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

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (68 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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MEDICATION
  • Ampicillin/sulbactam: 3 g (peds: 100–200 mg ampicillin/kg/24 h) IV q6h
  • Cefoxitin: 2 g (peds: 80–100 mg/kg/24 h) IV q6h
  • Ceftriaxone: 1 g (peds: 50–100 mg/kg) IV q24h
  • Ciprofloxacin: 400 mg (peds: 20–40 mg/kg) IV q12h
  • Ertapenem: 1 g IM/IV q24h
  • Metronidazole: 500 mg (peds: 30–50 mg/kg/24 h) IV q8–12h
  • Morphine sulfate: 3–5 mg (peds: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg per dose q2–q4h) IV, every 15 min titrated to effect
  • Piperacillin/tazobactam: 3.375 g (peds: 150–300 mg/kg/d if <6 mo; 240–400 mg/kg/d if >6 mo) IV q6h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Surgical intervention of acute appendicitis
  • Observation or further diagnostic workup if diagnosis is uncertain
Discharge Criteria

Patients with abdominal pain thought not to be appendicitis may be discharged if they meet the following criteria:

  • Resolved or resolving symptoms
  • Minimal or no abdominal tenderness
  • No lab/radiologic abnormalities
  • Able to tolerate PO intake
  • Adequate social support and able to return if symptoms worsen
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

24–48 hr recheck for patients discharged from the ED with abdominal pain of unclear etiology

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Pediatric and geriatric patients present atypically and have increased perforation rates
  • Imaging is not required in a classic presentation of acute appendicitis
  • Appendicitis cannot be ruled out on any imaging modality if the appendix is not visualized
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Basaran A, Basaran M. Diagnosis of acute appendicitis during pregnancy: A systematic review.
    Obstet Gynecol Surv
    . 2009;64(7):481–488.
  • Hennelly KE, Bachur R. Appendicitis update.
    Curr Opin Pediatr
    . 2011;23:281–285.
  • Long SS, Long C, Lai H, et al. Imaging strategies for the right lower quadrant pain in pregnancy.
    AJR Am J Roentgenol
    . 2011;196:4–12.
  • Singh A, Danrad R, Hahn PF, et al. MR imaging of the acute abdomen and pelvis: Acute appendicitis and beyond.
    Radiographics
    . 2007;27:1419–1431.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Abdominal Pain
  • Vomiting, Adult; Vomiting, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
  • 540.1 Acute appendicitis with peritoneal abscess
  • 540.9 Acute appendicitis without mention of peritonitis
  • 541 Appendicitis, unqualified
ICD10
  • K35.3 Acute appendicitis with localized peritonitis
  • K35.80 Unspecified acute appendicitis
  • K37 Unspecified appendicitis
ARSENIC POISONING
Vinodinee L. Dissanayake
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Acute toxicity:
    • Caused by intentional ingestion, malicious poisoning, or medication error
  • Minimal lethal ingested dose ∼2 mg/kg
  • Chronic toxicity:
    • Resulting from occupational exposures, water or food contamination, or use of folk remedies containing arsenic
  • Ingestion is the primary route of exposure
  • Inhalational toxicity is possible from arsine gas exposure
ETIOLOGY
  • Most cases seen in the ED result from intentional ingestion or malicious poisoning
  • Sodium arsenate, found in ant killer, is the most common acute exposure in the US
  • Contaminated food and water supplies are the most common cause worldwide
  • Inorganic arsenic trioxide has been recently approved as a chemotherapeutic agent for acute myelogenous leukemia (AML)
  • Melarsoprol, an organic arsenical, has been used to treat trypanosomiasis since 1949
  • Found in pesticides, certain folk remedies (herbal balls), industrial wood preservatives
  • May be released as arsine gas from combustion of zinc- and arsenic-containing compounds
Mechanism
  • Arsenic exists in several forms—gas (arsine, or lewisite), organic, elemental, and inorganic
  • Inorganic forms (pentavalent and trivalent arsenic) are most frequently involved in toxic exposures:
    • Pentavalent arsenic uncouples oxidative phosphorylation
    • Most pentavalent arsenic is converted to the more toxic trivalent arsenic in the body
    • Trivalent arsenic binds sulfhydryl groups and interferes in hemoglobin production
    • Some trivalent arsenic may be methylated into species of varying toxicity
    • The more reactive species are DNA damaging and genotoxic
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • CNS:
    • Altered mental status/encephalopathy
    • Neurodevelopmental deficits in children
    • Peripheral neuropathy
      • Acute: Sensory neuropathy
      • Subacute: Sensorimotor neuropathy
    • Peripheral dysesthesias
    • Headache
    • Seizures
  • Cardiovascular:
    • Prolonged QTc interval
    • Hypotension (acute) or hypertension (chronic)
    • Dysrhythmias, primarily ventricular
    • Nonspecific ST segment changes
    • Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
  • Pulmonary:
    • Inhalational exposure increases lung cancer risk and respiratory mortality
    • Large acute ingestion (8 mg/kg) may lead to severe respiratory distress
      • Pulmonary edema, hemorrhagic bronchitis, and bronchopneumonia
  • GI:
    • Nausea, vomiting after ingestion and possibly inhalation
      • Protracted and may be refractory to antiemetics at usual doses
      • Can have hemorrhagic gastroenteritis; corrosive to GI tract
    • Rice water diarrhea
    • Abdominal pain
    • Garlic odor to breath, vomit, stools
    • Causes acute hepatitis; chronically, can cause portal HTN
    • A possible association with diabetes mellitus in chronic exposure
  • Miscellaneous (usually associated with chronic exposure)
    • Acute rhabdomyolysis
    • Blackfoot disease in Taiwan: Gangrene from loss of circulation to extremities
    • Dermatitis, such as toxic erythroderma and hyperkeratotic, hyperpigmented lesions
    • Hemolytic anemia (more pronounced with arsine gas exposure)
    • Hypothyroidism (antagonizes thyroid hormone)
    • Increased risk of carcinoma (liver/basal cell/squamous cell of skin/bronchogenic)
    • Leukopenia (after several days)
    • Mees lines (white bands across the nails owing to growth arrest caused by arsenic)
    • Patchy alopecia
    • Raynaud phenomenon and vasospasticity
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Spot urine arsenic level
  • CBC
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Spot urine arsenic level >1,000 μg/L may confirm diagnostic suspicion:
    • Peaks 10–50 hr postingestion
  • Definitive test is 24 hr urine collection with speciation into organic and inorganic types of arsenic.
  • Blood levels not routinely helpful owing to short half-life in serum (∼2 hr)
  • CBC to evaluate for anemia, leukopenia, basophilic stippling
  • Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, and glucose
  • Urinalysis to look for evidence of hemolysis/rhabdomyolysis
  • Liver function tests
  • Total creatine phosphokinase (CPK) for rhabdomyolysis
  • Hair and nail arsenic levels:
    • Do not help in acute setting
    • May help determine chronicity of exposure in select populations
Imaging
  • Plain abdominal radiographs to look for radiopaque foreign body
  • Cranial CT/other studies as indicated by patient’s condition
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Acute toxicity:
    • Acute appendicitis/colitis/gastroenteritis
    • Celiac disease
    • Cholera
    • Distributive shock
    • Encephalopathy
    • Toxic ingestions
      • Amanita
        mushroom poisoning
      • Cyclic antidepressants or other seizure-inducing toxins
      • Organophosphates
  • Chronic toxicity:
    • Addison disease
    • Guillain–Barré syndrome or other neuropathy
    • Raynaud phenomenon
    • Thromboangiitis obliterans, or other vasculitides
    • Vitamin deficiency (B
      3
      , B
      6
      , or B
      12
      )
    • Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
7.83Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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