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 (242 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Identify risk factors for endocarditis in patients with fever of unknown etiology.
  • Blood cultures
  • ECG is needed to confirm the diagnosis.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC:
    • Anemia (sometimes hemolytic)
    • Leukocytosis (with granulocytosis and bandemia)
  • Blood cultures:
    • Multiple sets (3 sets over a time period) should be obtained before antibiotic administration:
      • 5–10% with endocarditis have false-negative cultures
      • Consider culture of catheter device
  • Elevated sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein (lacks specificity)
  • Urinalysis:
    • Microscopic hematuria
Imaging
  • CXR:
    • CHF
    • Septic pulmonic emboli, which may be seen in right-sided endocarditis
  • EKG
    • Arrhythmia, new heart block
  • Echocardiogram
    • Acute valvular pathology
    • Abscess
    • Vegetations
    • Transesophageal echo provides greater sensitivity.
  • CT scan
    • May provide comprehensive information and valvular abnormalities
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Rheumatic fever
  • Atrial myxoma
  • Acute pericarditis
  • MI
  • Aortic dissection with regurgitant valve
  • Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
  • Systemic lupus erythematosus
  • Occult neoplasm with metastasis
  • Septicemia
  • Cotton fever
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Monitor for signs of heart failure.
  • Operative repair if:
    • Severe valvular dysfunction causing failure
    • Unstable prosthesis
    • Perivalvular extension with intracardiac abscess
    • Antimicrobial therapy failure
    • Large or fungal vegetations
  • Antibiotic therapy:
    • IV, bactericidal, and empiric, pending culture results
    • Native valve or congenital abnormality:
      • Penicillin G + nafcillin + gentamicin
      • Vancomycin + gentamicin
    • Prosthetic valve or history of IVDA:
      • Vancomycin + gentamicin + rifampin
      • Nafcillin + gentamicin + rifampin (if methicillin-resistant
        S. aureus
        [MRSA] is not suspected)
      • If MRSA vancomycin failure/intolerant consider daptomycin or quinupristin–dalfopristin
      • Vancomycin resistant
      • Enterococcus faecium
        consider quinupristin–dalfopristin
      • Enterococcal: Penicillin G + gentamicin; vancomycin + gentamicin
      • Enterococcal (gentamicin resistant): Penicillin G + streptomycin
    • Fungal:
      • Amphotericin B
    • HACEK:
      • Ceftriaxone
MEDICATION
  • Amphotericin B:
    • Test dose 0.1 mg/kg up to 1 mg slow IV
    • Wait 2–4 hr.
    • If tolerated, begin 0.25 mg/kg IV and advance to 0.6 mg/kg IV QID
  • Ceftriaxone: 2 g/d IV (peds: 100 mg/kg/24h)
  • Daptomycin: 4 mg/kg/d U IV
  • Gentamicin: 1 mg/kg IV q8h (peds: 3 mg/kg/24h in 3 equally div. doses)
  • Nafcillin: 2 g IV q4h
  • Penicillin G: 4 million IU IV q4h (peds: 300,000 U/kg/d div. into 4 equal doses)
  • Quinupristin–dalfopristin: 7.5 mg/kg IV q8h (peds: 7.5 mg/kg/12h)
  • Rifampin: 600 mg PO QID
  • Streptomycin: 15 mg/kg/24h IV/IM in 2 equally div. doses (peds: 20 mg/kg/24h IV in 2 equally div. doses)
  • Vancomycin: 15 mg/kg IV q12h (peds: 40 mg/kg/24h in 2–3 equally div. doses)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Patients with risk factors who exhibit pathologic criteria or clinical findings
  • All IV drug users with fever
  • Admit patients with cardiovascular instability to an intensive care unit/monitored setting.
Discharge Criteria

None

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Expected course:
    • Most patients will defervesce within 1 wk.
  • Complications:
    • Cardiac: CHF, valve abscess, pericarditis, fistula
    • Neurologic: Embolic stroke, abscess, hemorrhage
    • Embolization: CNS, pulmonary, ischemic extremities
    • Mycotic aneurysms: Cerebral or systemic
    • Renal: Infarction, nephritis, abscess
    • Metastatic abscess: Kidney, spleen, tissue
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Fever, new or changing murmur
  • 50% of cases occur in patients with no known history of valve disease
  • Recent health care exposure/device consider as risk factor
  • Common complications; watch for stroke, embolization, heart failure, intracardiac abscess
  • Admit IV drug abusers presenting with fever to rule out endocarditis.
  • Empiric therapy for acutely ill after 2–3 sets of blood cultures from separate venipuncture sites.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Chen RS, Bivens MJ, Grossman SA. Diagnosis and management of valvular heart disease in emergency medicine.
    Emerg Med Clin North Am
    . 2011;29(4):801–810.
  • Hoen B, Duval X. Clinical practice. Infective endocarditis.
    N Engl J Med.
    2013;368(15):1425–1433.
  • Keynan Y, Rubinstein E. Pathophysiology of infective endocarditis.
    Curr Infect Dis Rep
    . 2013;15(4):342–346.
  • Murdoch DR, Corey GR, Hoen B, et al. Clinical presentation, etiology, and outcome of infective endocarditis in the 21st century: The International Collaboration on Endocarditis-Prospective Cohort Study.
    Arch Intern Med
    . 2009;169(5):463–473.
  • Selton-Suty C, Célard M, Le Moing V, et al. Preeminence of Staphylococcus aureus in infective endocarditis: A 1-year population-based survey.
    Clin Infect Dis
    . 2012;54(9):1230–1239.
CODES
ICD9
  • 421.0 Acute and subacute bacterial endocarditis
  • 424.90 Endocarditis, valve unspecified, unspecified cause
  • 996.61 Infection and inflammatory reaction due to cardiac device, implant, and graft
ICD10
  • I33.0 Acute and subacute infective endocarditis
  • I38 Endocarditis, valve unspecified
  • T82.6XXA Infect/inflm reaction due to cardiac valve prosthesis, init
ENDOMETRIOSIS
Francis L. Counselman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Presence of endometrial tissue and glands outside uterus
  • An estrogen-dependent chronic inflammatory disease
  • Affects 6–10% of women of reproductive age and 50–60% of women/teenage girls with pelvic pain
  • Endometrial tissue found anywhere in pelvic cavity, on ovaries, uterine ligament (due to retrograde menstruation) and distant sites, including bowel and lungs
ETIOLOGY
  • Unknown
Pediatric Considerations

Not prior to menarche

RISK FACTORS
  • Anatomic obstruction of menstrual outflow
  • Early menarche
  • Short menstrual cycles
  • Genetic component suggested by twin and family studies
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Dysmenorrhea (50–90%)
  • Deep pelvic pain
  • Dyspareunia
  • Dysfunctional uterine bleeding
  • Lower abdominal pain
  • Nausea, abdominal distention
  • Infertility (30–50%)
Physical-Exam
  • Focal pain or tenderness on pelvic exam
  • Tenderness along uterosacral ligament
  • Retroverted uterus
  • Rectovaginal nodularity
  • Pelvic mass
  • Physical exam can vary depending on location of endometrial tissue
  • Catamenial pneumothorax occurs during menses due to pleural endometriosis
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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