Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (109 page)

Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
4.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria

All cases of Boerhaave syndrome must be admitted to surgical ICU:

  • Cervical esophageal perforations may be treated by drainage alone.
  • All thoracic and abdominal perforations require surgical intervention.
Discharge Criteria

None

Issues for Referral

Thoracic or general surgeon must be consulted for admission and possible operative intervention.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

As per surgeon recommendations

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Chest radiographs done immediately after injury may be normal.
  • Left pleural space involvement is usually associated with a distal esophageal perforation.
  • Right pleural space involvement is usually associated with proximal esophageal perforations.
  • If esophagram is negative and there is high suspicion, repeat with patient in left and right decubitus positions.
  • Immediate surgical consultation is the keystone of management.
  • Significant increases in mortality are seen with delay in diagnosis and management.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Brinster CJ, Singhal S, Lee L, et al. Evolving options in the management of esophageal perforation.
    Ann Thoracic Surg
    . 2004;77:1475–1483.
  • Katabathina VS, Restrepo CS, Martinez-Jimenez S, et al. Nonvascular, nontraumatic mediastinal emergencies in adults: A comprehensive review of imaging findings.
    Radiographics
    . 2011;31:1150–1153.
  • Onat S, Ulku R, Cigdem KM, et al. Factors affecting the outcome of surgically treated non-iatrogenic traumatic cervical esophageal perforation: 28 years experience at a single center.
    J Cardiothorac Surg
    . 2010;5:46.
  • Vogel SB, Rout WR, Martin TD, et al. Esophageal peforation in adults: Aggressive, conservative treatment lowers morbidity and mortality.
    Ann Surg
    . 2005;241:1016–1023.
  • Wu JT, Mattox KL, Wall MJ Jr. Esophageal perforations: New perspectives and treatment paradigms.
    J Trauma
    . 2007;63:1173–1184.
CODES
ICD9

530.4 Perforation of esophagus

ICD10

K22.3 Perforation of esophagus

BOTULISM
Philip Shayne

Jean Wheeler
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Rare in US, causing <200 cases/yr; however, has significant bioterrorism potential.
  • Caused by a polypeptide, heat-labile exotoxin produced by
    Clostridium botulinum:
    • Most potent poison known
  • Toxin blocks neuromuscular transmission in cholinergic nerve fibers.
  • Symptoms occur by inhibition of acetylcholine release from presynaptic nerve membranes:
    • Damage is permanent.
    • Recovery is by formation of new synapses through sprouting from the axon.
  • Onset: 12–72 hr after exposure; may be up to 1 wk after exposure:
    • Death can occur 24 hr after onset of symptoms.
  • Slow recovery; symptoms often persist for months
  • Mortality:
    • Untreated: 60–70%
    • With supportive care: 3–10%
  • 3 major types: Food-borne botulism, wound botulism, and infantile botulism (see “Pediatric Considerations”). Absorbed through mucosal surfaces or nonintact skin
  • Food-borne botulism:
    • Occurs by ingestion of preformed toxin; from improperly canned food, improper refrigeration
    • Conditions required for exposure:
      • Food product contaminated with
        C. botulinum
        bacilli or spores
      • Proper conditions for germination of spores exist.
      • Time and conditions permit production of toxin before eating.
      • Food not heated sufficiently to destroy botulism toxin
      • Toxin-containing food ingested by susceptible host
  • Wound botulism:
    • Clinical evidence of botulism after trauma with a resultant infected wound and no history suggestive of food-borne illness
    • Botulinum isolated in about 50%
    • Wounds usually contaminated with soil
    • Majority of US cases from IV drug use
  • Other types:
    • Adult intestinal toxemia botulism:
      • Seen in adults with functional or structural GI abnormalities, are immunocompromised or with prolonged antibiotic use
      • Predisposes to
        Clostridial
        colonization
      • May have sporadic or recurrent botulism with no known source and even after immunoglobulin treatment
    • Iatrogenic botulism:
      • Doses found in cosmetic applications are insufficient to cause systemic symptoms.
      • No known recent cases from medical use.
      • Symptoms would be expected to be classic.
    • Inhalation botulism:
      • Aerosolization of toxin may have bioterrorism applications. Last reported naturally occurring case in 1962 from the disposal of animal remains.
Pediatric Considerations
  • Infantile botulism occurs from the ingestion of
    C. botulinum
    spores, which germinate in the gut and produce the toxin.
  • Accounts for 50–76% of botulism cases
  • 90% occur in children <6 mo:
    • Associated with patient or family exposure to soil, dust, or agricultural industry.
    • May also be associated with weaning from breast milk, which may alter intestinal flora and increase susceptibility to
      Clostridia
      infection.
  • Usually presents with change in stool pattern or constipation, progressing over several days to symptoms of bulbar weakness, then descending flaccid paralysis.
  • Slower onset is attributed to the toxin being produced locally as opposed to being ingested in 1 dose.
  • C. botulinum
    spores found in honey:
    • Honey not recommended for children <1 yr.
ETIOLOGY
  • C. botulinum
    is a large spore-forming, usually gram-positive, strictly anaerobic bacilli ubiquitous in nature.
  • Each strain produces antigenically distinct toxins, designated types A to G:
    • Types A, B, E, and rarely F are responsible for most human cases.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Ingestions/food history for previous 4–5 days:
    • Exposures traditionally from home-processed fruit or vegetable products
    • In prison populations ingestion of “pruno” (alcohol product created by prisoners using leftover food products)
  • Immune status (AIDS, cancer, chronic illness)
  • IV drug use
Physical-Exam
  • Food-borne botulism (classic botulism):
    • Bulbar weakness is invariably the initial presentation: Diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, and dysphonia
    • Subsequent symmetric, descending weakness or paralysis of the extremities (hallmark of the disease)
    • No sensory deficit
    • May have progressively diminishing deep tendon reflexes
    • Patient remains awake/alert; mentation unaffected.
    • Ventilatory insufficiency from weakness of respiratory muscles
    • Autonomic dysfunction (sympathetic and parasympathetic):
      • Dry mouth
      • Blurred vision
      • Orthostatic hypotension
      • Constipation
      • Urinary retention
    • Nausea and vomiting with food-borne botulism only
    • Afebrile
  • Wound botulism:
    • Finding similar to food-borne botulism
    • May be febrile as a result of soft-tissue infection
  • Infantile botulism:
    • Constipation
    • Weakness
    • Poor suck
    • Weak cry
    • Lethargy
    • Hypotonia
    • Flaccid facial expression
    • Respiratory difficulty
  • Inhalation botulism:
    • Similar to food-borne botulism with absence of GI symptoms
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Diagnosis is entirely clinical.
  • Workup focuses on differentiation from other conditions causing general paralysis.
  • If diagnosis is suspected, immediately notify state health department or CDC (770-488-7100 for adults or 1-510-231-7600 for infant cases).
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC
  • Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, and glucose:
    • Check for hypokalemia.
  • Arterial blood gas (ABG):
    • For signs of respiratory insufficiency
  • Confirmatory testing via mouse assay performed by select state and federal labs, using samples from:
    • Blood
    • Feces
    • Gastric contents
    • Suspected food and containers
    • Takes between 6–96 hr for results
  • Anaerobic blood cultures:
    • May detect bacterium
  • Nasal swab for ELISA test:
    • For inhalation botulism, as less reliably detected in sera and stool than other forms
    • Sample needs to be collected within 24 hr of exposure

Other books

Goddess of Death by Roy Lewis
Noches de tormenta by Nicholas Sparks
Vanishing Acts by Leslie Margolis
Temptation (A Temptation Novel) by Hopkins, Karen Ann
Amy by Peggy Savage
Guarding Miranda by Holt, Amanda M.
Heiress by Janet Dailey