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X-COVER?!?
Nadia Habal, MD
Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas
What is going on?
Goals of Lecture:
How do I make my X-cover list?
How do I identify emergency from non-emergency?
How do I know when I need to go and see the patient?
How do I handle common calls/questions?
When do I need to call my resident???
How to make your CareGate list:
Log on to CareGate
Go to Cross Cover
Under “problems”, put one liner about the patient
Then list all important problems and what has been done
about them
Under “to do” section put MR number, pt allergies,
important meds, anything for X-cover to follow up on
Example:
69 y/o with PCKD and transplant kidney p/w painless hematuria
1. Renal: pt continues to have hematuria: likely ruptured renal cysts
2/2 PCKD, considering CT abd and MRI results. Also worrying about
infx, CA, etc. Continue immunosuppression with Cellcept,
prednisone. CMV/EBV by PCR neg. Urology following - possible
cystoscopy to r/o bladder source.
2.Htn: BP well controlled.
3.Paroxysmal AF: atenolol and Cardizem. Short episode of afib with
RVR overnight, with rates of 120s. Continue ASA for prophylaxis.
4.Hypothyroidism - continue replacement.
5.Anxiety - continue Ativan.
6.RA-pain relief.
7.Insomnia: Ambien.
8.Wt loss: cancer w/u.
9.Choledocholithiasis and pancreatic duct stones: ERCP today.
Example, continued:
Cross Cover To Do
F/u ERCP results
ALL: NKDA
RX: allopurinol, aspirin, atenolol, Lipitor
… You get the idea!
Not Acceptable:
“Patient intubated, sedated, in 1 ICU”… when the pt has
been extubated and on the floor for 4 days
Must update room numbers on x-cover list
Must update DNR status
Must put pertinent changes in status (e.g., if a patient
went into afib or had GI bleed or is having a procedure)
Must put all pending tests on the list
If someone is really sick, include family contact info in the
event of a code or critical change in medical status
YOU MUST UPDATE THE WHOLE LIST EVERYDAY!!!
What do I do when I’m called?
We will go through some basics by organ systems today
Future subjects to be covered during Internship 101
lecture series:
ID:
June 30: Pneumonia
CV:
July 3: Arrhythmias
GI:
July 7: GI bleeding
Pulm: July 10: Sepsis/SIRS
Endo: July 17: Hyperglycemic states (DKA and HONC)
Neuro: July 31: Altered mental status and “Brain Code”
NEUROLOGY
Altered Mental Status
Seizures
Cord Compression
Falls
Delirium Tremens
Altered Mental Status
Always go to the bedside!!!
Try to redirect patient: drowsy, stuporous, making
inappropriate comments?
Is this a new change? How long?
Check for any recent/new medications administered
Check VITALS, alertness/orientation, pupils, nuchal
rigidity, heart/lungs/abdomen, strength
Scan recent labs in chart including: cardiac enzymes,
electrolytes, +cultures
If labs unavailable, get stat Accucheck, oxygen saturation
Try naloxone (Narcan), usually 0.4-1.2 mg IV, if there is any
possibility of opiate OD
“Move Stupid”
Metabolic – B12 or thiamine deficiency
Oxygen – hypoxemia is a common cause of confusion
Others - including anemia, decreased cerebral blood flow (e.g., low cardiac output),
CO poisoning
Vascular – CVA, intracerebral hemorrhage, vasculitis, TTP, DIC, hyperviscosity,
hypertensive encephalopathy
Endocrine – hyper/hypoglycemia, hyper/hypothyroidism, high /low cortisol states and
Electrolytes – particularly sodium or calcium
Seizures –post–ictal confusion, unresponsive in status epilepticus; also consider
Structural problems – lesions with mass effect, hydrocephalus
Tumor, Trauma, or Temperature (either fever or hypothermia)
Uremia – and another disorder, hepatic encephalopathy
Psychiatric – diagnosis of exclusion; ICU psychosis and "sundowning" are common
Infection – any sort, including CNS, systemic, or simple UTI in an elderly patient
Drugs – including intoxication or withdrawal from alcohol, illicit or prescribed drugs
Seizures
Go to bedside to determine if patient still actively seizing
Call your resident
Check your ABCs
Place patient in left lateral decubitus position
Immediate Accucheck
If still seizing, give diazepam 2mg/min IV until seizure stops or
max of 20mg (alternative: lorazepam 2-4mg IV over 2-5min)
Give thiamine 100 mg IV first, then 1 amp D50
Load phenytoin 15-20 mg/kg in 3 divided doses at 50 mg/min
(usually 1 g total)
Remember, phenytoin is not compatible with glucose-containing
solutions or with diazepam; if you have given these meds earlier, you
need a second IV!
If still seizing >30min, pt is in status—call Neuro (they can order
bedside EEG)
Get Head CT if appropriate and if pt stabilized
Cord Compression
Suspect in patients with new weakness or change in sensation
(especially if they have a demonstrable level), new bowel/bladder
retention or incontinence.
Prognosis is dismal for pts w/no function for >24h.
Prognosis is best for pts with new, incomplete loss (i.e. weakness).
Surgical emergency: call Neurosurgery.
Stabilize the spine: collars for C-spine, Turtle shells (TLSO) for
T/L-spine.
Dexamethasone not always indicated (in case of traumatic
fracture, for instance).
If tumor, needs immediate radiotherapy.
Falls
Go to the bedside!!!
Check mental status
Check vital signs including pulse ox
Check med list
Check blood glucose
Examine pt to ensure no fractures
Thorough neuro check
Check tilt blood pressures if appropriate
If on coumadin/elevated INR—consider head CT to r/o
bleed
Delirium Tremens (DTs)
Give thiamine 100mg, folate 1mg, MVI
See if patient has alcohol history
Check blood alcohol level
DTs usually occur ~ 3 days after last ingestion
Make sure airway is protected (vomiting risk)
Use Ativan 2mg at a time until pt calm, may need Ativan
drip, make sure you do not cause respiratory depression
Monitor in ICU for seizure activity
Always keep electrolytes replaced
PULMONARY
Shortness of Breath
Oxygen De-saturations
Shortness of Breath
Go to the bedside!!!
Check an oxygen saturation and ABG if indicated
Check CXR if indicated
Causes of SOB
Pulmonary:
Pneumonia, pneumothorax, PE, aspiration, bronchospasm, upper
airway obstruction, ARDS
Cardiac:
MI/ischemia, CHF, arrhythmia, tamponade
Metabolic:
Acidosis, sepsis
Hematologic:
Anemia, methemoglobinemia
Psychiatric:
Anxiety – common, but a diagnosis of exclusion!
Oxygen Desaturations
Supplemental Oxygen
Nasal cannula: for mild desats
Face mask/Ventimask: offers up to 55% FIO2
Non-rebreather: offers up to 100% FIO2
BIPAP: good for COPD
Start settings at: IPAP 10 and EPAP 5
IPAP helps overcome work of breathing and helps to change
PCO2
EPAP helps change pO2
CPAP: good for pulmonary edema, hypercapnea, OSA
Start at 5-7
Indications for Intubation
Uncorrectable hypoxemia (pO2 < 70 on 100% O2 NRB)
Hypercapnea (pCO2 > 55) with acidosis (remember
that people with COPD often live with pCO2 50–70 +)
Ineffective respiration (max inspiratory force < 25 cm
H2O)
Fatigue (RR>35 with increasing pCO2)
Airway protection
Upper airway obstruction
Mechanical Ventilation
If patient needs to be intubated, start with mask-
ventilation until help from upper level Arrives
Initial settings for Vent:
A/C FIO2 100 Vt 700 Peep 5 (unless increased ICP,
then no peep) RR 12
Check CXR to ensure proper ETT placement (should
be around 4cm above the carina)
Check ABG 30 min after pt intubated and adjust
settings accordingly
CARDIOLOGY
Chest pain
Hypotension
Hypertension
Arrhythmias
Chest Pain
Go and see the patient!!!
Why is the patient in house?
Recent procedure?
STAT EKG and compare to old ones
Is the pain cardiac/pulmonary/GI?—from H+P
Vital signs: BP, pulse, SpO2
If you think it’s cardiac:
Give SL nitroglycerin if pain still present (except if low
blood pressure, give morphine instead)
Supplemental oxygen
Aspirin 325 mg
Hypotension
Go and see the patient!!!
Repeat Manual BP and HR
Look at recent vitals trends
Look for recent ECHO/ meds pt has been given.
EXAM:
Vitals: orthostatic? tachycardic?
Neuro: AMS
HEENT: dry mucosa?
Neck: flat vs. JVD (=CHF)
Chest: dyspnea, wheezes (?anaphylaxis), crackles (=CHF)
Heart: manual pulse, S3 (CHF)
Ext: cool, clammy, edema
Management of Hypotension
If offending med, stop the med!
If volume down/bleeding: give wide open IV NS
Correct hypoxia
Recent steroid use? Adrenal insufficiency
Is there a neuro cause for hypotension?
If appropriate, consider: PE, tamponade, pneumothorax
If fever, consider sepsis—need for empiric antibiotics
If hives and wheezing, consider anaphylaxis—tx with
oxygen, epinephrine, Benadryl
Need for pressors? Transfer to ICU!
Commonly Used Pressors
Name
Receptor Affected Dose
Action
Phenylephrine
(Neosynephrine)
Alpha 1
10–200 mcg/min
Pure vasoconstrictor;
causes ischemia in
extremities
Norepinephrine
(Levophed)
A1, B1
2–64 mcg/min
Vasoconstriction, positive
inotropy; causes
arrhythmias
Dopamine
Dopa
1–2 mcg/kg/min
Splanchnic vasodilation
("renal dose dopamine"
even though many doubt
such effect exists)
B1
2–10 mcg/kg/min
Positive inotropy;
Causes Arrhythmias
A1
10–20
mcg/kg/min
Vasoconstriction;
Causes Arrhythmias
B1, B2
1–20 mcg/kg/min
Positive inotropy and
chronotropy;
Causes Hypotension
Dobutamine
Hypertension
Is there history of HTN?
Check BP trends
Is patient having pain, anxiety, headache, SOB?
Confirm patient is not post-stroke pt—BP parameters are
different: initial goal is BP>180/100 to maintain adequate
cerebral perfusion
EXAM:
Manual BP in both arms
Fundoscopic exam: look for papilledema and hemorrhages
Neuro: AMS, focal weakness or paresis
Neck: JVD, stiffness
Lungs: crackles
Cardiac: S3
Management of Hypertension
If patient is asymptomatic and exam is WNL:
See if any doses of BP meds were missed; if so, give now
If no doses missed, may give an early dose of current med
Remember, no need to acutely reduce BP unless
emergency
So, start a medication that you would have normally
picked in this patient as the next agent of choice
according to JNC/co-morbidities/allergies
Hypertension (continued)
URGENCY
SBP>210 or DBP>120
No end organ damage
EMERGENCY
SBP>210 or DBP>120
Acute end organ damage
OK to treat with PO
Treat with IV agents
agents
Decrease MAP by 25% in
one hour; then decrease
to goal of <160/100 over
2-6 hrs.
GI
Nausea/Vomiting
GI Bleed
Constipation
Diarrhea
Acute Abdominal Pain
Nausea/Vomiting
Vital signs, blood sugar, recent meds?
Make sure airway is protected
EXAM: abdominal exam, rectal (considering obstruction,
pancreatitis, cholecystitis),neuro exam (increased ICP?)
May check KUB
Treatment:
Phenergan 12.5-25mg IV/PR (lower in elderly)
Zofran 4-8mg IV
Reglan 10-20 mg IV (especially if suspect gastroparesis)
If no relief, consider NG tube (especially if suspect bowel
obstruction)
GI Bleed (to be discussed in detail at a later date):
UPPER
LOWER
Hematemesis, melena
BRBPR, hematochezia
Check vitals
Check vitals
Place NG tube
Rectal exam
NPO
Wide open fluids if low BP
Wide open fluids vs. blood
NPO
Check H/H serially
Check H/H serially
If suspect PUD: Protonix
Transfuse if appropriate
drip
Pain out of proportion? Don’t
If suspect varices: octreotide
forget ischemic colitis!
Call Resident and GI
Constipation
Very common call!
Check: electrolytes, pain meds, bowel regimen
Check KUB if suspect ileus/obstruction
Rectal exam to check for fecal impaction/mechanical
obstruction
Treatment:
If not acute process, can order “laxative of choice”
Fleets enema for immediate relief (unless renal failure b/c
high phos—then can order water/soap suds enema)
Lactulose/mag citrate PO if no mechanical obstruction
Diarrhea
Check: electrolytes, vitals, meds
Quantify volume, number, description of stools
Labs: fecal leukocytes, stool culture, guaiac, C.diff toxin if
recent antibiotic or nursing home resident
Treatment:
Colitis: flagyl 500mg po tid
GI bleed: per GI section
If don’t suspect infection: loperamide initially 4mg then 2mg
after each unformed stool up to 16mg daily
Acute Abdominal Pain
Go to the bedside!!!
Assess vitals, rapidity of onset, location, quality and severity
of pain
LOCATION:
Epigastric: gastritis, PUD, pancreatitis, AAA, ischemia
RUQ: gallbladder, hepatitis, hepatic tumor, pneumonia
LUQ: spleen, pneumonia
Peri-umbilical: gastroenteritis, ischemia, infarction, appendix
RLQ: appendix, nephrolithiasis
LLQ: diverticulitis, colitis, nephrolithiasis, IBD
Suprapubic: PID, UTI, ovarian cyst/torsion
Acute Abdomen?
Assess severity of pain, rapidity of onset
If acute abdomen suspected, call Surgery
Do you need to do a DRE?
KUB vs. Abdominal Ultrasound vs. CT
Treatment:
Pain management—may use morphine if no
contraindication
Remember, if any narcotics are started, use sparingly in
elderly, ensure pt on adequate bowel regimen
RENAL/ELECTROLYTES
Decreased urine output
Hyperkalemia
Foley catheter problems
Decreased Urine Output
Oliguria: <20 cc/hour (<400 cc/day)
Check for volume status, renal failure, accurate I/O, meds
Consider bladder scan
Labs:
UA: WBC (UTI); elevated specific gravity (dehydration);
RBC (UTI/urolithiasis); tubular epithelial cells (ATN); WBC
casts (interstitial nephritis); Eosinophils (interstitial casts)
Chemistries: BUN/Cr, K, Na
Treatment of Decreased UOP
Decreased Volume Status:
Bolus 500 cc NS
Repeat if no effect
Normal/Increased Volume:
May ask nursing to check
bladder scan for residual
urine
Check Foley placement
Lasix 20 mg IV
Foley Catheter Problems:
Why/when was it placed?
Does the patient still need it?
Confirm no kinks or clamps
Confirm bag is not full
Examine output for blood clots or sediment
Do not force Foley in if giving resistanc: call Urology
Nursing may flush out Foley if it must stay in
The sooner it’s out, the better (when appropriate)
Hyperkalemia
Ensure correct value—not hemolysis in lab
Check for renal insufficiency, meds
Check EKG for acute changes, peaked T-waves, PR
prolongation followed by loss of P waves, QRS
widening
Treatment of Hyperkalemia
Immediate Rx (works in minutes): for EKG changes,
stabilize myocardium with 1-2 amps calcium gluconate
Temporary Rx (shift K into cells):
2 amps D50 plus 10 units regular insulin IV: decreases K by
0.5-1.5 mEq/L and lasts several hours
2 amps NaHCO3: best reserved for non-ESRD patients with
severe hyperkalemia and acidosis
B2-agonists: effects similar to insulin/D50
Long-lasting Elimination:
Kayexalate 30g po (repeat if no BM) or retention enema
NS and Lasix
Dialysis
ENDOCRINOLOGY
DKA
HONC
(Will be covered in detail at later time)
DKA
Identify precipitating factor (e.g., infection, MI,
noncompliance with meds)
Check for anion gap
Check for ketones in urine or serum
Give bolus 1 Liter NS, then run IVF at 200 ml/hour if no
contraindication
Start insulin drip DKA protocol in ICU (EPIC order)
Check electrolytes every 4 hours and replace as appropriate
HONC
Similar to DKA but for Type II diabetes and no ketones
There is also an insulin drip NON-DKA protocol in ICU
(EPIC order)
ID
Positive Blood Culture
Fever
Positive Blood Culture
You get called by the lab because a blood culture has become
Positive.
Check if primary team had been waiting on blood culture.
Is the patient very sick/ ICU?
Is the culture “1 out of 2” and/or “coag negative staph”? This is
likely a contaminant.
If pt is on abx, make sure appropriate coverage based on
culture and sensitivity
If you believe it to be true Positive then give appropriate
empiric treatment for organism and likely source of
infection/co-morbidities of patient and discuss with primary
team in the AM
Fever
Has the patient been having fevers?
DDX: infection, inflammation/stress rxn, ETOH
withdrawal, drug rxn, transfusion rxn
If the last time cultures were checked >24 hrs ago, then
order blood cultures x 2, UA/culture, CXR, respiratory
culture if appropriate
If cultures are all negative to date, likely no need to
empirically start abx unless a source is apparent and you
are treating a specific etiology
HEME
Anticoagulation
Blood replacement products
Anticoagulation
Appropriate for DVT, PE, Acute Coronary Syndrome
Usually start with low molecular weight heparin—(Lovenox)
1 mg/kg every 12 hours and adjust for renal fxn
If need to turn on/off quickly (e.g., pt going for procedure)
use heparin drip—there is a protocol in EPIC
Risk factors for bleeding on heparin:
Surgery, trauma, or stroke within the previous 14 days
History of peptic ulcer disease, GI bleeding or GU bleeding
Platelet count less than 150K
Age > 70 yrs
Hepatic failure, uremia, bleeding diathesis, brain mets
Blood Replacement Products
PRBC: One unit should raise Hct 3 points or Hgb 1 g/dl
Platelets: One unit should raise platelet count by 10K;
there are usually 6 units per bag ("six-pack")
use when platelets <10-20K in nonbleeding patient.
use when platelets <50K in bleeding pt, pre-op pt, or before
a procedure
FFP: contains all factors
use when patient in DIC or liver failure with elevated coags
and concomitant bleeding or for needed reversal of INR
RADIOLOGY
What test do I order for what problem?
Plain Films
CT scans
MRI
Plain Films
CXR:
Portable if pt in unit or bed bound
PA/Lat is best for looking for effusions/infiltrates
Decubitus to see if an effusion layers; needs to layer >1cm
in order to be safe to tap
Abdominal X-ray:
Acute abdominal series: includes PA CXR, upright KUB
and flat KUB
CT
Head CT
Non-contrast best for bleeding, CVA, trauma
Contrast best for anything that effects the blood brain
barrier, tumors, infection
CT Angiogram
If suspect PE and no contraindication to contrast (e.g.,
elevated creatinine)
Abdominal CT
Always a good idea to call the radiologist if unsure whether contrast is
needed/depending on what you are looking for
Renal stone protocol to look for nephrolithiasis
If you have a pt who has had upper GI study with contrast, radiology won’t
do CT until contrast is gone—have to check KUB to see if contrast has
passed first
MRI
Increased sensitivity for soft tissue pathology
Best choice for:
Brain: neoplasms, abscesses, cysts, plaques, atrophy,
infarcts, white matter disease
Spine: myelopathy, disk herniation, spinal stenosis
Contraindications: pacemaker, defibrillator, aneurysm
clips, neurostimulator, insulin/infusion pump, implanted
drug infusion device, cochlear implant, any metallic
foreign body
DEATH
Pronouncing a patient
Notify the patient’s family
Request an autopsy
How to write a death note
Pronouncing a Patient
Check for:
Spontaneous movement
If on telemetry—any meaningful activity
Response to verbal stimuli
Response to tactile stimuli (nipple pinch or sternal rub)
Pupillary light reflex (should be dilated and fixed)
Respirations over all lung fields
Heart sounds over entire precordium
Carotid, femoral pulses
Notify the Patient’s Family
Call family if not present and ask to come in, or if family is
present:
Explain to them what happened
Ask if they have any questions
Ask if they would like someone from pastoral care to be
called
Let them know they may have time with the deceased
Nursing will put ribbon over the door to give family
privacy
Request an Autopsy
Ask family if they would like an autopsy
Medical Examiner will be called if:
Patient hospitalized <24 hours
Death associated with unusual circumstances
Death associated with trauma
How to Write a Death Note
DOCUMENTATION:
“Called to bedside by nurse to pronounce (name of pt).”
Chart all findings previously discussed:
“No spontaneous movements were present, pupils were
dilated and fixed, no breath sounds were appreciated, etc.”
“Patient pronounced dead at (date and time).”
“Family and attending physician were notified.”
“Family accepts/declines autopsy.”
Document if patient was DNR/DNI vs. Full Code.
Bottom Line:
When in doubt, call your Resident
It is OK to call your attending if over your head
You are Never All Alone
Write a NOTE about what has happened for the
primary team
Call primary team in the AM about important events.
Have fun…it’s gonna be a great year!