MEDICATION
- Pantoprazole: 80 mg (peds: Dosing not approved) IV bolus followed by an infusion of 8 mg/h for 72 hr
- Octreotide: 50 μg (peds: 1–2 μg/kg) bolus, then 50 μg/h (peds: 1–2 μg/kg/h) IV
- Somatostatin: 250 μg (peds: Not established) IV bolus and 250–500 μg/h for 2–5 days (not available in US)
- Vasopressin: 0.4–1 IU/min (peds: 0.002–0.005 IU/kg/min) IV
- Nitroglycerin: 10–50 μg/min (peds: Not established) IV
- Vitamin K: 10 mg (peds: 1–5 mg) PO/SC/IV q24h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Active bleeding
- Age >65 or comorbid conditions
- Coagulopathy
- Decreased hematocrit
- Unstable vital signs at any time
Discharge Criteria
- Resolution of UGIB with negative nasogastric lavage and EGD
- Minor or resolved LGIB
- Stable hematocrit >30 or hemoglobin >10 g/dL
- Otherwise healthy patient
Issues for Referral
Consider referral to gastroenterologist for outpatient colonoscopy and/or EGD
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Patients discharged from the ED should have close follow-up within 24–36 hr
- Give strict discharge instructions to return if further bleeding or other concerning symptoms (lightheadedness, dyspnea, chest pain, etc.) occur
- Patients with UGIB should be discharged on a PPI, and advised to avoid caffeine, alcohol, tobacco, NSAIDs, and aspirin
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- 10–15% of UGIB present with hematochezia
- Consider GIB in patients presenting with signs of hypovolemia or hypovolemic shock
- Common pitfall: Failure to adequately resuscitate with crystalloid and blood products
Geriatric Considerations
PUD is the predominant cause of GIB in elderly and has a higher associated mortality.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Das AM, Sood N, Hodgin K, et al. Development of a triage protocol for patients presenting with gastrointestinal hemorrhage: A prospective cohort study.
Crit Care
. 2008;12:R57.
- Gralnek IM, Barkun AN, Bardou M. Management of acute bleeding from a peptic ulcer.
N Engl J Med
. 2008;359(9):928–937.
- Johansson PI, Stensballe J. Hemostatic resuscitation for massive bleeding: The paradigm of plasma and platelets—a review of the current literature.
Transfusion.
2010;50(3):701–710.
- Pallin DJ, Saltzman JR. Is nasogastric tube lavage in patients with acute upper GI bleeding indicated or antiquated?
Gastrointest Endosc.
2011;74(5):981–984.
- Wolfson AB, Hendey GW, Ling LJ, et al., eds.
Harwood-Nuss’ Clinical Practice of Emergency Medicine
. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2009.
CODES
ICD9
- 533.40 Chronic or unspecified peptic ulcer of unspecified site with hemorrhage, without mention of obstruction
- 535.51 Unspecified gastritis and gastroduodenitis, with hemorrhage
- 578.9 Hemorrhage of gastrointestinal tract, unspecified
ICD10
- K27.4 Chronic or unsp peptic ulcer, site unsp, with hemorrhage
- K29.71 Gastritis, unspecified, with bleeding
- K92.2 Gastrointestinal hemorrhage, unspecified
GERIATRIC TRAUMA
Charles W. O’Connell
•
Peter Witucki
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Geriatric specific considerations and approach to the elderly trauma patient
- Should be used in conjunction with the accepted standard treatment of traumatic injuries (see trauma, multiple)
- Advanced age is a known risk factor for adverse outcomes following trauma
- Generally age >65, age not well defined, difficult to target due to discrepancies between physiologic and chronologic age in individuals
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence and Prevalence Estimates
ETIOLOGY
Most common mechanisms:
- Falls—most common cause of injury in patients of age >65, often occurs on an even, flat surface
- Motor vehicle crashes—2nd leading cause, most common fatal etiology
- Pedestrian—motor vehicle collisions, diminished cognitive skills, poor vision/hearing, impaired gait contribute to increased incidence
- Burns—higher fatality rate than young adults with same extent of burn
- Violence—less common mechanism than in younger ages, have heightened suspicion for elderly abuse, an under recognized issue
- Elderly more susceptible to serious injury from low-energy mechanisms
DIAGNOSIS
- Triage to major trauma center is determined by local protocols
- Injured patients with potential need for surgical, neurosurgical, or orthopedic intervention should be transferred to major trauma center
- Threshold for scene triage or transfer to trauma center should be lower for elderly
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- The same pattern of assessment using primary survey (ABCDE) and secondary survey should be used with geriatric patients as with younger patients (see trauma, multiple)
- Normal vital signs can lead to false sense of security
- Hypoperfusion often masked by inadequate physiologic response, underlying medical pathology, and medication effects
Primary survey (ABCDE)
- Airway, cervical spine—establish and maintain a patent airway with C-spine immobilization
- Anatomic variation in elderly can lead to more difficult airways (dentures, cervical arthritis, TMJ arthritis)
- Failure to recognize indications for early intubation is a common mistake
- Breathing—maintain adequate and effective breathing and ventilation
- Weakened respiratory muscles and degenerative changes in chest wall result in diminished effective ventilation
- Blunted response to hypoxia, hypercarbia, and acidosis delays onset of clinical distress
- Lower threshold to intubate elderly patients
- Circulation—ensure adequate perfusion
- Vigilant hemodynamic monitoring, heart rate, and BP do not always correlate well with cardiac output
- Geriatric patients often have impaired chronotropic response to hypovolemia
- Cardiovascular response may be blunted by rate controlling meds (β-blockers, Calcium channel blockers)
- Baseline hypertension, common in elderly, may obscure relative hypotension
- Bleeding made worse by antiplatelet and anticoagulation medicines
- Disability—rapid neurologic evaluation to assess for intracranial and spinal cord injury
- Brain atrophy may delay onset of clinical symptoms from compressive effects
- Grave error to assume alterations in mental status due solely to underlying dementia or senility
- Exposure—patient should be undressed completely
- Secondary survey
- After the primary survey has been completed
- Stabilization at each level
- Complete physical exam from head to toe
History
- The geriatric trauma patient should be viewed as both a trauma and a medical patient
- Elderly patients can have significant comorbidities, past medical history, medications, and allergies are essential
- Comorbid medical conditions may have precipitated the traumatic event
- Consider hypoglycemia, syncope, cardiac dysrhythmia, CVA, UTI, etc.
- Details of the mechanism, initial presentation, and treatment rendered should be elicited from EMS personnel
- Concurrent medical conditions impede compensation, confound interpretation of severity and response, and complicate resuscitation.
Physical-Exam
Should follow primary and secondary surveys
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
- Primary and secondary survey
- Cervical spine and chest imaging are mandatory for victims of major traumas
- Pelvic radiographs should be performed with clinical suspicion of pelvic trauma or with hemodynamic instability
- CBC, ABG, blood type
- Electrolytes, renal function, serum glucose
- Urine dip for blood, UA if dip shows positive result
- Coagulation profile
- Base deficit, lactate
- Ethanol screen
Imaging
- Liberal use of head CT is recommended for elderly with closed head trauma
- Nexus criteria has been validated in ages >65; however, cervical spine imaging needed in majority of geriatric traumas. CT scan emerging as study of choice for high suspicion, high-risk mechanism or age related changes likely to limit plain films
- Significant blunt and penetrating chest trauma requires objective evaluations of the heart and great vessels with echocardiography, CT scan, angiography, or direct visualization.
- Blunt abdominal trauma requires objective evaluation, modality depends on patient’s condition
- Hemodynamically stable patients should have an abdominal CT with IV contrast
- Ensure adequate hydration and assess baseline renal function prior to contrast load when clinical status permits.
- Unstable patients should have FAST exam or diagnostic peritoneal lavage
- CT with contrast is a valuable diagnostic tool for abdominal trauma, but predispose to risk of contrast related renal impairment
- Extremity injury:
- Radiographs
- Suspected vascular damage requires angiography or duplex ultrasound