Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (699 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

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Excited Delirium Syndrome, Puncture Wounds

CODES
ICD9
  • 919.8 Other and unspecified superficial injury of other, multiple, and unspecified sites, without mention of infection
  • 994.8 Electrocution and nonfatal effects of electric current
ICD10
  • T14.8 Other injury of unspecified body region
  • T75.4XXA Electrocution, initial encounter
TEMPORAL–MANDIBULAR JOINT INJURY/SYNDROME
Ben Osborne

Jennifer Dohrman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Myofascial pain causing temporomandibular joint (TMJ) dysfunction
  • Prevalence of 40–75% of 1 sign of TMJ disorder
  • Most common in 20–50-yr-olds
  • Females seek treatment more frequently
  • 40% have symptoms that resolve spontaneously
  • TMJ is a synovial joint:
    • Allows for hinge and sliding movements
  • Articular disorders:
    • Congenital or developmental
    • Degenerative joint disorders:
      • Inflammatory (rheumatoid arthritis)
      • Noninflammatory (osteoarthritis)
    • Trauma
    • TMJ hypermobility:
      • Laxity
      • Dislocation
      • Subluxation
    • TMJ hypomobility:
      • Trismus
      • Fibrosis
    • Infection
    • Neoplasm
  • Masticatory muscle disorders:
    • Local myalgias
    • Myositis
    • Muscle spasm
    • Contracture
    • Myofascial pain disorder
  • TMJ clicking:
    • May be normal finding; present as a transient finding in 40–60% of the population
  • TMJ motion:
    • Typical range is 35–55 mm (maxillary to mandible incisors)
    • Limited by adhesions within the joint or disk displacement or trismus from muscle spasm
  • Intra-articular disk disorder:
    • Anterior displacement with reduction:
      • Displacement in closed mouth position
      • Often with a click and variable pain with opening mouth
      • May worsen over time
    • Anterior disk displacement without reduction:
      • Disk is a mechanical obstruction to opening mouth
      • Maximal opening may be 20–25 mm
      • Often difficult to correct
ETIOLOGY

TMJ dysfunction is poorly understood:

  • Multifactorial:
    • Bruxism (teeth grinding)
    • Trauma
    • Malocclusion
  • Onset may be related to stress
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Preauricular pain:
    • Constant but with fluctuating intensity
    • Dull and aching
    • May be referred to the ipsilateral ear, head, neck, or periorbital region
    • Exacerbated by mandibular movement (pathognomonic)
    • More conspicuous at night and may cause insomnia
    • Often worsens through the day
  • Tongue, lip, or cheek biting
  • Ear pain
  • Ear fullness
  • Tinnitus
  • Dizziness
  • Neck pain
  • Headache
  • Eye pain
Physical-Exam
  • Joint sounds:
    • Popping or clicking sensation with TMJ articulation
    • A palpable or audible click with opening and closing
    • Not sufficient for diagnosis if not accompanied by pain or other dysfunction
  • Misalignment and limited range of motion:
    • Dentoskeletal malocclusion or lateral deviation
    • Open or closed locking of the jaw
  • Tenderness over the muscles of mastication and TMJ:
    • Masseter muscle most commonly painful
  • Pain with dynamic loading (bite on gauze)
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Diagnosis based on history and physical exam
  • Exclude other causes of headache and facial pain
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

No specific lab tests are indicated unless there is concern for other disease process, i.e., ESR may help distinguish temporal arteritis from TMJ dysfunction.

Imaging
  • Panorex is the screening radiograph of choice:
    • May demonstrate fracture or intra-articular pathology (i.e., tumor or degenerative joint disease) but usually unremarkable
  • CT: Best for evaluating bony structures for fractures, dislocations, etc.
  • MRI: Best imaging for nonreducing displaced disks:
    • Allows for better visualization of joints simultaneously
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Acute coronary syndrome
  • Carotid artery dissection
  • Intracranial hemorrhage (subarachnoid hemorrhage)
  • Inflammatory diseases:
    • Giant cell (temporal) arteritis
    • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Trigeminal or glossopharyngeal neuralgia
  • Vascular headache
  • Intraoral and dental pathology
  • Herpes zoster
  • Salivary gland disorder
  • Otitis media, otitis externa
  • Sinusitis
  • Elongated styloid process pain
  • Jaw trauma (fracture or dislocation)
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Provide comfort and reassurance

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

Make sure airway is patent

ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Acute therapeutic options:
    • Patient reassurance and education—”usually mild and self-limited”
    • Rest
    • Heat
    • Analgesics and anxiolytics
    • Urgent reduction of open or closed locking TMJ
    • Reduction of TMJ dislocation:
      • Dislocation usually bilateral
      • IV muscle relaxant may be helpful
      • Often requires procedural sedation
      • Monitor airway
      • May face the patient or perform from behind the patient
      • Protect thumbs with gauze and/or tongue depressors
      • Thumbs rest on intraoral surface of mandible
      • Fingers wrap around jaw
      • Firm, progressive downward pressure as jaw is guided 1st in a caudal direction and then posteriorly
    • Physical therapy—moist heat or ice packs
    • Pain site injections with mixture of steroids/lidocaine
  • Outpatient management:
    • Combination pharmacotherapy:
      • NSAIDs
      • Muscle relaxants
      • Antidepressants
      • Sedative hypnotics
    • Home physical therapy—moist heat or ice packs and mechanically soft diet
    • Caution not to open mouth >2 cm for 2 wk
    • Avoid triggers such as gum chewing
    • Occlusal appliance worn during sleep
    • Referral to dentist or oral–maxillofacial surgeon
MEDICATION
First Line
  • Naproxen: 250–500 mg PO BID (peds: 10 mg/kg/d PO div. q12h)
  • Cyclobenzaprine: 5–10 mg PO TID (peds: 5–10 mg PO TID if >15 yr old); caution with hepatic impairment
  • Diazepam: 2–10 mg PO BID–TID (peds: <12 yr old 0.12–0.8 mg/kg/d PO div. q6–8h); poor efficacy when used alone
  • Ibuprofen: 600 mg (peds: 10 mg/kg) PO q8h; less effective than naproxen
Second Line
  • Nortriptyline: 10–50 mg PO qhs
  • Narcotic analgesic
  • Sedative hypnotics
FOLLOW-UP

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