FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Patients with severe abdominal pain, nausea, and emesis
- Neurologically impaired, elderly, morbidly obese who cannot be cleaned out in the ED or home
- Bowel obstruction/peritonitis
Discharge Criteria
- No co-morbid illness requiring admission
- Pain free
- Adequately cleaned out
Issues for Referral
GI follow-up for further evaluation and treatment
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Primary care or GI follow-up for patients with longstanding constipation
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Advise patients regarding appropriate dietary and lifestyle changes to decrease incidence of constipation.
- Perform thorough history and physical exam to exclude significant medical or surgical etiologies for constipation.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Doody DP, Flores A, Rodriguez LA. Evaluation and management of intractable constipation in children.
Semin Colon Rectal Surg
. 2006;17(1):29–37.
- Ford AC, Talley NJ. Laxatives for chronic constipation in adults.
BMJ.
2012;345:e6168.
- Leung L, Riutta T, Kotecha J, et al. Chronic constipation: An evidence-based review.
J Amer Board of Fam Med
. 2011;24(4):436–451.
- Talley N. Differentiating functional constipation from constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome: Management implications.
Rev Gastroenterol Disord
. 2005;5(1):1–9.
- Wexner SD, Pemberton JH, Beck DE, et al., eds.
The ASCRS Textbook of Colon and Rectal Surgery
. Springer; 2007.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Abdominal Pain
- Bowel Obstruction
CODES
ICD9
- 564.00 Constipation, unspecified
- 564.09 Other constipation
- 564.8 Other specified functional disorders of intestine
ICD10
- K59.00 Constipation, unspecified
- K59.09 Other constipation
- K59.8 Other specified functional intestinal disorders
CONTACT DERMATITIS
Erik Adler
•
Jeffrey Druck
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Irritant:
- Immediate eczematous eruption (superficial inflammatory process primarily in epidermis)
- Most common type of dermatitis
- Trigger substance itself directly damages the skin resulting in nonimmunologic inflammatory reaction with erythema, dryness, cracking, or fissuring
- Usually owing to repeated exposure to mild irritant (e.g., water, soaps, heat, friction)
- Lesions itch or burn:
- Usually gradual onset with indistinct borders
- Most often seen on hands
- May see vesicles or fissures
- Dry, red, and rough skin
- Common irritants include cement, hair dyes, wet diapers, rubber gloves, shampoos, frequent hand washing
- Allergic:
- Delayed (type IV) hypersensitivity reaction (requires prior sensitization)
- Allergen-induced immune response
- Local edema, vesicles, erythema, pruritus, or burning
- Usually corresponds to exact distribution of contact (e.g., watchband)
- Onset usually within 12–48 hr with prior sensitization; may take 14–21 days for primary exposure
- Common sources: Nickel, gold, neomycin, bacitracin, preservatives, fragrances, dyes, poison ivy
- Photocontact:
- Interaction between an otherwise harmless substance on the skin and UV light
- Common sources: Shaving lotions, sunscreens, sulfa ointments, perfumes.
Pediatric Considerations
- Allergic contact dermatitis is less frequent in children, especially infants, than in adults
- Major sources of pediatric contact allergy:
- Metals, shoes, preservatives, or fragrances in cosmetics, topical medications, and plants
- Diaper dermatitis: Prototype for irritant contact dermatitis in children
- Circumoral dermatitis: Seen in infants and small children; may result from certain foods (irritant or allergic reaction)
ETIOLOGY
- Irritant (80% of contact dermatitis), e.g.:
- Soaps, solvents
- Chemicals
- Certain foods
- Urine, feces
- Diapers
- Continuous or repeated exposure to moisture (hand washing)
- Course paper, glass, and wool fibers
- Shoe dermatitis: Common; identify by lesions limited to distal dorsal surface of foot usually sparing the interdigital spaces
- Allergic:
- Plants, poison ivy, oak, sumac (rhus dermatitis):
- Most common form of allergic contact dermatitis in North America
- Direct: Reaction to oleoresin urushiol from plant
- Indirect: Contact with pet or clothes with oleoresin on surface or fur or in smoke from burning leaves
- Lesions may appear up to 3 days after exposure with prior sensitization (12–21 days after primary exposure) and may persist up to 3 wk
- Fluid from vesicles is not contagious and does not produce new lesions
- Oleoresin on pets or clothes remains contagious until removed
- Cement (prolonged exposure may result in severe alkali burn)
- Metals (especially nickel)
- Solvents, epoxy
- Chemicals in rubber (e.g., elastic waistbands) or leather
- Lotions, cosmetics
- Topical medications (e.g., neomycin, hydrocortisone, benzocaine, paraben)
- Some foods
- Ability to respond to certain antigens is probably genetically determined
- Photodermatitis:
- Inflammatory reaction from exposure to irritant (frequently plant sap) and sunlight
- Typically no response in absence of sunlight
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Date of onset
- Time course
- Pattern of lesions
- Relationship to work
- Pruritic or not
- Mucosal involvement
- Exposure to new products (e.g., lotions, soaps, and cosmetics), foods, medications, and jewelry
Physical-Exam
- Special attention to character and distribution of rash
- Acute lesions:
Skin erythema and pruritus:
- May see edema, papules, vesicles, bullae, serous discharge, or crusting
- Subacute:
Vesiculation less pronounced
- Chronic lesions:
May see scaling, lichenification, pigmentation, or fissuring with little to no vesiculation; may have characteristic distribution pattern
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
No specific tests in ED are helpful.
Imaging
No specific tests in ED are helpful
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Patch testing:
- Generally not done in ED; refer to allergist/immunologist
- When tinea is suspected, may use Wood lamp for fluorescence
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Atopic dermatitis: Associated with family history of atopy
- Seborrheic dermatitis: Scaly or crusting “greasy” lesions
- Nummular dermatitis: Coin-like lesions
- Intertrigo: Dermatitis in which skin is in apposition (axillae, groin area)
- Infectious eczematous dermatitis: Dermatitis with secondary bacterial infection, usually
Staphylococcus aureus
- Cellulitis: Warm, blanching, painful lesion
- Impetigo: Yellow crusting
- Scabies: Intensely pruritic, frequently interdigital with tracks
- Psoriasis: Silvery adherent, scaling, lesions well delineated, affecting extensor surfaces, scalp, and genital region
- Herpes simplex: Groups of vesicles, painful, burning
- Herpes zoster: Painful, follows dermatomal pattern
- Bullous pemphigoid: Diffuse bullous lesions
- Tinea: Maximal involvement at margins, fluoresces under Wood lamp
- Pityriasis alba: Discrete, asymptomatic, hypopigmented lesions
- Urticaria: Pruritic raised lesions (wheal) frequently with surrounding erythema (flare)
- Acrodermatitis enteropathica: Vesiculobullous lesion of hands and feet, associated with failure to thrive, diarrhea, and alopecia
- Dyshidrotic dermatitis (eczema)
- Drug rash
- Stevens–Johnson syndrome (SJS)
- Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN)
- Erythema nodosum (EN)