Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (83 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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SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Unresponsive patient
  • Pulseless
  • Agonal or absence of spontaneous respirations
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Confirm asystole in 2 limb leads to exclude VF.
  • Confirm lead and cable connections.
  • Confirm monitor power is on.
  • Confirm monitor gain is up.
  • Identify reversible causes (see above)
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

Arterial blood gas (potassium and hemoglobin)

Imaging

Cardiac US to exclude pericardial tamponade

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

“Fine” VF (which may be mistaken for asystole)

TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • No intervention should be made for a patient with a valid Do Not Resuscitate document.
  • No intervention if patient can be verified as dead:
    • Rigor mortis
    • Dependent livedo
    • Injury incompatible with life (e.g., decapitation)
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Initiate CPR, with emphasis on minimally interrupted, high-quality chest compressions
  • Confirm asystole with cardiac monitor
  • Place airway device (ETT preferred, but BVM acceptable), confirm placement, and provide 100% inspired oxygen and a slow ventilation rate (6–12 breaths/minute). Minimize interruption in chest compressions during airway placement
  • Establish IV or IO access.
  • Apply continuous waveform capnography to optimize quality of chest compressions (PETCO
    2
    correlates with cardiac output and myocardial blood flow during CPR)
  • Epinephrine every 3–5 min.
  • Consider and treat potentially reversible causes (see above)
  • Sodium bicarbonate if hyperkalemia or drug overdose suspected
  • No proven benefit to an empiric single countershock
  • No proven benefit to electrical pacing
  • Provide defibrillation without delay, IF the patient develops VF or VT
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Initiate induced hypothermia in comatose patients with return of spontaneous circulation
  • Consider termination of resuscitation efforts if the following conditions are met:
    • High-quality chest compressions performed for a period of time
    • Tracheal intubation to ensure normal oxygenation
    • Fine VF excluded
    • Reversible causes corrected or excluded
    • Bedside US without pericardial effusion
    • No tension pneumothorax clinically
MEDICATION
  • Epinephrine: 1 mg (peds: 0.01 mg/kg) IV q3–5min
  • Sodium bicarbonate: 1 mEq/kg IV only if:
    • Pre-existing acidosis
    • Hyperkalemia
    • Tricyclic antidepressant overdose is suspected.
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria

All patients with return of spontaneous circulation

Discharge Criteria

None—all patients with return of spontaneous circulation need admission to an ICU for post-arrest care

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

A permanent pacemaker may be considered only if asystole is found to be due to primary heart block

Patient Monitoring

ICU for cardiac monitoring and induced hypothermia as appropriate

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Emphasis on high-quality, minimally uninterrupted chest compressions while considering reversible causes of asystole
  • Resuscitation is likely to be successful only if reversible causes are found and corrected immediately
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Aufderheide TP, Sigurdsson G, Pirrallo RG, et al. Hyperventilation-induced hypotension during cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
    Circulation.
    2004;109:1960–1965.
  • Bernard SA, Gray TW, Buist MD, et al. Treatment of comatose survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest with induced hypothermia.
    N Engl J Med
    . 2002;346(8):557–563.
  • Levine RL, Wayne MA, Miller CC. End-tidal carbon dioxide and outcome of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.
    N Engl J Med
    . 1993;337;301–306.
  • Neumar RW, Otto CW, Link MS, et al. Part 8: adult advanced cardiovascular life support: 2010 American Heart Association Guidelines for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation and Emergency Cardiovascular Care.
    Circulation
    . 2010;122:S729–S767.
  • Silvestri S, Ralls GA, Krauss B, et al. The effectiveness of out-of-hospital use of continuous end-tidal carbon dioxide monitoring on the rate of unrecognized misplaced intubation within a regional emergency medical services system.
    Ann Emerg Med.
    2005;45:497–503.
CODES
ICD9

427.5 Cardiac arrest

ICD10
  • I46.2 Cardiac arrest due to underlying cardiac condition
  • I46.8 Cardiac arrest due to other underlying condition
  • I46.9 Cardiac arrest, cause unspecified
ATAXIA
Lara K. Kulchycki
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Inability to perform coordinated movements
  • Caused by a disorder of the cerebellum or its connections:
    • Ipsilateral signs with lateral cerebellar lesions
    • Truncal ataxia with midline lesions
ETIOLOGY

Usually cerebellar in origin, but may occur with sensory, motor, or vestibular dysfunction:

  • Trauma
  • Mass lesions
  • Vascular disorders
  • Infections or postinfectious processes
  • Toxins/drugs
  • Metabolic/endocrine derangements
  • Demyelinating diseases
  • Congenital malformations
  • Hereditary disorders:
    • Inborn errors of metabolism
    • Progressive degenerative ataxias
  • Nutritional deficiencies
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Gait disturbance:
    • Ataxia often presents with unsteady gait
    • Initial sense of insecurity while walking
    • Problems with special skills (bicycling, skiing, climbing)
    • Sense of imbalance
    • Wide base stance and staggering gait
    • Test tandem gait to identify subtle ataxia
  • Limb ataxia:
    • Incoordination
    • Intention tremors
    • Clumsiness with writing, picking up objects, buttoning
    • Dysmetria: Under- or overshooting on finger-to-nose and heel-to-shin testing
    • Dysdiadochokinesis: Difficulty with rapid alternating movements
  • Truncal ataxia:
    • Head tremors
    • Truncal instability
    • Titubation: Swaying of the head/trunk while at rest
  • Dysarthria and bulbar symptoms:
    • Slurred speech
    • Staccato, scanning speech
    • Choking from incoordination of swallowing
  • Visual abnormalities:
    • Blurry vision
    • Vertigo:
      • Distinguish central from peripheral vertigo
      • Peripheral vertigo is often severe, triggered by movement, and may be accompanied by ear pain, hearing loss, or tinnitus
    • Nystagmus:
      • Gaze-evoked nystagmus: Repetitive drifts to the midline followed by fast phase to the eccentric side
      • Rebound nystagmus
  • Abnormalities of muscle tone and strength:
    • Isometrataxia: Difficulty sustaining constant force during hand use:
      • Ask patient to hold slight, steady pinching pressure against examiner’s finger (examiner will feel irregular pressure)
    • True muscle weakness or hypotonia uncommon in cerebellar disease
  • Sensory ataxia:
    • Paresthesias
    • Numbness
    • Cautious, steppage gait
    • Marked worsening of coordination with eyes closed:
      • A positive Romberg sign is the classic finding in sensory ataxia
    • Loss of position/vibration sense
    • Difficulty with fine motor skills

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