Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (463 page)

Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
3.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Seriously ill who require supportive care
  • Vomiting and dehydration
  • Encephalitis, meningitis
  • Severe pancreatitis
  • Isolate admitted patients
Discharge Criteria
  • Virtually all patients
  • Contagious until about a week after onset of symptoms
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Mumps virus is the only cause of epidemic parotitis.
  • Vaccines are highly effective, and when correctly given confer 90% immunity. MMR should not be given to pregnant women or immunosuppressed or immunocompromised individuals.
  • Mumps virus is endemic to many parts of the world and may pose a risk to travelers without immunity to mumps.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • American Academy of Pediatrics. Mumps. In: Pickering LK, ed.
    Red Book 2012: Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases.
    29th ed. Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics; 2012:514–518.
  • Mumps. In: Atkinson W, et al., eds.
    Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases (The Pink Book).
    12th ed. 2012:205–214.
  • Mason WH. Mumps. In: Kliegman RM, Behrman RE, Jenson HB, et al., eds.
    Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics.
    19th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders Elsevier; 2011:1078–1081.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)

www.cdc.gov/mumps

CODES
ICD9
  • 072.0 Mumps orchitis
  • 072.3 Mumps pancreatitis
  • 072.9 Mumps without mention of complication
ICD10
  • B26.0 Mumps orchitis
  • B26.3 Mumps pancreatitis
  • B26.9 Mumps without complication
MUNCHAUSEN SYNDROME
Sophie Galson

Richard E. Wolfe
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • A neurotic disorder in which the patient fakes signs or symptoms without tangible personal benefit other than to experience the sick role.
  • Most dramatic form of chronic factitious disorder with a predominance of physical findings.
  • The nature of the disorder resists rigorous study but possible risk factors include:
    • Males
    • Less severe factitious disorders are more common in women
    • Unmarried
    • Age in the forties
    • Personality disorder
    • A history of sadistic and rejecting parents
    • A history of chronic childhood illness
ETIOLOGY
  • Factitious disorder:
    • 3 DSM-IV diagnostic criteria:
      • Intentional production of physical or psychological signs
      • Motivation to assume the sick role
      • Absence of external incentives
      • Predominance of symptoms rather than physical findings
  • Classic Munchausen syndrome:
    • Most severe and chronic form of factitious disorders
    • Predominantly physical findings
  • Clinical clusters:
    • Self-induced infection
    • Simulated specific illnesses with no actual disorder
    • Chronic wounds
    • Self-medication
Pediatric Considerations
  • Munchausen by proxy:
    • The patient’s illness is caused by the caregiver, not the patient
    • The motivation for the caregiver’s behavior is to assume the sick role by proxy
    • The caregiver inflicts injury or induces illness in their charge, usually a child
    • Commonly parents (mostly mothers)
  • May simulate injury and disease in a number of ways:
    • Inflicts injury
    • Induces Illness
    • Fabricates symptoms
    • Exaggerates symptoms of the child’s illness causing overaggressive medical interventions
  • The perpetrator usually refuses to acknowledge the deception
  • Cessation of the symptoms when the patient and caregiver are separated
Geriatric Considerations

Caregivers of elderly patients may also be perpetrators in Munchausen by proxy

DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Inappropriate or bizarre use of the ED
  • Frequent visits
  • Numerous hospital admissions
  • Peregrination: Travel from hospital to hospital
  • Pseudologia fantastica:
    • Intricate and colorful stories associated with the presentation
  • Alteration of biographical information:
    • Use of aliases
    • Change date of birth by 1 digit
  • Escalating demands for diagnostic testing and therapeutic interventions
  • Hostility toward the health care providers when questioned
  • Evasiveness regarding details of the presenting complaint
  • The patient provides excessive medical documentation
  • Masochistic acceptance of painful procedures
  • The patient appears more comfortable than is likely considering the disease
  • The patient demonstrates unusually strong medical knowledge
  • Frequent homelessness and significant wandering between cities and states
  • An absence of close interpersonal relationships
  • Self-medication
  • Abdominal complaints with history of repeated negative laparotomies (laparotomaphilia migrans)
  • Witnessed intentional acts to fake illness:
    • Inappropriate ingestion of medication to reproduce physical findings
    • Injection of contaminants (feces, bacteria, sputum, corrosives)
    • Self-induced wounds
    • Swallowing blood to simulate a GI hemorrhage
    • Self-phlebotomy
    • Instrument tampering
Physical-Exam
  • Fever:
    • Factious from manipulation of thermometer
    • Induced from injection of contaminants
  • Self-induced wounds
  • Chronic wounds
  • Multiple scars
  • Foreign bodies in wounds, ear canals, urethra
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Diligent detective work is needed:
    • Retrieval of records from other hospitals
    • Call on family members to discuss past history for inconsistencies and excessive use
    • Call personal physician for background and to coordinate information
    • Search patient’s room and belongings to establish the method of deception
  • Conclusive proof of faking disease is needed to make the diagnosis
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Direct observation of the patient when obtaining tests to prevent faking results
  • Commonly faked lab results:
    • Hemoccult positive stool
    • Hematuria (intentionally dripping blood into urine sample)
    • Hypoglycemia (self-administration of insulin)
  • Abnormal results from self-medication:
    • Low hematocrit (ingestion of warfarin or self-phlebotomy)
    • Elevated INR (ingestion of warfarin)
    • Thyroid function tests (ingestion of thyroxine)
    • Low serum glucose (injection of insulin or ingestion of sulfonylurea)
  • Evidence of intent to fake illness:
    • Testing stool for phenolphthalein may detect laxative abuse
    • Serum C-peptide with high insulin levels:
      • Low C-peptide: Exogenous administration of insulin
      • Elevated C-peptide: Endogenous hypoglycemia or sulfonylurea ingestion
Imaging

Do not rely on imaging brought by the patient

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

Avoid unless clear objective findings indicate the necessity of a procedure

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • True illness:
    • Primary illness unrelated to a psychiatric disorder
  • Secondary to a comorbid condition associated with factitious disorders:
    • Secondary to self-destructive acts in patients with dementia, psychotic disorders, or mental retardation
    • Secondary to diagnostic and therapeutic procedures
  • Malingering:
    • Clear-cut secondary gain
  • Conversion disorder:
    • Deficits of the voluntary motor or sensory neurologic system that are not consciously produced
  • Somatization disorder (hysteria, Briquet syndrome):
    • Symptoms that involve multiple organs, that varies over time, and are not consciously produced
  • Other neurotic disorders:
    • Anxiety
    • Depression
TREATMENT

Other books

The Light of His Sword by Alaina Stanford
Blood Law by Jeannie Holmes
The Invisible Day by Marthe Jocelyn
The Wild Road by Marjorie M. Liu
Hunger (Seductors #2) by B. L. Wilde