MEDICATION
- Carboprost tromethamine (Hemabate): 0.25 mg IM q15–60min (up to 2 doses)
- Methylergonovine maleate (Methergine): 0.2 mg IM
- Oxytocin: 20–40 U IV in 1 L of normal saline infused at 250–500 mL/h IV
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- All women with uncomplicated deliveries and no significant postpartum bleeding should be admitted to labor and delivery or postpartum unit for care and monitoring
- Obtain pediatric or neonatal consultation and admit to neonatal ICU:
- All infants with respiratory distress
- Gestational age <36 wk
- Weight <5 lb
- Low Apgar scores
- Term infants with none of above complications may be admitted to the nursery or with mother to combined maternal–fetal unit
- If transferring the mother and infant after delivery, consider using 2 ambulances
Discharge Criteria
- After adequate recovery from delivery, patient can be taken labor and delivery or postpartum unit
- Patient should not be discharged home from ED
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Be ready for complications such as cord prolapse, shoulder dystocia, breech delivery
- Be prepared to treat 2 patients after delivery—mother and infant
ADDITIONAL READING
- Enright K, Kidd A, Macleod A. Postpartum emergencies.
Emerg Med J
. 2009;26:310.
- Marx JA, Hockberger RS, Walls RM, et al.
Rosen’s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Practice
. 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2009.
- Mirza FG, Gaddipati S. Obstetric emergencies.
Semin Perinatol
. 2009;33:97–103.
- Roberts JR, Hedges JR, Chanmugan AS, et al., eds.
Clinical Procedures in Emergency Medicine
. 4th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders; 2004.
CODES
ICD9
- 650 Normal delivery
- 661.30 Precipitate labor, unspecified as to episode of care or not applicable
- V23.7 Supervision of high-risk pregnancy with insufficient prenatal care
ICD10
- O09.30 Suprvsn of preg w insufficient antenat care, unsp trimester
- O62.3 Precipitate labor
- O80 Encounter for full-term uncomplicated delivery
DEMENTIA
Gabriel Wardi
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Progressive deterioration in cognition, behavior, or both without impaired consciousness that is severe enough to interfere with activities of daily living due to alteration in cortical brain function. A chronic and progressive form of organic brain syndrome.
- Over 50 different causes, but >60% caused by Alzheimer disease
- Involves increased neurofibrillary tangles and elevated beta amyloid plaques
- Prevalence 1% at age 60 yr to 30–50% by age 85 yr
- Characterized by gradual decline in cognitive functioning:
- Generally evolves over period of years
- Course is highly variable, months to years in duration
- Rapid decline indicative of other causes, or rare rapid onset causes of dementia (prion diseases, progressive supranuclear palsy)
- Variable hereditary
- Increased risk of Alzheimer disease in 1st-degree relatives of patients with Alzheimer
- Apolipoprotein ε4 is the only well-established mutation with late-onset Alzheimer
ETIOLOGY
- Primary dementia:
- Cortical (Alzheimer disease, frontotemporal dementia)
- Subcortical (Huntington disease, Parkinson disease, progressive supranuclear palsy)
- Secondary dementia:
- Cerebrovascular disease (multi-infarct dementia)
- Toxic, metabolic, nutritional derangements
- Prion disorders (Creutzfelt-Jakob or bovine spongiform encephalopathy and variants)
- Infectious agents (HIV, syphilis, encephalitis)
- Vasculitis (systemic lupus erythematosus, thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura)
- Traumatic (chronic subdural hematomas, pugilistic dementia)
- Structural (normal pressure hydrocephalus, brain masses)
- Binswanger disease
- Reversible (∼15%) causes include normal pressure hydrocephalus, medications, intracranial masses, and alcohol abuse syndromes
- Pseudodementia:
- Depression in elderly can present with dementia-like symptoms
- Common in mildly demented patients, look for pin-point event with short duration of symptoms
- Generally with history of psychiatric conditions, emphasis on failures and disabilities
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Insidious onset, with initial complaints of anxiety, depression, frustration, increased forgetfulness
- Generally preceded by “mild cognitive impairment,” an intermediate state of cognitive function between normal aging and those meeting criteria for dementia
- Can be grouped into 3 categories:
- Early: Difficulty concentrating, memory deficits, difficulty with complex tasks, social withdrawal
- Moderate: Major memory difficulties, need assistance with activities of daily living
- Severe: Minimal ability to speak or communicate, difficulty eating, loss of psychomotor skills
- Diagnostic criteria (from American Psychiatric Association):
- Development of multiple cognitive deficits manifested by both:
- Memory impairment
- One (or more) of the following cognitive disturbances: Aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, disturbance in executive functioning
- Cognitive deficits that cause significant impairment in social or occupational functioning and are a decline from prior levels of functioning
- Deficits do not occur during course of delirium
History
- Must include input from family and friends
- Complete list of medications
- Comorbid diseases
- Prior history of similar behavior
- Onset and progression
- Consider use of Montreal Cognitive Assessment, Short Test of Mental Status (alternative to mini-mental status exam)
Physical-Exam
Full and complete physical exam:
- Head-to-toe evaluation, all organ systems
- Meticulous neurologic exam:
- Mental status evaluation
- Cranial nerves
- Reflexes
- Motor, sensory, cerebellar, gait
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Must eliminate acute reversible or exacerbating factors
- Extent of workup is related to history and course of illness:
- Extensive evaluation for new diagnosis
- Directed evaluation for sudden change of dementia
- Limited evaluation for stable disease previously assessed
- Must be able to identify signs and symptoms of the reversible causes of dementia
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Extent of evaluation dependent on patient condition and suspected cause
- New diagnosis or sudden deterioration:
- CBC
- ESR/CRP
- CMP
- Ammonia
- Urinalysis
- Toxicology screen
- Thyroid-stimulating hormone
- Vitamin B
12
level
- Syphilis serology (RPR)
- HIV
- Blood cultures if fever present
- Urine cultures if fever present
- Antinuclear antibody if SLE suspected
- Established diagnosis with stable disease: No tests may be required.
Imaging
- New diagnosis or sudden deterioration in established dementia:
- CXR if infection considered
- Head CT, without and with contrast
- EEG if suspicion of seizure disorder
- Brain MRI/MRA in selected cases
- More advanced imaging (PET, etc.) should be reserved for use by specialists
- Established diagnosis with stable disease: Studies may not be required.
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Lumbar puncture and CSF analysis, syphilis serology
- EEG if seizure suspected
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Toxic, metabolic, nutritional abnormalities:
- Narcotics, sedatives, hypnotics
- Alcohol
- Heavy metals
- Dehydration
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Pseudodementia
- Delirium (high suspicion for UTI and pneumonia in febrile patients)
- Senescent aging
TREATMENT