PRE HOSPITAL
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
Treatment should be limited to stabilization of life or limb threats caused by acts of self-harm
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Identify objective physical illness and treat as appropriate
- Document history and findings suggestive of factitious illness
- List of all the aliases, addresses, and date of births that the patient is known to use
- Summarize the patient’s known modus operandi (the factitious histories and behaviors that he or she has presented with)
- Ensure that the information will be communicated or available to all doctors who are likely to come into contact with the patient
- Confrontation of the patient in the ED is controversial and should only occur when unambiguous evidence is gathered
- Report Munchausen syndrome by proxy to child protective services
MEDICATION
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Injuries and disease caused by self-harm
- Munchausen by proxy:
- When the diagnosis is suspected but there is not enough evidence to have child protective services take custody
- Observation to collect evidence of faking disease:
- May also allow setting to rule out rare organic etiologies
- To establish a long-term plan to prevent future self-harm and iatrogenic adverse events
- Psychiatric admission may be of benefit, but it is rarely accepted by the patient
Discharge Criteria
- Medical stability
- Not an active threat to harm self
- Appropriate referral for medical and psychiatric follow-up arranged
Issues for Referral
- May offer psychiatric referral as a method of dealing with stress caused by illness
- Psychiatric providers located directly in medical settings (e.g., primary care physician office) may be more accepted. Overall, this is a chronic illness with poor prognosis
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Maintain contact between the patient and an identified provider for that patient.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Kenedi CA, Shirey KG, Hoffa M, et al. Laboratory diagnosis of factitious disorder: A systematic review of tools useful in the diagnosis of Munchausen’s syndrome.
N Z Med J.
2011;124:66–81.
- Mehta NJ, Khan IA. Cardiac Munchausen syndrome.
Chest.
2002;122(5):1649–1653.
- Robertson MM, Cervilla JA. Munchausen’s syndrome.
Br J Hosp Med
. 1997;58(7):308–312.
- Souid AK, Keith DV, Cunningham AS. Munchausen syndrome by proxy.
Clin Pediatr (Phila)
. 1998;37(8):497–503.
- Steel RM. Factitious disorder (Munchausen’s syndrome).
J R Coll Physicians Edinb.
2009;39:343–347.
- Stern TA. Munchausen’s syndrome revisited.
Psychosomatics.
1980;21:329–336.
- Walker EA. Dealing with patients who have medically unexplained symptoms.
Semin Clin Neuropsychiatry
. 2002;7:187–195.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Abuse, Pediatric
CODES
ICD9
301.51 Chronic factitious illness with physical symptoms
ICD10
- F68.11 Factitious disorder w predom psych signs and symptoms
- F68.12 Factitious disorder w predom physical signs and symptoms
- F68.13 Factitious disord w comb psych and physcl signs and symptoms
MUSHROOM POISONING
Michael E. Nelson
•
Timothy B. Erickson
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Amanitin/phalloidin:
- Species:
- Amanita phalloides
(“death cap”)
- Amanita virosa
/
Amanita verna
(“destroying angel”)
- Galerina marginata
,
Galerina venenata
- Mechanism:
- Cyclopeptide toxins inhibit RNA polymerase 2, which kills GI epithelium, hepatocytes, nephrocytes
- Gyromitrin:
- Species:
- Gyromitra esculenta
(“false morels”)
- Other
Gyromitra
spp.
- Mechanism:
- Inhibits pyridoxal phosphate
- Damage to RBCs, hepatocytes, neurons
- Muscarine:
- Species:
- Inocybe
(several species)
- Clitocybe
(several species)
- Mechanism:
- Coprine:
- Species:
- Coprinus atramentarius
(“inky caps”)
- Mechanism:
- Blocks acetaldehyde dehydrogenase
- Causes disulfiram-like reaction if mixed with alcohol
- Ibotenic acid/muscimol:
- Species:
- Amanita pantherina
(“the panther”)
- Amanita muscaria
(“fly agaric”)
- Mechanism:
- Psilocin/psilocybin:
- Species:
- Psilocybe
and
Panaeolus
spp. as well as others
- Mechanism:
- Similar structure to lysergic acid diethylamide, effect serotonin receptor
- Gastric irritants:
- Many various mushrooms, including those normally considered edible
- Orellanine:
- Species:
- Cortinarius
(several species)
- Mechanism:
- Tricholoma equestre
(“man on horse”):
- Rhabdomyolysis-inducing mushrooms
- Unidentified myotoxin
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Amanitin/phalloidin:
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Abdominal cramps
- Bloody diarrhea
- Clinical course:
- Onset of symptoms delayed 6–36 hr with development of GI symptoms
- Transient latent phase may last 2 days (no pain/symptoms)
- Can progress to hepatic or renal failure and death in 2–6 days
- Most lethal mushroom toxins
- Gyromitrin:
- 1st 5–10 hr:
- Abdominal cramps
- Nausea/vomiting
- Watery diarrhea
- Later symptoms:
- Weakness
- Cyanosis
- Confusion
- Seizures
- Coma
- Muscarine:
- Cholinergic symptoms include:
- Miosis
- Salivation
- Lacrimation
- Sweating
- Diarrhea
- Flushed skin
- Nausea
- Bradycardia
- Bronchoconstriction
- Onset usually within 1 hr (may be delayed)
- Coprine:
- Disulfiram-like reaction within minutes to hours when combined with alcohol:
- Flushing
- Sweating
- Nausea/vomiting
- Palpitations
- Ibotenic acid/muscimol:
- Relatively rapid onset of 30–120 min
- GABA agonist effects include:
- Hallucinations
- Dysarthria
- Ataxia
- Somnolence/coma
- Glutamatergic effects (mainly pediatrics):
- Seizures
- Muscle cramps/myoclonic movements
- Psilocin/psilocybin:
- Rapid onset, usually resolves in 6–12 hr
- Visual hallucinations
- Alteration of perception
- Mydriasis
- Tachycardia
- Fever and seizures in children
- Gastric irritants:
- Group of toxins that cause nausea, vomiting, intestinal cramps, and watery diarrhea
- Onset 30 min to 3 hr, usually resolved in 6–12 hr
- Amanita smithiana:
- Nausea/vomiting
- Headache
- Sweating
- Chills
- Low-back pain
- Polydipsia
- Clinical course:
- May progress to oliguria and acute renal failure
- Markedly delayed onset of symptoms (2–14 days)
- T. equestre
:
- Acute rhabdomyolysis:
- Myalgias/arthralgias
- Hematuria/dark urine
- Decreased urine output
- Dehydration