Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (543 page)

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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
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PRE HOSPITAL
  • Differentiate phenytoin-induced altered mental status from other potentially serious causes:
    • Head trauma common in seizure population
  • Collect/transport prescription bottles and medications to aid in identification and quantification of ingestion
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • ABCs:
    • IV access
    • Cardiac monitor (with IV overdose)
  • For altered mental status:
    • Accu-Chek.
    • Administer naloxone, dextrose, and thiamine as indicated.
  • Treat hypotension with IV fluids and Trendelenburg position:
    • Dopamine for refractory hypotension
  • Treat paradoxical seizures with diazepam.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Provide supportive care
  • Activated charcoal
    • Administer single dose.
    • Multiple-dose activated charcoal may increase the clearance of phenytoin; does not correlate with clinical improvement in patients with phenytoin toxicity.
MEDICATION
  • Activated charcoal slurry: 1–2 g/kg up to 90 g PO
  • Dextrose: D50W 1 amp: 50 mL or 25 g (peds: D25W 2–4 mL/kg) IV
  • Dopamine: 2–20 μg/kg/min IV titrated to desired BP
  • Naloxone (Narcan): 2 mg (peds: 0.1 mg/kg) IV or IM initial dose
  • Thiamine (vitamin B
    1
    ): 100 mg (peds: 50 mg) IV or IM
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Altered mental status, severe ataxia, increasing phenytoin level
  • Level >25
    µ
    g/mL
  • ICU admission with intoxication from IV phenytoin
  • Fall precautions
Discharge Criteria
  • Level ≤25
    µ
    g/mL
  • Ambulatory without ataxia
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Psychiatric referral for intentional ingestions/suicide attempts.
  • Close primary care follow-up to check phenytoin levels.
  • Anticipate altered pharmacokinetics and phenytoin levels with any change in manufacturer or dosage formulation
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Small incremental increases in dose of phenytoin can result in toxicity since phenytoin follows zero-order kinetics.
  • Repeat phenytoin levels every 4 hr until declining.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • McCluggage LK, Voils SA, Bullock MR. Phenytoin toxicity due to genetic polymorphism.
    Neurocrit Care
    . 2009;10:222–224.
  • Skinner CG, Chang AS, Matthews AR, et al. Randomized controlled study on the use of multiple-dose activated charcoal in patients with supratherapeutic phenytoin levels.
    Clin Toxicol (Phila).
    2012;50:764–769.
  • Von Winckelmann SL, Spriet I, Willems L. Therapeutic drug monitoring of phenytoin in critically ill patients.
    Pharmacotherapy
    . 2008;28:1391–1400.
CODES
ICD9

966.1 Poisoning by hydantoin derivatives

ICD10

T42.0X1A Poisoning by hydantoin derivatives, accidental, init

PHEOCHROMOCYTOMA
David N. Zull
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Pheochromocytoma (pheo) is a catecholamine-producing tumor arising from the chromaffin tissues of the sympathetic nervous system.
  • Origin from the adrenal medulla or sympathetic ganglia:
    • 80% solitary adrenal (usually the right side)
    • 10% bilateral (usually inherited form)
    • 10% extra-adrenal in location:
      • Abdominal, within mesenteric ganglia (86%)
      • Thorax (10%), neck (3%), bladder (1%)
    • 10% malignant (usually inherited form)
  • Incidence:
    • 0.2–0.4% of hypertensive patients, but higher proportion of patients with severe hypertension
    • 2–8/million population per year
    • Peaks in decades 3–5, 10% in children
    • Male = female
    • In about 1/2 of the cases, the diagnosis is made postmortem.
    • 10% asymptomatic, incidental on CT
  • Genetics:
    • Inherited form 25%, autosomal dominant
    • Usually associated with multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) 2A, less so with MEN 2B or von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) disease:
      • MEN 2A (medullary thyroid carcinoma [CA], pheo, and hyperparathyroidism)
      • MEN 2B (medullary thyroid CA, pheo, oral mucosal neuromas, skeletal and bony abnormalities)
      • VHL (hemangioblastomas of retina and CNS, pancreas and renal cysts, and pheo
    • Other associated diseases: Neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, Sturge–Weber syndrome, paragangliomas of the neck
ETIOLOGY
  • The tumor synthesizes and stores catecholamines in the same manner as the normal adrenal medulla.
  • Tumors predominantly secrete norepinephrine, and to a lesser extent epinephrine (some tumors are epinephrine predominant, in which hypotensive episodes are characteristic)
  • Paroxysmal release of catecholamines:
    • Spontaneously due to changes in blood flow or tumor necrosis
    • Direct pressure on the gland from external forces (trauma, exercise)
    • Precipitation of release (opiates, glucagon, metoclopramide, steroids, foods with tyramine, iodinated contrast media)
    • Augmentation of catecholamine effect (tricyclic antidepressants [TCAs], β-blockers, sympathomimetics)
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Hypertension, moderate to severe, refractory to treatment:
    • 40%: Paroxysms with normal BP between episodes
    • 30%: Sustained hypertension with paroxysms
    • 30%: Sustained hypertension without paroxysms
    • Sometimes normotensive in familial forms and small tumors: <5%
  • Paroxysmal symptoms
    • Sudden onset, gradual resolution
    • Duration: Minutes to hours (average 20 min)
    • Intervals: Hours to months (average weekly)
    • Increasing frequency, duration, and severity with time
  • Clinical characteristics of paroxysms
    • Hypertensive crisis or urgency
    • Headache – abrupt, throbbing, bilateral
    • Tachycardia/palpitations
    • Profuse diaphoresis/pallor
    • Apprehension/anxiety/tremulous
    • Shock associated with trauma, surgery, parturition, anesthesia
  • Acute crisis
    • Prolonged (>24hr) severe paroxysm
    • Severe HTN or shock, hyperpyrexia
    • Multiorgan failure/lactic acidosis
    • Pulmonary edema due to cardiomyopathy (dilated, hypertrophic or Takotsubo)
    • Stroke (SAH, PRES, RCVS, embolic)
    • Severe headache/encephalopathy
    • Chest pain (MI/dissection)
    • Acute abdomen
      • Hemorrhagic tumor necrosis
      • Mesenteric infarction
  • Chronic symptoms
    • Chest pains/palpitations
    • Orthostasis (decreased plasma volume and blunted sympathetic reflexes)
    • Constipation can be severe, leading to ileus or pseudo-obstruction (catecholamines inhibit peristalsis)
    • Weight loss/fevers (increased metabolism)
    • Lethargy, fatigue (catecholamine withdrawal))
    • Polydipsia, polyuria (glucose intolerance)
    • Anxiety, tremors, heat intolerance
Physical-Exam
  • Moderate to severe hypertension, often with orthostatic changes
  • Tachycardic, diaphoretic, evidence of weight loss, low-grade fever
  • Pallor, cold hands and feet (flushing not seen, except rarely after a paroxysm)
  • Tremor, anxiety
  • Mydriasis, hypertensive retinopathy
  • Café au lait spots, neurofibromas, thyroid nodule
  • No palpable masses (tumors tend to be small)
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Accurate BP determination with orthostatic BPs
  • ECG to exclude ischemia or dysrhythmias
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
  • Overdiagnosis in >20% from misinterpretation of borderline biochemical tests and overzealous imaging
  • Underdiagnosis is common from failure to consider the diagnosis or ignoring adrenal masses on CT.
Lab
  • CBC:
    • Elevated hemoglobin due to diminished plasma volume
    • Elevated WBC from demargination
  • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose:
    • Lactic acidosis
    • Renal failure secondary to hypertensive nephropathy
    • Hyperglycemia due to impaired response to insulin and effect of catecholamines
    • Hypercalcemia due to excess parathyroid hormone
  • Urinalysis: Proteinuria and hematuria
  • Plasma-free metanephrine (fractionated):
    • 96% sensitive, 85% specific—best screening test. Normal level excludes diagnosis, but many false positives
    • Least likely to be interfered by medications or stress and no special prep for venipuncture
  • 24 hr urine collection for free catecholamines and metanephrine (total and fractionated):
    • 99.7% combined specificity and 87.5% sensitivity (best test for confirmation)
    • Must include creatinine to verify adequate collection
    • Medications that interfere: Levodopa, methyldopa, monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs), labetalol, propranolol, radiographic contrast media, sympathomimetics, benzodiazepines, TCAs, caffeine, nicotine

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