Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (625 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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DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Neurovascular compromise or injury requiring surgical repair
  • Concomitant infection or necrosis
  • Investigation of abuse and or neglect
Discharge Criteria

Successful band removal with restoration of circulation.

Issues for Referral

Wounds at high risk for infection should have close follow-up in 1–2 days.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Return to the ED for increasing pain, numbness, tingling, redness, swelling drainage, fevers, or other changes in clinical presentation.

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Failure to completely examine the fingers, toes, and genitalia of the irritable infant
  • The hair causing a hair tourniquet may be obscured by edema and heaped up tissue and skin.
  • Rings must be removed early after trauma to the distal extremity.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Hoffman RJ, Wang VJ, Scarfone RJ.
    Fleisher and Ludwig’s 5-minute Pediatric Emergency Medicine Consult
    . Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2011.
  • O’Gorman A, Ratnapalan S. Hair tourniquet management.
    Pediatr Emerg Care.
    2011;27(3):203–204.
  • Peckler B, Hsu CK. Tourniquet syndrome: A review of constricting band removal.
    J Emerg Med
    . 2001;20(3):253–262.
  • Rosen P, Chan TC, Vilke GM, et al.
    Atlas of Emergency Procedures.
    St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2001.
  • Sung S, Hsu CK, O’Rouke K. Resident training in constricting band removal: Motorized cutting.
    Ann Emerg Med.
    2007;50(3):Sup:S76.
CODES
ICD9
  • 959.5 Finger injury
  • 959.7 Knee, leg, ankle, and foot injury
ICD10
  • S60.448A External constriction of other finger, initial encounter
  • S60.449A External constriction of unspecified finger, initial encounter
  • S90.446A External constriction, unspecified lesser toe(s), initial encounter
ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED FEVER
Roger M. Barkin
BASICS
DESCRIPTION

Rickettsial invasion of small blood vessels:

  • Causes direct vascular damage
  • Superimposed additional vascular damage/vasculitis due to immunologic phenomena
ETIOLOGY
  • Acute infection by
    Rickettsia rickettsii
    via tick vector:
    • Dermacentor andersoni
      (wood tick) in the western states
    • Dermacentor variabilis
      (dog tick) in the eastern states
  • Reported in all states; 1/2 of cases occur in 5 states (NC, SC, TN, OK, AR), as well as parts of Central America and South America
  • More common April–September, but can occur any month
  • More common in males and in individuals 40–64 yr of age
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Tick bite reported within 14 days of rash in 60% of patients
  • Incubation varies 2–14 days with median 7 days
  • Exposure to ticks, often in rural environment
Physical-Exam
  • Rash:
    • Initial rash (3–5 days)
      • Macular, red, and flat
      • Blanches under pressure
      • 1–4 mm diameter
    • In hours to days:
      • Becomes darker, papular, dusky, and palpable
    • In 2–3 days:
      • Petechial or purpuric
      • Positive Rumpel–Leede test
      • May coalesce or ulcerate
    • In severe disease, necrosis of dependent peripheral parts may occur.
    • Location:
      • Begins in flexor surfaces of wrist and ankles, rapidly spreading to palms and soles
      • Spreads centripetally involving extremities; may involve trunk and face
      • 15% with centrifugal spread to palms and soles
      • 10% of patients do not have rash
      • Often not identified when patient initially presents for care
  • Pulmonary:
    • Nonproductive cough
    • Chest pain
    • Dyspnea
    • Rales
  • GI:
    • Often associated with fatal Rocky Mountain spotted fever
    • Secondary to vasculitis
    • Nausea/vomiting
    • Abdominal pain/distention
    • Ileus
    • Hepatosplenomegaly
  • Neurologic:
    • Focal or generalized neurologic manifestation in 2/3
    • Meningismus
    • Severe, unremitting headache
    • Encephalitis
  • Other:
    • Generalized edema
    • Dehydration
    • Malaise
    • Myalgia
    • Retinal hemorrhage and conjunctivitis
  • Complications:
    • Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC)
    • Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
    • Acute renal failure
    • Severe or fatal in advanced age, male sex, African American, chronic alcohol abuse, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Clinical diagnosis supplemented by confirmatory lab findings such as hyponatremia, anemia, and thrombocytopenia

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Serology:
    • Diagnose by single titer >1:64 or 4-fold increase. Antibody may not be detected in the 1st few days of symptoms
    • Methods:
      • Immunofluorescent antibody (sensitivity of 95%)
      • Complement fixation
      • Indirect hemagglutination test
      • Indirect immunofluorescence assay is reference standard.
  • CBC:
    • Normal WBC count
    • Thrombocytopenia
    • Anemia
  • Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, glucose:
    • Hyponatremia <130 mEq/L
  • Liver profile:
    • Elevated aspartate aminotransferase
    • Lactate dehydrogenase
  • Arterial blood gas for:
    • Hypoxia
    • Respiratory alkalosis
  • Coagulation profile if DIC suspected
  • Microbiology:
    • Immunohistologic antibody stain of skin biopsy
    • Isolation of
      R. rickettsii
      (time-consuming/ expensive)
    • Polymerase chain reaction assay
  • CSF:
    • Pleocytosis and increased protein
Imaging
  • Chest radiograph for pulmonary edema, pneumonia
  • Echocardiography:
    • Decreased left ventricular contractility
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

Skin biopsy may be confirmatory if immunohistologic antibody studies available.

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Other tick-borne diseases:
    • Ehrlichiosis: Older adults
    • Relapsing fever
    • Lyme disease: Erythema chronicum migrans
    • Tularemia
    • Babesiosis
    • Colorado tick fever
  • Infectious diseases:
    • Meningococcemia—late winter, early spring; maculopapular or petechial rash
    • Measles—late winter, early spring; severe prodrome
    • Rubella—palms and soles spared
    • Varicella—does not have rash in extremities
    • Viral exanthem
    • Infectious mononucleosis—palms and soles spared
    • Disseminated gonococcal infection—pustular lesions
    • Typhus—rash starts at trunk with centrifugal spread
    • Secondary syphilis
    • Scarlet fever
    • Kawasaki disease—red, cracked lips
    • Toxic shock syndrome
    • Gastroenteritis
    • Staphylococcal sepsis
  • Inflammatory causes:
    • Allergic vasculitis
    • Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
    • Collagen vascular disease
    • Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
  • Heat illness
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Stabilize as appropriate

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • ABC management
  • 0.9% NS IV fluid bolus for dehydration
  • Oxygen for hypoxia
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Correct fluid and electrolyte deficits.
  • Initiate antibiotic therapy immediately based on clinical and epidemiologic findings. Should not be delayed until lab confirmation is obtained:
    • Doxycycline—drug of choice
    • Chloramphenicol in pregnant and allergic patients
    • Sulfonamides make infection worse.
  • Administer acetaminophen for fever.
  • Consider high-dose steroids for severe cases complicated by extensive vasculitis, encephalitis, or cerebral edema (controversial).
  • Better outcome in children if treatment begins before day 5 of illness
  • Treat complications:
    • DIC
    • Adult respiratory distress syndrome
    • CHF
  • Medication

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