Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (348 page)

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

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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ADDITIONAL READING
  • Dominguez S, Liu P, Roberts C, et al. Prevalence of traumatic hip and pelvic fractures in patients with suspected hip fracture and negative initial standard radiographs—a study of ED patients.
    Acad Emerg Med
    . 2005;12:366–369.
  • Foulk DM, Mullis BH. Hip Dislocation: Evaluation and management.
    J Am Acad Orthop Surg.
    2010;18:199–209.
  • Kirby MW, Spritzer C. Radiographic detection of hip and pelvic fractures in the emergency department.
    AJR Am J Roentgenol
    . 2010;194:1054–1060.
  • Parker M, Johansen A. Hip fracture.
    BMJ
    . 2006;333:27–30.
  • Quick TJ, Eastwood DM. Pediatric fractures and dislocations of the hip and pelvis.
    Clin Orthop Relat Res
    . 2005;432:87–96.
  • Tarascon Pocket Pharmacopoeia
    , 2013. 14th ed. Lompoc, CA: Tarascon Publishing.
  • Ward KR, Yealy DM. Systemic analgesia and sedation in managing orthopedic emergencies.
    Emerg Med Clin North Am
    . 2000;18:141–166.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Femur Fracture
  • Pelvic Fracture
CODES
ICD9
  • 820.8 Closed fracture of unspecified part of neck of femur
  • 835.00 Closed dislocation of hip, unspecified site
  • 959.6 Hip and thigh injury
ICD10
  • S72.009A Fracture of unsp part of neck of unsp femur, init
  • S73.006A Unspecified dislocation of unspecified hip, init encntr
  • S79.919A Unspecified injury of unspecified hip, initial encounter
HIRSCHSPRUNG DISEASE
Sheila McMorrow
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Described in 1886 by Harold Hirschsprung as a cause of constipation in early infancy
  • Congenital aganglionosis megacolon
  • 1:5,000 live births
  • Overall mortality of Hirschsprung enterocolitis is 35–50%
ETIOLOGY
  • Absence of enteric ganglia in the distal bowel
  • Normally, ganglia are derived from neural crest and migrate along the intestine, arriving at the proximal colon by 8 wk of gestation and in the rectum by 12 wk of gestation.
  • Failure of neural crest cells to migrate into parasympathetic Meissner (submucosal) and Auerbach (myeneteric) ganglions results in an aganglionic segment and clinical disease
  • Affected bowel classically presents at the internal anal sphincter and involves the rectosigmoid colon (75% of cases)
  • May extend the entire length of the GI tract (often fatal)
  • Aganglionic segment chronically contracts, forming an obstruction to the passage of stool, and proximal bowel distends to hold the stool that has not passed
  • Stimulation of the anus allows passage of stool
  • Genetic and other causes
    • Mutations of the
      ret
      proto-oncogene found in both familial and spontaneous forms
    • Male-to-female ratio 4:1
      • 8% with positive family history; 5–12% of siblings are affected
      • Associated chromosomal abnormality in 5–15%, most commonly trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)
      • Other congenital anomalies in 18%—GI, cardiac, craniofacial, cleft palate, congenital deafness
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Children with Hirschsprung disease are usually diagnosed by the age of 2 yr

  • Three presentations, varying with age:
    • Neonatal
      • Abdominal distension
      • Failure of passage of meconium within the 1st 48 hr of life
      • Vomiting
      • Enterocolitis (abdominal pain, fever, foul-smelling and/or bloody diarrhea, vomiting, leading to sepsis and potential intestinal perforation)
      • Sepsis
    • Infancy
      • Constipation
      • Chronic abdominal distension
      • Vomiting
      • Failure to thrive
      • Enterocolitis (abdominal pain, fever, foul-smelling and/or bloody diarrhea, vomiting, leading to sepsis and potential intestinal perforation)
      • Toxic megacolon
    • Later childhood and adulthood
      • Chronic constipation with obstruction and rare history of overflow incontinence and often refractory to normal treatment protocols
      • Enterocolitis (abdominal pain, fever, foul-smelling and/or bloody diarrhea, vomiting, leading to sepsis and potential intestinal perforation)
      • Abdominal distension
      • Bloody, foul-smelling diarrhea
      • Malnutrition
History
  • Sepsis
  • Bowel movements frequently require rectal stimulation or enemas
  • Narrow caliber stools
  • Encopresis and diarrhea are uncommon
  • Absence of inciting factors associated with functional constipation (i.e., fissures, toilet training, diet)
Physical-Exam

Possible palpable colon on the left

  • Abdominal distension and symptoms of intestinal obstruction
  • Findings consistent with malnutrition, failure to thrive
  • Rectal exam commonly reveals an empty rectal vault
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Plain abdominal radiographs:

  • Distended small bowel and proximal colon (megacolon) with an empty rectum are common findings
  • Transition zone into a narrowed rectosigmoid segment
  • In neonates, films will commonly show a distal obstructive pattern
  • In children with chronic constipation, films may show only large amounts of stool
  • In children with enterocolitis, bowel wall edema or pneumatosis intestinalis may be present
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC, electrolytes, glucose, BUN, Cr
  • Urinalysis
  • Blood culture, if toxic
Imaging

Barium enema:

  • Obtain after stabilization; contraindicated if perforation and enterocolitis are suspected
  • Dilated colon proximal to the contracted aganglionic colon with uncoordinated peristalsis, and transition zone between the narrowed aganglionic segment and the dilated and normally innervated segment
    • A transition zone may not be apparent in neonates, because of insufficient time to develop colonic dilatation, or in infants who have undergone rectal exams and enemas
    • May demonstrate a nondistensible rectum, which is a classic sign of Hirschsprung disease
  • Delayed barium evacuation
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Rectal manometry may assist in diagnosis but is often abnormal in long-standing constipation; children with Hirschsprung disease fail to demonstrate reflex relaxation of the internal anal sphincter in response to inflation of a rectal balloon
  • Full-thickness rectal biopsy confirms diagnosis by the lack of ganglion cells
    • The definite diagnosis of Hirschsprung disease rests on histologic review of rectal tissue
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Neonates
    • Meconium ileus or meconium plug syndrome from cystic fibrosis
    • Intestinal or anal atresia or hypoplasia
    • Malrotation or duplication with volvulus
    • Necrotizing enterocolitis
    • Sepsis
  • Infants and children
    • Functional constipation
    • Toxic—opiates, anticholinergics
  • Infectious—botulism
  • Acquired aganglionic colon
    • Metabolic or endocrine—hypothyroid/parathyroid, adrenal insufficiency, electrolyte abnormality
      • Spinal cord defects
  • Abdominal masses
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Airway, breathing, and circulation management with monitoring as appropriate
  • Initial bolus of isotonic IV fluids (20 cc/kg) for shock, dehydration, sepsis
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Infants should be managed for bowel obstruction; in the presence of vomiting, an NG tube may be necessary
  • Consultation with a pediatric surgeon
    • Triple antibiotics are indicated in toxic patients or those with enterocolitis
  • Unstable patients may require decompression by emergent loop colostomy
    • Stable children may have their workup done as an outpatient
    • Definitive treatment is resection of the aganglionic section of bowel to achieve normal ganglion containing bowel within 1 cm of anal opening
  • Enterocolitis may occur at any time, even after operative intervention

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