ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Dependent upon clinical scenario
- Cell count differential with absolute cell counts may be helpful if the etiology is not apparent based on history and physical exam alone, or if hematologic malignancy is considered
- If hematologic malignancy is suspected patients will require peripheral blood smear and bone marrow biopsy following admission
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
See etiology. Narrow diagnosis based on corresponding clinical presentation.
TREATMENT
- Based on underlying disease process.
- Leukostasis secondary to the extremely high WBC counts of malignancy may require acute management with:
- IV hydration
- Transfusion
- Allopurinol
- Hydroxyurea
- Hematology consult for leukapheresis
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Dependent upon clinical scenario. Avoid making disposition decisions based solely on the WBC count.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Be aware that the decision making of health care providers is significantly influenced by the presence of a leukocytosis
- Increased admission rate
- Increased number of tests and cost
- Wide variety of conditions can cause a leukocytosis, including normal variants
- Poor sensitivity and specificity for predicting severity of illness
- Extremely high WBC counts typically in the setting of hematologic malignancy can be associated with leukostasis which can be life threatening and require emergent therapy
ADDITIONAL READING
- Callaham M. Inaccuracy and expense of the leukocyte count in making urgent clinical decisions.
Ann Emerg Med.
1986;15(7):774–781.
- Cerny J, Rosmarin AG. Why does my patient have leukocytosis?
Hematol Oncol Clin North Am.
2012;26:303–319.
- Janz TG, Hamilton GC. Anemia, polycythemia, and white blood cells disorders. In: Marx JA, Hockberger RS, Walls RM, et al., eds.
Rosen’s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice
. 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Mosby Elsevier; 2009.
- Shah SS. Clinical significance of extreme leukocytosis in the emergency department evaluation of young febrile children.
Acad Emerg Med.
2003;10(5):443–444.
CODES
ICD9
- 288.8 Other specified disease of white blood cells
- 288.60 Leukocytosis, unspecified
- 288.61 Lymphocytosis (symptomatic)
ICD10
- D72.820 Lymphocytosis (symptomatic)
- D72.828 Other elevated white blood cell count
- D72.829 Elevated white blood cell count, unspecified
LIGHTNING INJURIES
Tarlan Hedayati
•
Sheila T. Wan
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Lightning is a discharge of energy that occurs cloud to cloud (90%) or cloud to ground (10%).
- Exposure to lightning:
- Brief duration (1–100 msec)
- Typically occurs during outdoor activity
- Highest incidence in summer months, between 3 and 6
pm
- Fatality rate of 8–10%
ETIOLOGY
- Mechanism of injury—electrical:
- Direct strike (5%)
- Contact potential (15–25%):
- Current passes through an object the victim is touching.
- Side splash (20–30%):
- Current jumps from nearby object to the victim.
- Earth potential rise/ground current (40–50%):
- Current moves through the ground surface and may injure multiple victims.
- Current moves through hard-wired telephone lines, metallic pipes, or a structure’s electrical equipment, causing lightning injury to victims indoors.
- Upward streamer (10–15%):
- Negatively charged lightning strikes from a cloud and induces positive current from the ground to rise and meet it to complete the lightning channel.
- Mechanism of injury—trauma:
- Barotraumas
- Blunt trauma:
- Muscle contractions can throw the victim and/or cause a fall.
- Thermal burn
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Consider lightning strike in unwitnessed falls, cardiac arrests, or unexplained coma in an outdoor setting.
- Conscious patients may report:
- Muscle aches and pains
- Chest pain
- Shortness of breath
- Extremity pain or discoloration
- Burns
- Neurologic deficits including:
- Paresthesia
- Dysesthesias
- Weakness or paralysis
- Visual disturbance or blindness
- Headache
- Confusion or amnesia
- Hearing loss or deafness
- Dizziness
Physical-Exam
- HEENT:
- Blunt head trauma
- Ruptured tympanic membrane with ossicular disruption (up to 50%)
- Ophthalmic injuries:
- Cataracts
- Corneal lesions
- Intraocular hemorrhages
- Retinal detachment
- Neck:
- Cardiopulmonary injuries:
- Primary cardiac arrest:
- Cardiac asystole:
- Due to direct current injury
- May resolve spontaneously as the heart’s intrinsic automaticity resumes.
- Hypertension: Transient
- Pulmonary contusion or hemorrhage
- Respiratory arrest:
- Caused by paralysis of medullary respiratory center
- May persist longer than primary cardiac arrest and lead to hypoxia-induced secondary cardiac arrest and/or brain injury
- Extremities:
- Fractures/dislocations
- Muscle tears, contusions
- Compartment syndromes
- Mottled or cold:
- Caused by autonomic vasomotor instability
- Usually resolves spontaneously in a few hours
- Skin:
- Burns:
- May evolve over several hours after injury
- Discrete entrance and exit wounds are uncommon.
- Superficial in nature; deep burns uncommon
- Direct thermal injury is uncommon due to the brevity of electrical currents.
- Thermal burns can arise from evaporation of water on skin, ignited clothing, and heated metal objects (buckles, jewelry).
- Feathering pattern of fernlike “burns” are pathognomonic of lightning injuries and resolve within 24 hr.
- Neurologic injuries:
- Confusion, cognitive or memory defects
- Altered level of consciousness (>70% of cases)
- Flaccid motor paralysis
- Seizures
- Cerebrovascular accident
- Fixed dilated pupils due to either serious head injury or autonomic dysfunction
- Shock:
- Neurogenic (spinal injury)
- Hypovolemic (trauma)
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Confirmatory history from bystanders or rescuers of the circumstances of the injury
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- CBC
- Urinalysis for myoglobin (rare)
- Electrolytes for acidosis
- BUN, creatinine for renal function
- Troponin, creatine kinase, and cardiac enzymes for muscle/cardiac damage
Imaging
- CXR:
- Pulmonary edema
- Pulmonary contusion/hemorrhage
- Rib fractures
- Cervical spine radiograph
- Head CT for altered mental status or significant head trauma
- Relevant imaging for specific injuries
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery