Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (129 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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Pediatric Considerations
  • If the patient is not on steroids, bacteremia risk is similar to that in the general population.
  • High incidence of pneumonia
  • Patients on steroids may not show meningeal signs
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Acute rejection
    • Nonspecific symptoms predominate because the heart is usually denervated
    • Fatigue
    • Dyspnea
    • Low-grade fever
    • Nausea
    • Vomiting
    • May be difficult to differentiate between infection and acute rejection
  • Heart failure
    • Tachypnea
    • Rales
    • Hypoxia
    • S3
    • Murmur
    • Edema
  • Allograft vasculopathy
    • As early as 3 months after transplantation (20–50% incidence by 5 yr)
    • Denervated hearts do not present with typical angina.
    • Insidious onset
      • Fatigue
      • Cough
      • Dyspnea
    • Acute onset
      • Heart failure
      • Sudden death
      • Infarction
  • Infection (Opportunistic and conventional)
    • Fever
    • Skin lesions (zoster)
    • CMV
      • Mild (flu-like illness)
      • Fever
      • Nausea
      • Malaise
      • Pneumonitis (13–50% mortality)
      • Hepatitis
      • Gastroenteritis
      • Profound leukopenia
Pediatric Considerations
  • Higher risk for post-transplant lymphoproliferative disease with Epstein–Barr virus seroconversion
  • Like adults, at risk for allograft vasculopathy and its associated cardiac ischemia
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Assess for signs of rejection, cardiac dysfunction, and infarction:
    • ECG
    • Cardiac enzymes
    • Chest radiograph
    • Echocardiography
  • Possible rejection requires biopsy, consult transplant team.
Pediatric Considerations

Normal fever workup + chest radiograph and ECG; if on steroids, perform LP

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Electrolytes:
    • Cyclosporine effects:
      • Increased blood urea nitrogen, creatinine
      • Hyperkalemia
      • Metabolic acidosis
      • Hyponatremia
  • CBC:
    • Relative eosinophilia may indicate rejection over infection
  • Blood and urine culture if febrile
  • Lumbar puncture if seizures, altered mental status, or severe headache
  • BNP (expect baseline elevation)
  • CMV titers
  • Urine antigen test
  • Cyclosporine trough level
Imaging
  • ECG
    • Tachycardia
    • 20% decrease in total voltage (nonsensitive)
    • Note that normal rhythm for denervated heart is sinus 90–110 bpm
    • Depending on transplant surgical technique, may see 2 P-waves (native and donor heart):
    • Native P-waves do not correspond to quasi-random signal
  • Chest radiograph
    • Cardiomegaly
    • Pulmonary edema
    • Pleural effusions
    • Compare with previous (healthy donor heart may appear large in small recipient)
  • Echocardiography
    • Decreased mitral deceleration time
    • Initial diastolic dysfunction
    • Biventricular enlargement
    • Mitral/tricuspid regurgitation
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Rejection
  • Infection
  • Ischemia
  • CMV
  • Viral illness
  • Malignancy
  • Cyclosporine toxicity
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Adenosine should not be given to patients who have had a heart transplant as the effects may be prolonged and unpredictable.

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • IV access
  • Oxygen
  • Monitor
  • Intubation
  • Defibrillation/pacing
  • Vasopressors as required
  • Arrhythmias
    • Advanced cardiac life support
    • Bradycardia does not respond to atropine; use isoproterenol
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Hemodynamically significant rejection
    • Methylprednisolone
    • May also require OKT3 or other anti–T-cell antibody therapy
  • Infarct/vasculopathy
    • Aspirin
    • Heparin
    • Possible angioplasty
    • Likely need retransplantation
  • CMV
    • Empiric IV ganciclovir
  • HSV
    • Oral or IV acyclovir
  • Gastroenteritis
    • Search for CMV infection with culture, serology
  • Fever without a source
    • Consult infectious disease or transplantation team
  • Headache
    • Threshold for CT scan and lumbar puncture should be low (meningitis, abscess)
  • Serious illness/trauma/operation
    • Steroid burst
    • Limit NSAID use because risk for renal insufficiency from cyclosporine and tacrolimus.
MEDICATION
  • Acyclovir: 5–10 mg/kg IV q8h calculate dose on IBW; genital herpes: 400 mg PO TID × 7–10 days; varicella: 20 mg/kg up to 800 mg PO QID for 5 days
  • Ceftriaxone: 50 mg/kg IV q12–24h
  • Cyclosporine, CellCept, tacrolimus, sirolimus, Neoral, azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil: Per transplantation team
  • Ganciclovir: Insert IV; 5 mg/kg BID for 2–3 wk (adjust for renal function)
  • Isoproterenol: 1–4 μg/min, titrate to effect; max. 10 μg/min
  • Methylprednisolone: 1 g IV; peds: 10–20 mg/kg IV
  • OKT3, daclizumab or other antibody therapy: Per transplant team
IN PATIENT CONSIDERATIONS
Admission Criteria
  • Hemodynamically significant rejection
  • Vasculopathy/ischemia
  • New dysrhythmia
  • Poorly controlled hypertension
  • Congestive heart failure
  • Dyspnea
  • Hypoxia
  • Temperature >38°C in adult or child on steroids
  • Suspected CMV (unexplained fever, gastroenteritis, or interstitial pneumonitis)
  • Not tolerating oral medicines
  • Syncope
Discharge Criteria
  • Mild rejection
  • Only in consultation with transplantation team
  • Fever in nontoxic child:
    • Do not give children stress-dose steroids
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Abecassis M, Bridges ND, Clancy CJ, et al. Solid-organ transplantation in older adults: Current status and future research.
    Am J Transplant.
    2012;12:2608–2622.
  • Chinnock R, Sherwin T, Robie S, et al. Emergency department presentation and management of pediatric heart transplant recipients.
    Pediatr Emerg Care
    . 1995;11(5):355–360.
  • Cowan SW, Davison JM, Doria C, et al. Pregnancy after cardiac transplantation.
    Cardiol Clin
    . 2012;30:441–452.
  • Massad MG. Current trends in heart transplantation.
    Cardiology
    . 2004;101:79–92.
  • Mastrobattista JM, Gomez-Lobo V. Pregnancy after solid organ transplantation.
    Obstet Gynecol
    . 2008;112:919–932.
CODES
ICD9

996.83 Complications of transplanted heart

ICD10
  • T86.20 Unspecified complication of heart transplant
  • T86.21 Heart transplant rejection
  • T86.23 Heart transplant infection
CARDIOGENIC SHOCK
Nadeem Alduaij
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Persistent hypotension and tissue hypoperfusion due to cardiac dysfunction in the presence of adequate intravascular volume and left ventricular (LV) filling pressure
  • Most common cause of death in hospitalized patients with acute MI (AMI)
  • Underlying mechanisms in AMI:
    • Pump failure:
      • ≥40% LV infarct
      • Infarct in pre-existing LV dysfunction
      • Reinfarction
    • Mechanical complications:
      • Acute mitral regurgitation
      • Ventricular septal defect
      • LV rupture
      • Pericardial tamponade
    • Right ventricular (RV) infarction
  • 5–8% of patients with STEMI develop cardiogenic shock
  • Role for a systemic inflammatory response syndrome via excess nitric oxide in the pathophysiology of cardiogenic shock
  • Role of initial treatment with β-blockers, ACEI, and high-dose diuretics in cardiogenic shock development
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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