A condition of depressed body functions as a reaction to injury with loss of body fluids or lack of oxygen. Signs of traumatic shock include weak and rapid...
medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/traumatic+shoc... medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/traumatic+shock
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), once called shell shock or battle fatigue syndrome, is a serious condition that can develop after a person has experienced or witnessed a traumatic or terrifying event in which serious physical harm occurred or was threatened.
www.webmd.com/anxiety-panic/guide/post-traumatic-stress... www.webmd.com/anxiety-panic/guide/post-traumatic-stress-disorder
These Trauma Pages focus primarily on emotional trauma and traumatic stress, including PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress Disorder) and dissociation, whether following individual traumatic experience(s) or a large-scale disaster.
www.trauma-pages.com/
Shock, Traumatic information including symptoms, diagnosis, misdiagnosis, treatment, causes, patient stories, videos, forums, prevention, and prognosis.
www.wrongdiagnosis.com/s/shock_traumatic/intro.htm www.wrongdiagnosis.com/s/shock_traumatic/intro.htm
traumatic shock n Any shock produced by trauma, whether psychic or physical. In general usage, this term refers to shock following physical trauma,
www.answers.com/topic/traumatic-shock www.answers.com/topic/traumatic-shock
Hutchinson encyclopedia article about traumatic shock. traumatic shock. Information about traumatic shock in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. (redirected from traumatic shock)
encyclopedia.farlex.com/traumatic+shock encyclopedia.farlex.com/traumatic+shock
subsequently patient may develop distributive shock due to systemic inflammation resulting from tissue trauma and reperfusion injury; tissue hypoperfusion...
www.aic.cuhk.edu.hk/web8/Traumatic%20shock.htm www.aic.cuhk.edu.hk/web8/Traumatic%20shock.htm
Encyclopedia: Shock (medical)
Shock is a serious, often life-threatening medical condition where insufficient blood flow reaches the body tissues. As blood is the body's carrier of oxygen and nutrients, insufficient flow leads t...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_(medical)
PTSD has also been recognized in the past as railway spine, stress syndrome, shell shock, battle fatigue, traumatic war neurosis, or post-traumatic stress...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posttraumatic_stress_disorder en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posttraumatic_stress_disorder
Pentobarbital-anesthetized rats subjected to traumatic shock developed a shock state characterized by marked hypotension to 65-70 mmHg, a survival time of 88 ± 13 min, significant increases in ileal myeloperoxidase activity (P < 0.01), and severe endothelial dysfunction as evidenced by a significant (P < 0.01) decrease...
ajpheart.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/275/1/H23
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