PRE HOSPITAL
Evaluate vital signs:
- Collect relevant information that could help psychosocial evaluation.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs
- Administer supplemental oxygen for hypoxia.
- IV fluid bolus for signs of dehydration
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Treatment should be directed to correction of the underlying cause of fatigue:
- Identify and treat any infectious process.
- Correct metabolic and hematologic disturbances.
- Diagnose progressive neurologic disease and acute psychiatric crisis.
- Initiate workup for endocrine and neoplastic disease.
- Stop any offending medications or toxins.
- Most cases will not have identifiable cause, so reassurance and close follow-up is required.
- Recommend appropriate diet, exercise regimen, and consistent sleep cycles.
MEDICATION
First Line
Medication should be reserved for treatment of the underlying cause of symptoms.
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Underlying disease requiring IV medication or monitoring
- Failure to thrive as outpatient
- Unable to provide for self
Discharge Criteria
- Able to care for self
- Serious disturbances have been excluded.
- Adequate follow-up is arranged.
Issues for Referral
Most patients who are evaluated for fatigue in the ED should be referred:
- When the cause of a patient’s fatigue symptoms have been clearly identified, referral should be directed to the appropriate specialist.
- When the cause of a patient’s fatigue symptoms are not clearly identified, a primary care referral is indicated.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Fatigue is a subjective symptom complex, and a complete history and physical exam are needed.
- Beware of patients with unreliable history and physical exam. The elderly, children, intoxicated, and those with decreased mental ability may all have life-threatening disease and present with a complaint of fatigue.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Kitai E, Blumberg G, Levy D, et al. Fatigue as a first-time presenting symptom: Management by family doctors and one year follow-up.
Isr Med Assoc J.
2012;14(9):555–559.
- Manzullo EF, Escalante CP. Research into fatigue.
Hematol Oncol Clin North Am
. 2002;16(3):619–628.
- Mawle AC. Chronic fatigue syndrome.
Immunol Invest
. 1997;26(1–2):269–273.
- Morrison RE, Keating HJ 3rd. Fatigue in primary care.
Obstet Gynecol Clin North Am
. 2001;28(2):225–240, v–vi.
- Nemec M, Koller MT, Nickel CH, et al. Patients presenting to the emergency department with non-specific complaints: The Basel Non-specific Complaints (BANC) study.
Acad Emerg Med.
2010;17(3):284–292.
CODES
ICD9
- 729.1 Myalgia and myositis, unspecified
- 780.71 Chronic fatigue syndrome
- 780.79 Other malaise and fatigue
ICD10
- M79.1 Myalgia
- R53.82 Chronic fatigue, unspecified
- R53.83 Other fatigue
FEEDING PROBLEMS, PEDIATRIC
Richard Gabor
•
Niels K. Rathlev
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Problems may present in 1 or several of the components of “feeding”:
- Getting food into oral cavity: Appetite, food-seeking behavior, ingestion
- Swallowing food: Oral and pharyngeal phases
- Ingestion and absorption: Esophageal swallowing, GI phase
- Acute feeding problems may be a component of acute systemic disease:
- Infection, bowel obstruction
- Chronic feeding problems may result from underlying neuromuscular, cardiovascular, or behavioral issues:
- Cerebral palsy, prematurity, congenital heart disease, chronic neglect
- Minor feeding difficulties reported in 25–50% of normal children:
- Mainly colic, vomiting, slow feeding, and refusal to eat
- More severe problems observed in 40–70% of infants born prematurely or children with chronic medical conditions.
ETIOLOGY
- Several distinct areas of pathology—but overlap is common
- Structural abnormalities:
- Naso-oropharynx:
- Cleft lip/palate
- Choanal atresia
- Micrognathia and/or Pierre Robin sequence
- Macroglossia
- Tonsillar hypertrophy
- Retropharyngeal mass or abscess
- Larynx and trachea:
- Laryngeal cleft or cyst
- Subglottic stenosis
- Laryngo- or tracheomalacia
- Tracheoesophageal fistula
- Esophagus:
- Esophageal strictures, stenosis, or web
- Tracheoesophageal compression from vascular ring/sling
- Esophageal mass or tumor
- Foreign body
- Neurologic conditions:
- Cerebral palsy
- Muscular dystrophies
- Mitochondrial disorders
- Arnold–Chiari malformation
- Myasthenia gravis
- Brainstem injury
- Pervasive developmental disorder (autism spectrum disorders)
- Infant botulism
- Brainstem glioma
- Polymyositis/dermatomyositis
- Prematurity
- Immune disorders:
- Allergy
- Eosinophilic esophagitis
- Celiac disease
- Congenital heart disease:
- Precorrection: Fatigue, respiratory compromise, increased metabolic needs
- Postcorrection: Any/all of the above, recurrent laryngeal nerve injury
- Chronic aspiration
- Conditioned dysphagia:
- Gastroesophageal reflux (GER)
- Prolonged tube or parenteral feeding early in life
- Metabolic disorders:
- Hypothyroidism
- Inborn errors of metabolism
- Acute illness or event:
- Sepsis
- Pharyngitis
- Intussusception
- Malrotation
- Shaken baby syndrome
- Behavioral issues:
- Poor environmental stimulation
- Dysfunctional feeder–child interaction
- Selective food refusal
- Rumination
- Phobias
- Conditioned emotional reactions
- Depression
- Poverty (inadequate food available)
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Common presentations:
- Caregiver concerns regarding feeding or postfeeding behavior
- Poor weight gain/failure to thrive
- Recurrent or chronic respiratory illness
History
- Onset of problem
- Length of meals (often prolonged)
- Food refusal/oral aversion
- Independent feeding (if >8 mo):
- Neuromuscular problems decrease ability to get food to the mouth
- Failure to thrive/poor weight gain
- Recurrent pneumonia/respiratory distress:
- Most aspiration episodes are silent in infants
- Recurrent pneumonia or wheezing may be primary symptoms of chronic aspiration
- Chronic lung disease
- Recurrent vomiting or gagging:
- Diarrhea, rectal bleeding
- Onset of irritability or lethargy during feeding, colic
- Duration of feeding highly variable, especially in breast-fed infants—for all ages, feeding times >30 min on a regular basis is cause for concern:
- Full-term healthy infant usually has 2–3 oz of formula every 2–3 hr.
- Breast-fed baby eats 10–20 min on each breast every 2–3 hr.
- As child gets older, duration and frequency may decrease.
- 1 mo old normally eats 4 oz every 4 hr.
Physical-Exam
- Vital signs, including oximetry
- Weight, length, head circumference:
- Comparison with prior measurements; plotting growth curve
- Slow velocity of growth
- Impaired nutritional status. Severe cases may show emaciation, weakness, apathy.
- General physical exam—especially note:
- Affect and social responsiveness
- Dysmorphism (facial asymmetry, tongue and jaw size, etc.)
- ENT—oropharyngeal inflammation, infection, or anatomic abnormality
- Cardiovascular status (murmur, tachycardia, tachypnea, retractions)
- Pulmonary—tachypnea, color change, evidence of aspiration
- Abdominal exam—bowel sounds, distension, tenderness, masses
- Neurologic—tone, coordination, alertness
- Skin: Allergic rash or atopy:
- Loss of subcutaneous fluid or fat is often most apparent around the eyes, which will appear “sunken” in most dehydrated or malnourished infants
- Edema, however, may occur with protein deficiency (kwashiorkor).
- Observation of feeding: Neuromuscular tone, posture, position; patient motivation; oral structure and function; efficiency of oral intake:
- Ability to handle oral secretions
- Pace of feeding
- Noisy airway sounds after swallowing
- Gagging, coughing, or emesis during feeding
- Respiratory distress with feeding
- Oximetry during feeding may be helpful
- Onset of fatigue or irritability
- Duration of feeding