DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Confusion
- Difficulty in maintaining a coherent stream of thinking and mental performance:
- Remember to consider level of education, language, and possible learning disabilities.
- Inattention
- Memory deficit:
- Inability to recall any of the following:
- The date, inclusive of month, day, year, and day of week
- The precise place
- Items of universally known information
- Why the patient is in the hospital
- Address, telephone number, or Social Security number
- Impaired mental performance:
- Difficulty retaining 7 digits forward and 4 backward
- Difficulty naming ordinary objects
- Serial calculations: 3-from-30 subtraction test
- Disorganized and rambling language:
- May be mistaken for aphasia
- Fever:
- Infectious etiologies, drug toxicities, endocrine disorders, heat stroke
- Severe hypertension and bradycardia
- Cushing reflex suggests intracranial lesion
- Hypotension:
- Infectious, toxicologic etiologies, decreased cardiac output
- Eye movements:
- Ocular bobbing:
- Cyclical brisk conjugate caudal jerks of the globes followed by a slow return to midposition
- Seen in bilateral pontine damage, metabolic derangement, and brainstem compression
- Ocular dipping:
- Slow, cyclical, conjugate, downward movement of the eyes followed by a rapid return to midposition
- Seen in diffuse cortical anoxic damage
- Pupil exam:
- Nearly all toxic and metabolic causes of coma leave the pupillary reflexes sluggish but bilaterally intact.
- Focal findings (indicative of CNS process):
- Hemiparesis
- Hemianopsia
- Aphasia
- Myoclonus
- Convulsions
- Nuchal rigidity
- Asterixis:
- Arrhythmic flapping tremor (almost always bilateral)
- Seen in hepatic failure or severe renal failure
History
- Ask witnesses, family, pre-hospital personnel
- Baseline mental status
- Medical history (immunosuppressed, liver failure, depression, or chronic conditions)
- Recent events: Trauma, fever, illness
- Detailed medication list
- Substance abuse history
Physical-Exam
- Vital signs
- Head: Signs of trauma, pupils
- Fundoscopic exam: Hemorrhage, papilledema
- Neck: Rigidity, bruits, thyroid enlargement
- Heart and lungs
- Abdomen: Organomegaly, ascites
- Extremities: Cyanosis
- Skin: Diaphoretic/dry, rash, petechiae, ecchymoses, splinter hemorrhages, needle tracks
- Neurologic exam
- Mental status exam
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Dextrostix and glucose
- CBC
- Electrolytes (including Ca, Mg, P)
- BUN, creatinine
- Toxicologic screen (including toxic alcohols)
- ECG
- Urinalysis
- Blood and urine cultures (suspected infection)
- PT, PTT (anticoagulated, liver failure patients)
- Consider LFTs, thyroid function tests, ammonia, serum osmolarity, arterial blood gas
- Consider B
12
, folic acid, RPR, urine porphobilinogen, heavy metal screening
Imaging
- Head CT scan:
- Noncontrast only to rule out hemorrhage and mass effect
- Chest radiograph: To diagnose pneumonia
- MRI (if available):
- Indicated when suspicious of ischemic stroke or other CNS abnormality
- May be deferred when admitting the patient as part of the inpatient work-up
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- Lumbar puncture (LP):
- Indicated when the etiology remains unclear after lab and CT scan
- Empiric antibiotics should be given before LP in patients with suspected meningitis.
- EEG (inpatient): For suspected seizure, nonconvulsive status epilepticus
- Caloric stimulation of the vestibular apparatus to assess unresponsive patients:
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Locked-in syndrome:
- Rare disorder caused by damage to the corticospinal, corticopontine, and corticobulbar tracts resulting in quadriplegia and mutism with preservation of consciousness.
- Communication may be established through eye movements (maintain vertical eye movements).
- Psychogenic unresponsiveness:
- Conversion reactions
- Catatonia
- Malingering
- Akinetic mutism (abulic state)
- Dementia:
- Multiple progressive cognitive deficits
- Attention is preserved in the early stages.
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Airway management if loss of airway patency
- IV access, supplemental oxygen, cardiac monitor
- Spine immobilization if possibility of trauma
- “Coma cocktail”:
- Look for signs of an underlying cause:
- Medications, medic alert bracelets
- Document a basic neurologic exam, GCS, pupils, extremity movements
- Gross signs of trauma
- CONTROVERSIES
- Empirical dextrose should not be withheld or delayed if Dextrostix is not available
- Glucose can be safely administered before thiamine.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Consider empiric use of antibiotics for altered mental status of undetermined etiology:
- Broad spectrum with good CSF fluid penetration such as ceftriaxone and vancomycin
- Empiric treatment if a toxic ingestion is suspected:
- Correct body temperature:
- Specific therapy directed at underlying cause
MEDICATION
- Ceftriaxone: 2 g (peds: 50–75 mg/kg/d q12–24h) IV q12–24h
- Dextrose: 1–2 mL/kg of D
50
W (peds: 2–4 mL/kg D
25
W) IV
- Diazepam: 0.1–0.3 mg/kg slow IV (max 10 mg/dose) q10–q15min × 3 doses
- Lorazepam: 0.05–0.1 mg/kg IV (max. 4 mg/dose q10–q15min)
- Mannitol: 0.5–1 g/kg IV
- Naloxone: 0.01–0.1 mg/kg IV/IM/SC/ET
- Thiamine: 100 mg IM or 100 mg thiamine in 1,000 mL of IV fluid wide open
- Vancomycin: 1 g (peds: 10 mg/kg q8–12h) IV q12h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
All patients with acute and persistent changes in mental status require admission.
Discharge Criteria
- Treated hypoglycemia related to insulin therapy with resolved symptoms
- Chronic altered mental status (e.g., dementia) without change from baseline
- Acute drug intoxication with return of patient’s mental status to baseline with observation and drug has no potential for delayed toxicity
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Primary care follow-up to manage etiology which led to altered mental status (i.e., adjust medication dosing, drug abuse treatment referral)
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Consider reversible causes
- Hypoglycemia (check glucose, give dextrose)
- Opiate overdose (trial of naloxone)
- Thiamine deficiency (trial of thiamine)
- Consider head CT for any patient with unclear etiology or neurologic abnormality
- Consider empiric antibiotics in patients with fever or unclear etiology
ADDITIONAL READING
- Kanich W, Brady WJ, Huff JS, et al. Altered mental status: evaluation and etiology in the ED.
Am J Emerg Med
. 2002;20:613–617.
- Sporer K, Solares M, Durant E, et al. Accuracy of the initial diagnosis among patients with an acutely altered mental status.
Emerg Med J.
2013;30(3):243--246.
- Young GB. Disorders of consciousness: Coma.
Ann NY Acad Sci.
2009;1157:32–47.
- Zehtabchi S, Abdel Baki SG, Malhotra S, et al. Nonconvulsive seizures in patients presenting with altered mental status: An evidence-based review.
Epilepsy Behav.
2011;22(2):139–143.
CODES