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Shock

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[[File:PureShock.jpg|thumb|Baby in shock after circumcision]]'''Shock''' is one of the possible consequences of [[circumcision]], especially in newborns and infants at an age when effective [[pain ]] suppression with general anesthesia is not possible.<ref name="agoglu2022">{{REFjournal |last=Aydoğlu |first= |init=B |author-link= |last2=Aydoğlu |first2= |init2=M |author2-link= |last3=Okur |first3= |init3=MH |author3-link= |etal=no |title=Social and psychological effects of circumcision: A narrative review |trans-title= |language= |journal=Journal of Applied Nursing and Health |location= |date=2022-12 |volume=4 |issue=2 |pages=264-71 |url=https://janh.candle.or.id/index.php/janh/article/view/110/138 |archived= |quote= ||DOI=10.55018/janh.v4i2.110 |format=PDF |accessdate=2023-05-03}}</ref>
{{WikipediaQuote|URL=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shock_(circulatory)}}
<blockquote>Shock is the state of insufficient blood flow to the tissues of the body as a result of problems with the circulatory system. Initial symptoms of shock may include weakness, fast heart rate, fast breathing, sweating, anxiety, and increased thirst. This may be followed by confusion, unconsciousness, or cardiac arrest, as complications worsen.
Shock is divided into four main types based on the underlying cause: low volume, cardiogenic, obstructive, and distributive shock. Low volume shock, also known as hypovolemic shock, may be from [[bleeding]], diarrhea, or vomiting.[1] Cardiogenic shock may be due to a heart attack or cardiac contusion. Obstructive shock may be due to cardiac tamponade or a tension pneumothorax. Distributive shock may be due to sepsis, anaphylaxis, injury to the upper spinal cord, or certain overdoses.</blockquote>The American Academy of Pediatrics advised:<blockquote>When pain is prolonged, striking changes occur in the infant's physiologic and behavioral indicators. During episodes of prolonged pain, neonates enter a state of passivity with few, if any, body movements; an expressionless face; decreased heart rate and respiratory variability; and decreased oxygen consumption, all suggestive of a marked conservation of energy.<ref name="aap2016">{{REFjournal |last= Committee on Fetus and Newborn and Section on Surgery; Section on Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine;Canadian Paediatric Society; Fetus and Newborn Committee |etal=no |title=Prevention and Management of Pain in the Neonate: An Update |trans-title= |language= |journal=Pediatrics |location= |date=2006-11 |volume=118 |issue=5 |article= |page= |pages=2231–41 |url=https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/118/5/2231/69964/Prevention-and-Management-of-Pain-in-the-Neonate?autologincheck=redirected |archived= |quote= |pubmedID=17079598 |pubmedCID= |DOI=10.1542/peds.2006-2277 |accessdate=2023-04-29}}</ref> <ref name="agoglu2022" /></blockquote>
=== Neurogenic shock ===
[[File:AmericanBabyInShockAfterCircumcision.jpg|thumb|American baby in shock after circumcision]]
In neurogenic shock, a nervous failure of the regulation of circulatory and / or vascular tone results in circulatory failure. Common causes of neurogenic shock are lesions of the spinal cord, spinal anesthesia and injuries or intoxication of the central nervous system (e.g. traumatic brain injury in a traffic accident). Cancer, meningitis and brain inflammation (encephalitis) are also among the causes of neurogenic shock. '''Functional neurogenic shock is less common, for example in the case of very strong pain stimuli.'''<ref>{{REFweb
|url=https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schock_(Medizin)#Neurogener_Schock
|accessdate=2020-12-20
}}</ref>
 
== Hypovolemic shock ==
Every operation, including [[circumcision]], can lead to severe blood loss, which can lead to a “traumatic-hemorrhagic shock” (bleeding as a result of traumatic effects).
=== Traumatic hemorrhagic shock ===
The early complications of circumcision are [[bleeding]], [[pain]], inadequate [[skin ]] removal, and surgical site [[infection]], but they usually tend to be minor. Of these, bleeding is the most common complication of circumcision. Bleeding may occur along the [[skin ]] edges between sutures or from a discrete blood vessel, most commonly at the [[frenulum]].<ref>{{REFjournal
|url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4005087/
|title=Hypovolemic Shock after Circumcision
== Misinterpretation of the shock ==
More and more parents (especially from the USA) are posting photos of their newborn sons on the Internet after genital mutilation. Your comments on the photos often testify to a complete misinterpretation of the situation.
<gallery mode=slideshow packed heights=300px caption="Example postings from social media">
File:CircShock DadsTwin.jpg
File:CircShock Sweetest.jpg
File:CircShock Abused.jpg
File:CircShock Stared.jpg
File:CircShock Cuddles.jpg
File:CircShock Traumatized.jpg
</gallery>
* [https://alphamom.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/wonderland_circumcision-e1273195287922.jpg alphamom.com: Circumcision: the kindest cut, or the cruelest?]
Infants regularly go into shock during [[circumcision ]] due to the extreme [[pain ]] they cannot escape and from which they cannot defend themselves (because of being restrained by a [[Circumstraint]] or because of being held by adults). <ref name="agoglu2022" /> This is their only way to turn off pain perception. Visible symptoms are usually very swollen eyelids and puffy faces after the intense screaming before. With some, the apathetic eyes do not close by themselves in shock.
=== "Felt nothing" ===
[[File:Britmila2.jpg|thumb|infant after [[Brit milahMilah]]]]Parents are very often misled by the statement by doctors and nurses that the child did not feel anything and is now sleeping peacefully. Often the parents are not present at the circumcision either. Newborns do not yet have any or only very few blockers of the nociceptors that transmit [[pain ]] sensations to the brain.
When circumcision techniques last several minutes, children often go into a freeze, which was previously misinterpreted as falling asleep peacefully and which led to the belief that babies felt no [[pain]]. Measurements in such cases resulted in an usually 3 to 4 times increased cortisol value, which corresponds to a severe [[shock]] state.<ref>{{REFjournal
|last=Gunnar
|init=MR
|init4=JM
|title=The effects of circumcision on serum cortisol and behavior
|url=httpshttp://pubmedwww.ncbicirp.nlm.nih.govorg/library/pain/7291435gunnar/
|journal=Psychoneuroendocrinology
|date=1981
}}</ref>
We owe the perception of [[pain ]] to so-called nociceptors, free nerve endings that are excited when the body is injured or damaged. These specialized nerve cells are distributed all over the body; they send their signals via the spinal cord to the brain, where the excitation is then processed and interpreted as [[pain]]. The number of nociceptors exceeds that of all other receptors and their reporting system is largely independent of other sensory channels such as the sensation of warmth or touch. This shows how central the perception of pain is for the organism.<ref>{{REFweb
|url=https://www.dasgehirn.info/wahrnehmen/fuehlen/schmerzlich-aber-unabdingbar
|title=Schmerzlich, aber unabdingbar
The facial expressions of these children are described by some [[intactivists]] as after being subjected to cruel torture (e.g. rape). Many babies are apathetic, no longer respond to their parents' speech and have massive breastfeeding confusion.
 
Harvard [[trauma]] expert [[Bessel van der Kolk]], {{MD}}, explains:
<blockquote>
"When fighting or running does not take care of the threat, we activate the last resort—the reptilian brain, the ultimate emergency system. This system is most likely to engage when we are physically immobilized, as when we are pinned down by an attacker or when a child has no escape from a terrifying caregiver. … Once this system takes over, other people, and we ourselves, cease to matter. Awareness is shut down and we may no longer even register physical pain."<ref name="vanderkolk2014">{{REFbook
|last=van der Kolk
|first=Bessel
|init=BA
|author-link=Bessel van der Kolk
|year=2014
|title=The Body Keeps the Score
|url=
|page=85
|isbn=978-0-14-312774-1
|accessdate=2021-08-10
}}</ref>
</blockquote>
=== Witch sleep ===
}}
{{SEEALSO}}
* [[Breastfeeding]]
* [[Circumcision industry]]
* [[Circumstraint]]
* [[Pain]]
* [[Trauma]]
{{LINKS}}
* {{REFdocument
|title=Child Genital Cutting as an Adverse Childhood Experience
|trans-title=
|language=English
|url=http://adversechildhoodexperiences.net/CGC_as_an_ACE.pdf
|archived=
|contribution=
|quote=
|trans-quote=
|quote-lang=
|last=Bollinger
|first=Dan
|author-link=Dan Bollinger
|last2=Chapin
|first2=Georganne
|author2-link=Georganne Chapin
|publisher=Intact America
|location=Tarrytown, New York, USA
|format=PDF
|date=2019-08-01
|accessdate=2021-06-30
}}
 
{{ABBR}}
{{REF}}
 
[[Category:Circumcision risk]]
[[Category:Breastfeeding]]
[[Category:Pain]]
[[Category:Parental information]]
[[Category:Trauma]]
[[de:Schock]]
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