Intra-abdominal bleeding can lead to hypovolemic shock and death.
Injury to the internal iliac artery can occur, leading to hypovolaemic shock.
But antibiotic treatment may not be effective in late stages of inhalation anthrax, which can quickly lead to severe breathing problems, shock and death.
In severe cases, rapid loss of body fluids leads to dehydration and shock.
It can lead to septic shock, if the immune response is severely pronounced.
Lack of treatment or misdiagnosis could quickly lead to sepsis, septic shock, and death.
Low blood pressure (hypotension) is the rule and rapidly leads to septic shock.
This occurs at the critical closing pressure, closing off blood supply to tissues, which can lead to toxic shock.
This may lead to endotoxic shock, which may be fatal.
Some of the venom was believed to have entered his nasal passages and led to anaphylactic shock.