PRE HOSPITAL
Initiate IV access for patients with nausea or vomiting.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
IV fluid bolus if vomiting or hypotensive
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- IV hydration with 0.9% NS if vomiting
- NPO
- Parenteral NSAIDs (ketorolac) may lessen biliary spasm, but may exacerbate peptic causes of pain.
- Narcotic analgesics (hydromorphone) with antiemetic (ondansetron):
- Administer for refractory pain once diagnosis is reasonably established.
- Morphine sulfate may lead to spasm at sphincter of Oddi (clinical significance not well established).
- Anticholinergics (glycopyrrolate) have no proven benefit in the treatment of acute biliary pain.
MEDICATION
- Ketorolac: 60 mg IM or 30 mg (peds: Start 0.5 mg/kg for 1st dose up to 1 mg/kg/24h) IV q6h. In elderly: 30 mg IM or 15 mg IV
- Hydromorphone: 0.5–2 mg IV (0.01–0.02 mg/kg), titrated to pain relief.
- Ondansetron: 4–8 mg IV (0.15–0.3 mg/kg) IV (not to exceed 8 mg/dose IV), q4h PRN vomiting.
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
Admission and surgical or gastroenterologic consultation for evidence of:
- Acute cholecystitis
- Acute cholangitis
- Common duct obstruction
- Gallstone pancreatitis
Discharge Criteria
- Lack of clinical, lab, or radiographic evidence of cholecystitis, cholangitis, common duct obstruction, or pancreatitis
- Resolution of all pain and tenderness
- Ability to tolerate oral fluids
Issues for Referral
- General surgery referral for all cases of biliary colic with documented cholelithiasis or for radiographic finding of a “Porcelain gallbladder” (due to increased risk of gallbladder carcinoma).
- GI referral for choledocholithiasis.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Surgical follow-up for patients with symptomatic gallstones
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Alternative causes of upper abdominal pain may be falsely attributed to incidental finding of gallstones.
- An ultrasound is more sensitive and specific for cholelithiasis.
- Radionuclide scanning (HIDA) is highly diagnostic of cystic duct obstruction and cholecystitis.
- CT scans may miss gallstones if the stones are not radiopaque.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Antevil JL, Buckley RG, Johnson AS, et al. Treatment of suspected symptomatic cholelithiasis with glycopyrrolate: A prospective, randomized clinical trial.
Ann Emerg Med
. 2005;45:172–176.
- Jackson PG, Evans SR. Biliary system. In: Townsend CM Jr, ed.
Sabiston Textbook of Surgery
. 19th ed. Philadelphia, PA: WB Saunders; 2012:1476–1514.
- Silen W, ed. The colics.
Cope’s Early Diagnosis of the Acute Abdomen
. 22nd ed. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press; 2010:145–153.
- Strasberg SM. Acute calculous cholecystitis.
N Eng J Med
. 2008;358:2804–2811.
- Vassiliou MC, Laycock WS.
Biliary Dyskinesia. Surg Clin North Am.
2008;88(6):1253–1272.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Cholangitis
- Cholelithiasis
CODES
ICD9
- 574.20 Calculus of gallbladder without mention of cholecystitis, without mention of obstruction
- 574.21 Calculus of gallbladder without mention of cholecystitis, with obstruction
- 574.90 Calculus of gallbladder and bile duct without cholecystitis, without mention of obstruction
ICD10
- K80.20 Calculus of gallbladder w/o cholecystitis w/o obstruction
- K80.21 Calculus of gallbladder w/o cholecystitis with obstruction
- K80.70 Calculus of GB and bile duct w/o cholecyst w/o obstruction
CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE
Adam Z. Barkin
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- 3rd leading cause of death in US
- A disease characterized by airflow obstruction due to several processes:
- Emphysema: Irreversible alveolar destruction with loss of airway elastic recoil. Represents accelerated aging of the lung
- Chronic bronchitis: Airway inflammation without alveolar destruction
- Reactive airway disease: Reversible bronchospasm, mucous plugging, and mucosal edema
- COPD affects ∼10% of the population and 50% of smokers.
- Increased incidence of hypertension, diabetes, heart failure, and cardiovascular disease in those with COPD
- Frequent exacerbations lead to:
- Greater mortality
- Faster decline in lung function
- Worse quality of life
- Increased risk of hospitalization
- Medical Research Council (mMRC) dyspnea scale
- Grade 0: Only breathless with strenuous exercise
- Grade 1: Short of breath when hurrying or walking up a slight hill
- Grade 2: Walk slower than people of same age due to dyspnea or have to stop for breath when walking on level ground
- Grade 3: Stop for breath after 100 m on level ground
- Grade 4: Too breathless to leave the house or breathless when dressing/undressing
- GOLD guidelines
- Group A
- No more than 1 exacerbation/yr
- FEV1 >80% predicted
- mMRC of 0 or 1
- Group B
- mMRC of 2 or more
- FEV1 50–80% of predicted
- Group C
- mMRC < 2
- ≥2 exacerbations/yr
- FEV1 30–49% of predicted
- Group D
- High symptom burden
- mMRC ≥ 2
- High risk for exacerbations
- FEV1 < 30% of predicted
RISK FACTORS
Genetics
α
1
-Antitrypsin deficiency
ETIOLOGY
- Smoking is the overwhelming cause:
- COPD develops in 15% of smokers.
- Air pollution
- Airway hyper-responsiveness
- α
1
-Antitrypsin deficiency
- Autoimmunity may play a role
- Acute exacerbations:
- Viral infections
- >50% of exacerbations associated with recent cold symptoms
- Decreased immunity may make the host more susceptible to a COPD exacerbation
- Rhinovirus
- Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)
- Bacterial infections
- Bacteria isolated in 40–60% of sputum during acute exacerbation
- Most common:
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Moraxella catarrhalis
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- More likely if:
- Increased dyspnea
- Increased sputum volume
- Purulent sputum
- Pollutants
- Changes to immunity
- Increased airway inflammation
- Seasonal variations
- More common and more severe in winter
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Dyspnea on exertion
- Cough
- Sputum production
- Fatigue
- Wheezing
- Orthopnea
- Altered mental status
Physical-Exam
- Wheezing
- Retractions
- Decreased air movement
- Cyanosis
- Prolonged expiratory phase
- Barrel chest
- Lower-extremity edema
- Jugular venous distension
- S3 and S4 gallops
- Altered mental status secondary to carbon dioxide narcosis
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC:
- Elevated hematocrit may indicate chronic hypoxemia.
- Increased neutrophils and elevated WBC may indicate infection.
- Arterial blood gas:
- Retaining carbon dioxide
- Acidosis
- Oxygenation
- β-Natriuretic peptide:
- Differentiate between COPD and CHF
- Sputum sample
- Theophylline level as needed