A patient who has cardiac tamponade will have hypoperfusion of the brain due to a/an:

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Multiple Choice

A patient who has cardiac tamponade will have hypoperfusion of the brain due to a/an:

Explanation:
In cardiac tamponade, the pericardium and the fluid inside it squeeze the heart and limit its ability to fill. That external pressure reduces venous return to the right side of the heart, so preload drops and less blood is pumped out with each beat (cardiac output falls). When cardiac output falls, cerebral perfusion drops, leading to brain hypoperfusion. The idea of losing afterload isn’t the primary issue here: tamponade doesn’t relieve the pressure the heart must push against—in fact, it makes ejection harder by externally constraining the heart. Irregular rhythm and other factors can contribute, but the core mechanism for brain hypoperfusion is the decreased venous return reducing overall blood flow to the brain.

In cardiac tamponade, the pericardium and the fluid inside it squeeze the heart and limit its ability to fill. That external pressure reduces venous return to the right side of the heart, so preload drops and less blood is pumped out with each beat (cardiac output falls). When cardiac output falls, cerebral perfusion drops, leading to brain hypoperfusion. The idea of losing afterload isn’t the primary issue here: tamponade doesn’t relieve the pressure the heart must push against—in fact, it makes ejection harder by externally constraining the heart. Irregular rhythm and other factors can contribute, but the core mechanism for brain hypoperfusion is the decreased venous return reducing overall blood flow to the brain.

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