MEDICATION
First Line
- Diazepam: 5 mg incremental doses IV
- Lorazepam: 2 mg incremental doses IV
Second Line
- Activated charcoal slurry: 1–2 g/kg up to 90 g PO
- Dextrose: D
50
W 1 ampule (50 mL or 25 g) (peds: D
25
W 2–4 mL/kg) IV
- Esmolol: 50–200 μg/kg/min IV infusion titrated to effect
- Naloxone (Narcan): 2 mg (peds: 0.1 mg/kg up to 2 mg) IV or IM initial dose
- Nitroglycerin: 10–100 μg/min IV infusion
- Nitroprusside: 0.3 μg/kg/min IV (titrate to effect up to 10 μg/kg/min)
- Phentolamine: 5 mg IV q15–24min (titrate to clinical effect)
- Polyethylene glycol (GoLYTELY): 1–2 L PO/hr until packet passage (efficacy controversial)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Altered mental status
- Abnormal vital signs: Heart rate >100 bpm, diastolic BP >120 mm Hg, or hypotension
- Hyperthermia
- Cocaine-induced myocardial ischemia
- Body stuffers and body packers
- ICU admission for moderate to severe toxicity
Discharge Criteria
- Mental status and vital signs normal after 6 hr of observation
- Body packers or stuffers with confirmed expulsion of packets and no clinical signs of toxicity
- Stuffers may be discharged if uncomplicated packets were ingested and if asymptomatic for 12–24 hr.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Benzodiazepines are the 1st-line treatment for the sympathomimetic toxidrome from cocaine.
- Avoid β-blockers in the hyperdynamic cocaine intoxicated patient.
- Consider a broad differential in cocaine-associated chest pain.
- An abdominal flat plate radiograph will be of some value in a body packer, but of no value in imaging packets in a body stuffer.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Hoffman RS. Cocaine. In: Goldfrank LR, ed.
Goldfrank’s Toxicologic Emergencies
. 9th ed. Stamford, CT: Appleton & Lange; 2010:1091–1102.
- Jones JH, Weir WB. Cocaine-associated chest pain.
Med Clin North Am
. 2005;89:1323–1342.
- June R, Aks SE, Keys N, et al. Medical outcome of cocaine bodystuffers.
J Emerg Med
. 2000;18:221–224.
- Kalimullah EA, Bryant SM. Case files of the medical toxicology fellowship at the Toxikon Consortium in Chicago: Cocaine-associated wide-complex dysrhythmias and cardiac arrest-treatment nuances and controversies.
J Med Toxicol
. 2008;4:277–283.
CODES
ICD9
970.81 Poisoning by cocaine
ICD10
- T40.5X1A Poisoning by cocaine, accidental (unintentional), init
- T40.5X4A Poisoning by cocaine, undetermined, initial encounter
- T40.5X2D Poisoning by cocaine, intentional self-harm, subs encntr
COLON TRAUMA
Stephen R. Hayden
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Trauma that perforates the colon inflames the cavity in which it lies.
- Peritoneal inflammation from hollow viscus perforation often requires hours to develop.
- Mesenteric tears from blunt trauma cause hemorrhage and bowel ischemia.
- Delayed perforation from ischemic or necrotic bowel may occur.
- Peritonitis and sepsis may develop from the extravasated intraluminal flora.
- Ascending and descending colon segments are retroperitoneal.
- The left colon has a higher bacterial load than the right.
- Morbidity and mortality increase if the diagnosis of colon injury is delayed.
ETIOLOGY
- Penetrating abdominal trauma:
- The colon is the 2nd most commonly injured organ in penetrating trauma.
- Gunshot wounds have the highest incidence.
- Transverse colon is most commonly injured.
- Often presents with peritonitis
- Blunt abdominal trauma:
- Colon rarely injured in blunt trauma
- Burst injury occurs from compression of a closed loop of bowel.
- Intestine may be squeezed between a blunt object (lap belt) and vertebral column or bony pelvis.
- Sudden deceleration may produce bowel–mesenteric disruption and consequent devascularization.
- With deceleration, the sigmoid and transverse colon are most vulnerable.
- Transanal injury:
- Iatrogenic endoscopic or barium enema injury
- Foreign bodies used during sexual activities may reach and injure the colon.
- Compressed air under high pressure such as at automobile repair facilities can perforate the colon even if the compressor nozzle is not fully inserted anally.
- Swallowed sharp foreign bodies (toothpick) may penetrate the colon, particularly the cecum, appendix, and sigmoid:
- Most foreign bodies pass without complications.
Pediatric Considerations
Unlike adults, children have an equal frequency of blunt and penetrating colon injuries.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Colon trauma is generally associated with other intra-abdominal and extra-abdominal injuries, commonly to the small intestine.
- Injuries of significant severity may have minimal early findings.
- It is uncommon to determine specific organ injury on physical exam.
- Assess on exam:
- Abdomen for peritoneal signs
- Ecchymosis or hematoma on lower abdomen from lap-belt compression
- Ecchymosis on epigastric region from steering-wheel compression
- Grey Turner sign (flank hematomas) resulting from retroperitoneal bleeding.
- Foreign bodies or blood on digital rectal exam (be careful if sharp object suspected)
- Note: Abdominal wall ecchymosis or hematoma is not always present despite existing injury.
- Note: Bowel sounds are not helpful.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Serial abdominal exam because inflammation takes time to develop
- Abdominal CT with contrast is the best diagnostic study in stable patients.
- US and diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL) are helpful in the potentially unstable patient.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
- No individual test or combination of currently available diagnostic modalities is adequate to exclude blunt colonic injury.
- Signs of peritoneal irritation owing to intestinal injury typically develop hours after the event.
Lab
- Electrolytes
- Calcium, magnesium
Imaging
- CT is more useful for detecting penetrating vs. blunt colon injury.
- CT with triple contrast allows intraperitoneal and retroperitoneal visualization.
- Oral contrast is not essential in blunt abdominal trauma CT evaluation.
- Although CT may miss colon injuries, abnormal findings are typical.
- CT is only moderately sensitive at identifying hollow viscus injury.
- Hollow viscus injury–associated CT findings include extraluminal gas or contrast, mesenteric fat streaking, and free fluid without solid organ injury.
- Water-soluble enema with fluoroscopy is useful if other test results are inconclusive.
- Plain abdominal radiographs can show indirect signs such as intraperitoneal and retroperitoneal free air.
- FAST US exam does not evaluate for enteric injury and retroperitoneal hemorrhage.
- See “Abdominal Trauma, Blunt”; “Abdominal Trauma, Imaging.”
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- DPL or ultrasound in addition to CT will increase sensitivity.
- In blunt trauma, DPL will often not detect retroperitoneal injuries and enteric injury as intra-abdominal bleeding is limited.
- Fecal or vegetable material on DPL analysis indicates hollow viscus injury.
- Lavage white cell response may be negative secondary to delayed peritoneal inflammation.
- In hollow viscus injury, lavage WBC count: RBC ratio is higher than that seen with solid organ injuries.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Other intra-abdominal injuries
- A fractured pelvis may present similarly to intraperitoneal injuries in children.
TREATMENT