What is the best course of treatment for a patient in hemorrhagic shock?

Medical Advisory BoardAll articles are reviewed for accuracy by our Medical Advisory Board
Educational purpose only • Exercise caution as content is pending human review
Article Review Status
Submitted
Under Review
Approved

Last updated: January 21, 2026View editorial policy

Personalize

Help us tailor your experience

Which best describes you? Your choice helps us use language that's most understandable for you.

Management of Hemorrhagic Shock

Immediately control the source of bleeding while simultaneously initiating resuscitation with crystalloids and blood products, targeting permissive hypotension (systolic BP 80-90 mmHg) until definitive hemorrhage control is achieved. 1, 2

Immediate Priorities: The ABCs of Hemorrhagic Shock

Step 1: Simultaneous Bleeding Control and Resuscitation

  • Stop the bleeding first - patients presenting with hemorrhagic shock and an identified source of bleeding require immediate bleeding control procedures unless initial resuscitation measures are successful 1
  • Begin fluid resuscitation with crystalloids (Ringer's lactate or normal saline) using 2000 mL bolus in adults or 20 mL/kg in children 1
  • Transfuse packed red blood cells early in severe hemorrhage (Class III-IV shock) 1, 2
  • Time is critical - minimize time between injury and definitive hemorrhage control, as mortality increases with delay 2

Step 2: Classify Severity Using ATLS Grading

The American College of Surgeons classification helps determine urgency and resource needs 1:

  • Class I (<750 mL loss): Minimal intervention, type and crossmatch blood 1
  • Class II (750-1500 mL): Moderate crystalloid needs, type-specific blood preparation 1
  • Class III (1500-2000 mL): High crystalloid needs, likely operative intervention, anxious/confused mental status 1
  • Class IV (>2000 mL): Immediate blood transfusion, emergency blood release, highly likely operative intervention, lethargic mental status 1

Resuscitation Strategy: Permissive Hypotension

Target systolic BP 80-90 mmHg (MAP 50-60 mmHg) until bleeding is definitively controlled - this prevents disruption of early clot formation and limits dilutional coagulopathy 1, 2, 3

  • Use crystalloids as first-line fluid (Ringer's lactate or normal saline) 1, 3
  • Transfuse packed red blood cells when Class III-IV hemorrhage is evident 1
  • Target hemoglobin 70-90 g/L in most trauma patients, though 100 g/L may be reasonable in actively bleeding patients, elderly, or those at risk for myocardial infarction 1, 4
  • Avoid excessive crystalloid administration to prevent dilutional coagulopathy 1, 2

Critical Caveat on Fluid Type

  • Colloids (starches, gelatins) impair coagulation and platelet function - use crystalloids preferentially in the initial phase 1
  • Avoid hypotonic solutions (Ringer's lactate) in traumatic brain injury patients to prevent cerebral edema 1
  • Hypertonic solutions did not improve survival or neurological outcomes 1

Ventilation Management

Avoid hyperventilation and excessive PEEP in severely hypovolemic patients - these maneuvers decrease cardiac output and worsen shock 1:

  • Hyperventilated trauma patients have increased mortality compared to non-hyperventilated patients 1
  • Use low tidal volume (protective ventilation) with moderate PEEP, particularly in patients at risk for acute lung injury 1
  • Avoid hypocapnia (<27 mmHg) as it causes cerebral tissue lactic acidosis and neuronal injury 1

Monitoring and Assessment

Use these parameters to estimate severity and guide resuscitation 2:

  • Serum lactate and base deficit - primary markers to estimate extent of bleeding and shock 2
  • Do not rely on single hematocrit measurements as isolated markers for bleeding 2
  • Monitor vital signs continuously - response to initial fluid resuscitation determines next steps 1

Response to Initial Resuscitation (2000 mL crystalloid)

The patient's response determines subsequent management 1:

  • Rapid response (vitals normalize): Minimal blood loss (10-20%), low transfusion needs, type and crossmatch blood 1
  • Transient response (temporary improvement then deterioration): Moderate ongoing blood loss (20-40%), moderate-to-high transfusion needs, type-specific blood, likely operative intervention 1
  • Minimal/no response (vitals remain abnormal): Severe blood loss (>40%), immediate transfusion needs, emergency blood release, highly likely operative intervention 1

Definitive Hemorrhage Control

Penetrating Trauma

  • Gunshot wounds with shock require immediate surgical control - all patients arriving in shock from abdominal gunshot wounds are candidates for rapid transfer to operating theatre 1
  • Abdominal stab wounds with severe shock also require early surgical control, though less urgently than gunshot wounds 1

Blunt Trauma

  • Mechanism of injury helps determine need for surgical bleeding control 1
  • Pelvic fractures with hemodynamic instability require immediate pelvic stabilization (binder/C-clamp) followed by angiographic embolization if instability persists 2
  • Avoid non-therapeutic laparotomy in pelvic fracture hemorrhage - it dramatically increases mortality 2

Adjunctive Pharmacologic Therapy

Consider tranexamic acid in bleeding trauma patients: 10-15 mg/kg loading dose followed by 1-5 mg/kg/hour infusion 2

  • Antifibrinolytic agents may reduce mortality in bleeding trauma patients 2
  • Administer early for maximum benefit 2

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Never delay definitive hemorrhage control for prolonged resuscitation attempts - operative control and volume resuscitation must occur simultaneously 5
  • Do not aggressively fluid resuscitate to normal blood pressure while bleeding is uncontrolled - this disrupts clot formation and worsens coagulopathy 1, 2, 3
  • Avoid hyperventilation during resuscitation - it decreases cardiac output and increases mortality 1
  • Do not perform exploratory laparotomy for isolated pelvic hemorrhage - use angiographic embolization instead 2
  • Do not use hemoglobin as the sole guide in actively bleeding patients - restore intravascular volume and hemodynamic parameters as primary goals 4

budget:token_budget Tokens used this turn: 5425 Tokens remaining: 194575

References

Guideline

Guideline Directed Topic Overview

Dr.Oracle Medical Advisory Board & Editors, 2025

Guideline

Management of Pelvic Fracture with Active Bleeding and Hypotension

Praxis Medical Insights: Practical Summaries of Clinical Guidelines, 2025

Research

Initial resuscitation of hemorrhagic shock.

World journal of emergency surgery : WJES, 2006

Research

Clinical review: hemorrhagic shock.

Critical care (London, England), 2004

Research

Hemorrhagic shock.

Current problems in surgery, 1995

Professional Medical Disclaimer

This information is intended for healthcare professionals. Any medical decision-making should rely on clinical judgment and independently verified information. The content provided herein does not replace professional discretion and should be considered supplementary to established clinical guidelines. Healthcare providers should verify all information against primary literature and current practice standards before application in patient care. Dr.Oracle assumes no liability for clinical decisions based on this content.

Have a follow-up question?

Our Medical A.I. is used by practicing medical doctors at top research institutions around the world. Ask any follow up question and get world-class guideline-backed answers instantly.