The Comatose Patient
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Transcript The Comatose Patient
The Comatose
Patient
Hans House, MD, FACEP
Professor
Department of Emergency Medicine
University of Iowa
Objective
Outline the general approach to the
patient with stupor or coma, including the
use of clinical, laboratory, and imaging
investigations
Pathophysology
Initial Management
A: Airway control if needed
B: Assist ventilations, 100% O2
C: Volume if hypotensive
D: Dextrose
Consider: glucose, thiamine, nalaxone
Differential Diagnosis
A - alcohol, anoxia
E - epilepsy
I - insulin (diabetes)
O - overdose
U - uremia, underdose
T- trauma
I - infection
P - psychiatric
S – stroke / sub-arachnoid
Differential Diagnosis
Most common ED diagnosis:
Trauma
CVA
Intoxications
Metabolic
Post- ictal state
Post- cardiopulmonary arrest
Differential Diagnosis
1) Cerebral Anemia
2) Mechanical injury
3) Convulsive attacks
4) CVA
5) Poisons, endogenous
and exogenous
6) Infection
Young GS. Can Med
Assoc J. 1934; 31(4):
381–385.
General Approach: History
“Further history limited to
patient’s medical condition”
General Approach: History
Ask family, EMS, chart:
Time course of onset
Duration of symptoms
Focal signs
Past Medical History
Medications
Alcohol or drug use
General Approach: Physical
PE normal in 85% of all patients
Vital signs are vital!
Elevated or lowered temp may be helpful
Need a core temp!
Ventilatory patterns not helpful
General Approach: Physical
After nervous, skin is
the most useful system
to examine
Trauma
Infection
Toxidromes
Jaundice
Seizure trauma
Rhinnorrhea
General Approach: Physical
Nervous System
Assess and document level of arousal
Useful for prognosis, not diagnosis
Use GCS
“Less than eight, in-tu-bate!”
General Approach: Physical
Assessing level of arousal
Shouting, sternal rub, pinching trapezius,
nailbed pressure
Supraorbital pressure? Smelling Salts?
General Approach: Physical
Motor function
Unable to do routine oppositional force
Use reflexes
Look for asymmerty
General Approach: physical
Cranial nerves: Pupils
Supertentorial mass/ hemorrhage or
primary brainstem lesion
Disruption of 3rd CN or brainstem nuclei
Transtentorial herniation:
First dilation/ loss of light reflex
Later, midrange (4-5mm) and fixed
May be mimicked in severe sedative O/D
General Approach: physical
Cranial nerves: Pupils
20% of population have
1mm difference in pupil
size
Try looking at Driver’s
License for previous doc.
of anisicoria
Huge: anticholinergic
Tiny: pontine, opiate
General Approach: Physical
Cranial Nerves: eye movements
Large cerebral mass lesions cause
deviation toward side of lesion
Seizure focus (irritable inflammation or
blood) causes deviation away from lesion
Vestibuloocular reflexes
Oculocephalic (doll’s eyes)
Oculovestibular (caloric testing)
General Approach: Physical
Oculocephalic Reflex
Normal is for the eyes to turn
opposite to head movement to
keep focused on a fixed point
Do not perform in trauma patient!
Positive Doll’s Eyes?
General Approach
Oculovestibular Reflex
Torso inclined 30º
50ml cold water into ear
COWS:
Cold water causes nystagmus toward
contralateral ear
Warm water causes nystagmus to ipsilateral
Conscious patients may vomit
Test both sides: may be asymmetrical
General Approach: Physical
Cranial Nerves: Corneal reflexes
Indicative of depth of metabolic coma
Absent 24 hours after trauma / cardiac
arrest indicates poor prognosis
May be diminished in conscious elderly,
diabetic, or optho patients due to loss of
sensation of cornea
Toxidromes
Pinpoint pupils, decreased respiratory
effort and rate, hypothermia, AC scars
Widely dilated pupils, moderate
tachycardia (120’s), flushed skin, dry
skin
Hyperthermia, tachycardia, tremor,
myoclonus, rigidity
Miosis, salivation, lacrimation, urination,
defecation, emesis, bradycardia
Toxidromes
Pinpoint pupils, decreased respiratory
effort and rate, hypothermia, AC scars
Widely dilated pupils, moderate tachycardia (120’s), flushed skin,
dry skin
Hyperthermia, tachycardia, tremor, myoclonus, rigidity
Miosis, salivation, lacrimation, urination, defecation, emesis,
bradycardia
Toxidromes
Pinpoint pupils, decreased respiratory effort and rate,
hypothermia, AC scars
Widely dilated pupils, moderate
tachycardia (120’s), flushed skin, dry
skin
Hyperthermia, tachycardia, tremor, myoclonus, rigidity
Miosis, salivation, lacrimation, urination, defecation, emesis,
bradycardia
Toxidromes
Pinpoint pupils, decreased respiratory effort and rate,
hypothermia, AC scars
Widely dilated pupils, moderate tachycardia (120’s), flushed skin,
dry skin
Hyperthermia, tachycardia, tremor,
myoclonus, rigidity
Miosis, salivation, lacrimation, urination, defecation, emesis,
bradycardia
Toxidromes
Pinpoint pupils, decreased respiratory effort and rate,
hypothermia, AC scars
Widely dilated pupils, moderate tachycardia (120’s), flushed skin,
dry skin
Hyperthermia, tachycardia, tremor, myoclonus, rigidity
Miosis, salivation, lacrimation, urination,
defecation, emesis, bradycardia
Laboratory Testing
Serum labs
Radiography (Head CT)
Lumbar Puncture
EEG
Laboratory Testing: Serum
Accu-check is part of the ABCD’s!
Electrolytes essential to r/o metabolic
Na, BUN/Cr, anion gap
Consider
UA, urine and blood cultures
TSH
Carboxyhemoglobin
Drug Screen and EtOH level
Laboratory Testing: CT
CT is initial test of choice
(better for blood than MRI)
Laboratory Testing: LP
Head CT before LP recommended for
possible mass lesions
DO NOT DELAY ANTIBIOTICS/
STEROIDS! (you have the blood
cultures . . .)
LP after CT if SAH suspected
Laboratory Testing: EEG
Indications:
Status epilepticus (SE) with paralysis
Suspected non-convulsive SE (NCSE)
Aid in diagnosis of unknown case
8 of 236 patients without overt seziure
activity in coma had NCSE
Pattern may indicate cause of coma
(metabolic, structural, seizure, anoxic)
Case #1
78 yo male BIB RA from SNF for fever
and altered mental status
Temp 40º, HR 110, BP 95/60, R 20
PE: dry mucous membranes, poor tugor
Minimally responsive, groans when neck
flexed, hot to touch
UA normal
Case #1
Blood Cx
Dexamethasone
10mg q 6hrs
Vancomycin and
Ceftriaxone
Head CT
LP
Case #2
42 yo male of “no fixed abode” BIB
police after found down in street
Pt is “well known to service”
Vitals normal except mild hypothermia
GCS 9 (withdraws and moans to pain)
Odor of EtOH on breath
Case #2
Pt left in back
room for 4 hours to
“sober up”
Found seizing
Further exam
found a hematoma
to left parietal
scalp
Case #3
46 yo male alcoholic BIB family for
decreased consciousness
He moans in response to stimulation,
withdraws from pain, eye remain shut
Skin is jaundiced, sclera icteric
Foul breath (fetor hepaticus)
Abdomen: swollen, caput medusae
Case #3
Intubation?
Low grade cerebral
edema sec. to NH4
Lactulose, neomycin,
rifaximin
Differential dx?
Precipitating causes
(GI bleed, benzo,
infection, etc)
Case #4
22 yo male BIB police for odd behavior
He was found in the street yelling
Agitated, combative, anxious
BP 184/97, HR 140, R 22, T38
Eyes open to pain, moves all 4’s,
incomprehensible sounds
Eyes have rotatory nystagmus
Case #4
Used PCP
Essentially adrenergic
toxidrome
Hallucinogen
Causes all forms of
nystagmus
Case #5
39 yo female found down by husband
Had complained of a headache earlier
PMH: Htn
FHx: polycystic kidney disease
BP 150/90, HR 65, T37
Eyes closed, withdraws to pain, no verbal
Case #5
CT: 93% sensitive,
99% specific for SAH
CT Angio probably
more sensitive
LP still needed to
rule out definitively
Transfer
Case #6
27 yo female BIB family for odd behavior
Previous history of bipolar d/o
Now not responsive
No signs of trauma or intoxication
Exam normal except for intermittent
nystagmus and eye deviation
All labs, including head CT and drug
screen WNL
Case #6
EEG revealed
persistent seizure
activity
Pt has no myoclonic
activity on exam
Non-Convulsive Status
Epilepticus
Mental status improved
with giving lorazepam
Conclusions
ABC-D (D is for Dextrose)
If elevated or low Temp would change
your management, get a core temp
Less than 8, in-tu-bate!
For meningitis: IV, then blood cultures,
then steroids, then Abx, then CT, then LP
Beware of occult trauma in the intoxicated
Any Questions?