PRE HOSPITAL
Cautions: Female patients of childbearing age presenting in shock may have unrecognized ruptured ectopic pregnancy
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Vital signs unstable:
- Airway management, resuscitate as needed
- Fluid therapy with 2 large-bore IVs, oxygen, and monitor
- Type specific, or O-negative blood if hypotensive after initial fluid bolus
- Consult gynecology and transport to OR immediately for surgery
- Vital signs stable:
- Evidence of ectopic pregnancy on US:
- Obstetric–gynecologic evaluation for surgery vs. outpatient methotrexate treatment
- For patients in whom future fertility is desired, methotrexate is the best option; otherwise surgery is the definitive treatment
- No evidence of ectopic pregnancy (pregnancy of unknown location [PUL]: Early IUP vs. early ectopic):
- Desired pregnancy: Serial β-hCG every 48 hr in stable, reliable patients and in conjunction with obstetrician
- Undesired pregnancy: Dilation and curettage to evacuate uterus and confirm presence of products of conception
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Methotrexate: Initiated only in conjunction with obstetric consultant and close follow-up:
- Reliable patients with unruptured ectopic pregnancies <3.5 cm
- β-hCG levels <6,000–15,000
- Contraindications:
- Breast-feeding
- Immunodeficiency
- Pre-existing blood dyscrasia
- Clinically significant anemia
- Known sensitivity to methotrexate
- Active pulmonary disease
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Hepatic dysfunction
- Renal dysfunction
- Alcoholism
- Alcoholic liver disease
- Ectopic mass >3.5 cm (relative contraindication)
- Embryonic cardiac motion (relative contraindication)
- Most common dosing, single dose (50 mg/m
2
); serial β-hCG on days 2, 4, and 7
- If <25% decline in β-hCG from day of 1st injection, 2nd dose is given
- Multidose treatment is associated with less treatment failure
- Common side effects:
- Worsening abdominal pain
- Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
- Worsening abdominal pain usually occurs 3–7 days after methotrexate initiation.
- These are usually tubal miscarriages
- Follow-up USs are essential to rule out ectopic rupture
- Most common complication, tubal rupture in 4%
- Factors associated with methotrexate treatment failure:
- Initial hCG >5,000 mIU (5,000–9,999 mIU/mL—13% failure rate, >15,000 mIU/mL failure rate as high as 32%)
- Moderate to large free peritoneal fluid on US
- Presence of fetal cardiac activity
- Pretreatment increase in serum hCG level of more than 50% over a 48 hr period
MEDICATION
- Methotrexate: 50 mg/m
2
IM/IV × 1
- RhoGAM in Rh-negative women: 50 μg IM in women ≤12 wk pregnant; 300 μg IM in women >12 wk pregnant
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Any patient with confirmed ectopic pregnancy who is hemodynamically unstable
- Unreliable patients with increased risk factors, no available US, β-hCG >6,500 with no evidence of IUP should be admitted for observation and serial β-hCG tests
Discharge Criteria
- Decision for outpatient management should be made in conjunction with OB/GYN
- Hemodynamically stable and reliable patients with workup that cannot rule out ectopic pregnancy:
- Strict follow-up for serial β-hCG tests every 2 days
- Patients should be recorded in logbook with phone numbers to ensure follow-up
- Ectopic precautions:
Patients should return to emergency room immediately for:
- Increasing abdominal pain
- Vaginal bleeding
- Syncope or dizziness
- Patients should not be left alone until diagnosis of ectopic pregnancy can be safely ruled out
- Family and friends should also be instructed on warning signs and symptoms of ruptured/bleeding ectopic pregnancies
Issues for Referral
Phone consultation (at a minimum) with OB/GYN is essential when discharging a possible ectopic pregnancy
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
All patients with positive pregnancy tests and unconfirmed IUP must be followed by an OB/GYN
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Always obtain a pregnancy test on women of childbearing age
- Obtain serum hCG and transvaginal ultrasonography in all women with positive pregnancy test presenting with abdominal pain or vaginal bleeding
- Recognize the possibility of heterotopic pregnancies, especially in women undergoing fertility treatment
- Secure close follow-up for any patient being evaluated and discharged for ectopic pregnancy
ADDITIONAL READING
- Barnhart KT. Clinical practice. Ectopic pregnancy.
N Engl J Med.
2009;361:379–387.
- Crochet JR, Bastian LA, Chireau MV. Does this woman have an ectopic pregnancy?: The rational clinical examination systematic review.
JAMA
. 2013;309:1722–1729.
- Huancahuari N. Emergencies in early pregnancy.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2012;30:837–847.
- Marx JA, Hockberger RS, Walls RM, et al.
Rosen’s Emergency Medicine: Concepts and Clinical Practice
. 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2009.
- Stein JC, Wang R, Adler N, et al. Emergency physician ultrasonography for evaluating patients at risk for ectopic pregnancy: A meta-analysis.
Ann Emerg Med
. 2010;56:674–683.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Pregnancy, Uncomplicated
- Vaginal Bleeding
CODES
ICD9
- 633.00 Abdominal pregnancy without intrauterine pregnancy
- 633.10 Tubal pregnancy without intrauterine pregnancy
- 633.90 Unspecified ectopic pregnancy without intrauterine pregnancy
ICD10
- O00.0 Abdominal pregnancy
- O00.1 Tubal pregnancy
- O00.9 Ectopic pregnancy, unspecified
ECZEMA/ATOPIC DERMATITIS
James A. Nelson
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Atopic dermatitis is the most common cause of eczema and the terms are often used synonymously.
- Associated with allergic diseases such as asthma and allergic rhinitis
- Eczema literally means “out boil” and refers to spongiosis, the process where microvesicles form and rupture, leaving erythema, edema, crusting, and oozing
- Pruritus is highly characteristic
- Patient rub and scratch skin breakdown with oozing and crusting
- Chronically this causes epidermal hyperplasia and hyperkeratosis
- 90% of patients colonize with
Staphylococcus aureus
, and are prone to episodes of superinfection
RISK FACTORS
Genetics
- Family history of atopy (asthma, allergic rhinitis) typical
- Mutation of the filaggrin protein, part of the epidermal barrier, is strongly associated
ETIOLOGY
Atopic dermatitis is caused by a deficit in epidermal integrity that allows foreign substances to enter and trigger immune responses.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Rash, pruritus, and atopy traditionally prompt the diagnosis
- UK diagnostic criteria = pruritus and 3 of the following:
- Flexural distribution
- Atopic history (asthma or allergic rhinitis)
- History of dry skin
- Onset age <2 yr
- Objective signs of flexural dermatitis
- Additional findings:
- Cutaneous infections
- Itch when sweating
- Intolerance to wool and lipid solvents
- Triggered by stress