Neurogenic shock
Background
- Do not confuse with Spinal Shock
- Diagnosis of exclusion
- Never presume hypotension in trauma patient is due to neurogenic shock
- Injury to cervical or thoracic vertebrae causes peripheral sympathetic denervation
- Above T1: full sympathetic denervation
- T1-L3: Partial sympathetic denervation
- Below L4: no sympathetic denervation
- Lasts 1-3 wk
Diagnosis
- Hypotension (well tolerated)
- Bradycardia
- Peripherally vasodilated (warm extremities)
- May lead to hypothermia
Differential Diagnosis
Shock
- Cardiogenic
- Acute valvular Regurgitation/VSD
- CHF
- Dysrhythmia
- ACS
- Myocardial Contusion
- Myocarditis
- Drug toxicity (e.g. beta blocker, CCB, or bupropion OD)
- Obstructive
- Distributive
- Hypovolemic
- Severe dehydration
- Hemorrhagic shock (traumatic and non-traumatic)
Treatment
- Exclude other causes of shock
- Supplemental O2 to perfuse injured spinal cord
- Mechanical ventilation and oxygenation if spinal perfusion is compromised
- Judicious IVF
- Pressors if needed, norepinephrine or dopamine, with MAP goal of 85-90 for the first 7 days after spinal cord injury[1]
- Consider adding phenylephrine if BP refractory to first line agent
- Phenylephrine alone without beta-1 stimulation will cause reflex bradycardia
- Atropine if needed, keeping HR 60-100 bpm in NSR
- UOP > 30 cc/hr
- Prevent hypothermia
Source
- Tintinalli
- Chin LS et al. Spinal Cord Injuries Treatment & Management. Jul 7, 2015. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/793582-treatment#showall.
See Also
- ↑ Coplin WM. Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury. 2013 Neurocritical Care Society Practice Update. http://www.neurocriticalcare.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/09.SCI.final.pdf.