 4 “L’s” ?
    • Check the pulse pressure along with other vitals
    • Why are they here? What’s the brief history?
  • Narrow Pulse Pressure? Cardiogenic, hypovolemic, or obstructive shock 
  • Wide Pulse Pressure? Distributive shock 
    • Think: sepsis (most likely), neurogenic, anaphylaxis, adrenal crisis, hepatic failure

🚨 Clinical Bottom Line

A brief but thorough bedside exam remembering the 4 “L’s”, a quick history, and examining the pulse pressure can help a clinician form a quick differential into the underlying etiology for a critically ill patient in shock. Stay sharp, stay systematic! 

💡 Shock is a clinical diagnosis based on bedside findings — not just blood pressure readings.

You don’t always need invasive monitoring to identify shock. Look at HR, RR, UOP, and mentation.