Case Presentation - Calgary Emergency Medicine
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Transcript Case Presentation - Calgary Emergency Medicine
Case Presentation
Dave Choi
PGY-4
Emergency Medicine
Edmonton
Learning Goals
Present an interesting case
Briefly review relevant material
Be done in 25 minutes… really.
The Case
Day shift at the Foothills
Just finished resusitating a
level 1 trauma patient
Feeling good about your
intubation and chest tube skills,
you move to the minor side to
see a patient with “low back
pain”
History
Mr G. 58 y.o. male
Walked into ER
c/o lower back pain x 1/12
Seen by GP last week given
toradol and percocet, also put
on Flomax for BPH
History
Noticed lower back pain at night
initially
No history of trauma
Constant pain
Mildly relieved by hot compresses,
and pain medications
Activity doesn’t make it better or
worse
Wakes him up at night sometimes
History
Pain has been getting bit worse
Worse with coughing, straining
Radiating to flank/groin x 1/52
Some voiding difficulty (hard
start) x 1/52
No bowel incontinence
History
No fever, chills, night sweats
~5lb weight loss over last
couple months
Red Flags
Pain not relieved by lying down
Night pain
Leg weakness
Bowel, bladder, sexual symptoms
Fever (esp. IVDU)
Weight loss
History
PmHx: ↑ cholesterol
Meds: Crestor 10mg PO QD,
Percocet 1tab PO Q4H prn,
Toradol 10mg PO Q6H prn
Allergies: NKDA
FHx: father MI at 80 y.o.
History
-
SHx
non smoker
occas. EtOH
no illegal drugs
worked as senior manager for Telus,
retired earlier this year, exercises
3x/week, going on holidays soon
ANY OTHER QUESTIONS?
Ddx?
O/E
Vitals: T36.8, P54, RR15, BP137/83,
Sat 99%
Heart S1S2, no EHS/murmurs/rubs
Lungs clear, AE=AE
Abd soft, normal BS, bit tender
suprapubic, no peritoneal
signs/guarding
No pulsating mass, no flank
tenderness
MSK Exam
No erythema/warmth/swelling over
back
Pain is midline but not worse with
palpation
No atrophy legs
Normal SLR tests (Lasegue’s)
Normal ROM lower back (Schober’s)
Normal gait
Neuro Exam
Motor: 5/5 power UE,
Slight decreased power
L hip flexor, otherwise
normal
Sensation: normal
UE/LE, no saddle
anesthesia, normal
rectal tone, mild
prostate enlargement
DTR +2 bilat UE, +1
bilat LE, no Babinski
Investigations
Xray Lspine - mild degen changes
Hgb158 WBC5.9 Plt 243
Na140 K4.1 Cl105 bicarb27
Cr100, Urea5.5
Urine neg leuks/protein/hgb
Bladder scanned for 154ml
Differential Dx Low
Back Pain
Mechanical (>95%)
-
Lumbar strain (70%), degenerative process (10%), herniated disk
(4%), spinal stenosis (3%), OP compression # (4%),
spondylolisthesis (2%), traumatic # (<1%), congenital disease
(<1%), disc disruption
Non-mechanical spinal conditions
(~1%)
-
Neoplasia, infection, inflammatory arthritis, Paget’s
Visceral disease (~2%)
-
Disease of pelvic organs, renal disease, AAA, GI
PLAN
D/C home?
Any other
investigations?
- FAST (aorta)
Follow up?
10 days later…
Patient sent into ER from GP’s
office for in/out cath and
urinalysis
Lower abdominal discomfort
Cannot sleep
Physical Exam
Chest clear
Abd: bit distended, dull to
percussion, suprapubic discomfort
to palpation, symmetric fullness
Neuro exam unchanged from
previous
Bladder scanned for 550ml, foley
drained 500ml, foley left in
10 days later…
Urinalysis: 3+ leuks, many
bacteria
Started on Septra
Discharged home with U/S
pelvis booked for next day
PLAN
Leave catheter in
Toradol 30mg IM
Buscopan 10mg PO
Patient feels bit
better
• U/S pelvis
tomorrow
It’s tomorrow
U/S abdo/pelvis – normal GB + bile
ducts, liver grossly normal,
pancreas, spleen, aorta normal,
multiple bilateral renal cysts, but
kidneys otherwise normal
Now what?
Dx = prostate hyperplasia, UTI, and
mechanical back pain
Case continued
Urology
consult for
cystoscopy as
outpatient
28 days later
Still c/o back pain worse at
night
Very tender suprapubic area
Numbness / tingling feet
started 1 week ago
Meds: Flomax, Proscar,
Flexeril, Percocet prn, Toradol
prn
28 days later
-
O/E: AVSS
Neuro Exam
Motor: 4+/5 hip flexors, others 5/5
Sensation: “numb” over plantar feet
bilat, touch/pinprick ok
- DTR +1 LE bilat, +2 UE bilat, no
Babinski
- No saddle anesthesia
- Rectal tone intact
Case continued
Working Dx = Urinary retention
2o to BPH and LBP (mechanical)
Hmm…
Pt returns to ED 3 more times in
the next 4 days c/o urinary
retention and suprapubic
discomfort
Now c/o bilateral
numbness/tingling feet and
lower back pain radiating to
bilateral thighs
Investigations
Pt booked for outpt MRI L-spine
for ?neurogenic claudication by
GP
Cystoscopy – mildly enlarged
prostate
2 weeks later…
Returns to ED c/o gradual
bilateral leg weakness L>R
Has been unable to walk
independently over last 4 days
(using walker)
Foley catheter in situ x 3 weeks
Unable to cope at home
Recap of the Events
LBP, gradual onset and worsening,
night pain, worse with valsalva x
4/12
Pain radiating to bilat thighs and
groin x 3/12
Numbness/tingling bilat feet,
ascending from feet to thigh x 1/12
Urinary retention x 1/12, indwelling
foley x 3/52
Gradual bilateral leg weakness x
2/52
Neuro Exam Now
Motor: UE normal; 3/5 Hip flexors,
3+/5 Quads, 4/5 Hamstrings, 4/5
ankle dorsi/plantarflexion
Sensation: saddle anesthesia!
Reflexes: no DTRs LE, no Hoffman’s,
no Babinski, normal
bulbocavernosus reflex and rectal
tone
Case continued
Admitted under neurosurgery
MRI – syrinx vs inflammatory or
neoplastic cord disease, suggest LP
by neurology to r/o viral etiology
Lumbar Puncture – WBC103 RBC96
Prot4.15 (<0.45) Glu2.6 (2.2-4.4) neg
cultures
Diagnosis?
Case
CT chest/abd – no aortic dissection
MRA – suspicious for dural AV
fistula arising from upper lumbar
region causing ischemia
OR – L2-4 laminectomy and clipping
of spinal dural AV fistula
Dural AV fistula
a.k.a. Foix-Alajouanine Syndrome
AV malformation of spinal cord
vessels, usually lower thoracic or
lumbosacral
Can lead to ischemic injury of the
cord
Male:Female 4:1
Usually >50yo
Symptoms gradual onset over
months to years
Symptoms / Signs
- Weakness / numbness / tingling of
LE
- Gradual onset + worsening LE
weakness
- Urinary / fecal incontinence
- lower back pain +/- radiating
- Abnormal gait
- Spastic or flaccid paraparesis +/sensory level
- DTR variable; +/- Babinski
- Decreased rectal tone
Investigation /
Treatment
INVESTIGATION
MRI
Myelogram
angiography
TREATMENT
Embolization of AVM
Laminectomy w/ obliteration of AV
shunt
Case
Electrodiagnostic Study
- Axonal injury to leg muscles L>R
- Considerable # motor neurons
still intact, prognosis for
functional recovery reasonably
good
Mr. G now
Back pain significantly reduced
Unable to ambulate
Self in/out catheterizations
BMs ok
Still hoping to go on planned
holidays to Hawaii in the future
Summary
Red flags for Low back pain
Multiple ER visits with same
problem, do not get blinded by
the “diagnosis”