Hypovolemic Shock
  1. What is it? Answer

  2. What causes it? Answer

  3. How many causes are there?Answer

  4. What are the risk factors? Answer

  5. What's normal? Answer

  6. How is it diagnosed? Answer

  7. What are the symptoms? Answer

  8. What are the signs? Answer

  9. What are the clinical findings? Answer

  10. What are the lab or investigation findings? Answer

  11. What is the treatment? Answer

  12. What are the workable treatment options? Answer

  13. How could this be prevented? Answer


Hypovolemic Shock
What is it?
Hypovolemic shock is a medical emergency, but getting care quickly gives you the best chance of survival. Your provider may be able to reverse the condition, but you’ll need time to recover and heal. This is especially true if a traumatic injury caused your shock. Be sure to follow your provider’s instructions for taking care of yourself and your wounds.

Hypovolemic Shock

Hypovolemic shock: What causes it?
1. Bleeding from a gunshot wound
2. Bleeding from blunt traumatic injuries due to the mentioned cause
3. Bleeding from serious cuts or wounds
4. Bleeding from the digestive tract
5. Blood in your urine
6. Endometriosis
7. Excessive or prolonged diarrhea
8. Excessive sweating
9. Internal bleeding from abdominal organs or ruptured ectopic pregnancy
10. Protracted or excessive vomiting
11. Severe burns
12. Significant vaginal bleeding
13. Any other issue specified

Hypovolemic shock: What is the treatment? How is hypovolemic shock treated?
Find the underlying cause. Treat the underlying cause.
Start an intravenous line. Start normal saline intravenous relevant to hypovolemia.
If hemorrhagic shock occurs, start intravenous blood relevant to blood loss. Do not continue intravenous blood for more than 4 hours.

What are the types of intravenous fluids?
https://www.qureshiuniversity.com//intravenousfluids.html