Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (577 page)

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

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
12.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Acute prostatitis:
    • Patients who appear ill or toxic
    • Hypotension
    • Urinary retention
  • Chronic prostatitis:
    • Admission generally not warranted unless patient has signs or symptoms of acute prostatitis.
Discharge Criteria
  • Acute prostatitis:
    • Patient must be nontoxic.
    • Able to take fluids and oral medications (analgesia and antibiotics)
    • Urinate without difficulty
    • Immunocompetent
    • Relatively free of concurrent underlying disease
    • Have appropriate follow-up care
  • Chronic prostatitis: Appropriate follow-up care should be available.
Issues for Referral

Patient with either acute or chronic prostatitis should be referred to an urologist.

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Obtain a good history to distinguish acute from chronic prostatitis, as longer antibiotic therapy may be warranted.
  • Consider this diagnosis even in sexually active adolescent males.
  • Acutely ill males with antibiotic treatment failure for prostatitis should be evaluated for abscess regardless of immunocompetence.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Hedayati T, Keegan M. Prostatitis.
    eMedicine
    . Available at
    www.emedicine.medscape.com/article/785418
    . Updated July 29, 2009.
  • Pontari MA. Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
    Urol Clin North Am
    . 2008;35(1):81–89, vi.
  • Schaeffer AJ. Chronic prostatitis and the chronic pelvic painsyndrome.
    N Engl J Med
    .2006;355:1690–1698.
  • Takhar S, Moran G. Diagnosis and management of urinary tract infection in the emergency department and outpatient settings.
    Inf Disease Clin of North America.
    2014;28(1):1--168.
  • Touma NF, Nickel JC. Prostatitis and chronic pelvic pain syndrome in men.
    Med Clin North Am.
    2011;95(1):75–86.
CODES
ICD9
  • 601.0 Acute prostatitis
  • 601.1 Chronic prostatitis
  • 601.9 Prostatitis, unspecified
ICD10
  • N41.0 Acute prostatitis
  • N41.1 Chronic prostatitis
  • N41.9 Inflammatory disease of prostate, unspecified
PRURITUS
Christine Tsien Silvers
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Unpleasant sensation that provokes a desire to scratch
  • Mediated by unmyelinated C fibers in upper portion of dermis:
    • Transmitted to dorsal horn of spinal cord
    • Via spinothalamic tract to cerebral cortex
  • Peripheral mediators (e.g., histamine and peptides such as substance P that release histamine) stimulate C fibers and induce itching
  • Prostaglandins (PGE
    2
    , PGH
    2
    ) lower threshold to pruritus
  • Opiates cause pruritus by acting on central receptors
  • No single pharmacologic agent effectively treats all causes of pruritus
  • “Itch–scratch–itch” cycle:
    • Itching triggers scratching
    • Scratching damages skin and stimulates nerve endings, thereby producing even greater itching
ETIOLOGY

4 categories in proposed itch classification:

  • Pruritoceptive: Generated in the skin from localized irritation or inflammation
  • Neurogenic: Generated in the CNS due to circulating pruritogens
  • Neuropathic: Due to CNS or PNS lesions
  • Psychogenic
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Onset:
    • Shortly after freshwater bathing in swimmer’s itch
    • More intense at night with scabies
    • Paroxysmal with multiple sclerosis
    • With sudden changes in temperature in polycythemia vera
  • Character: Paroxysmal, burning, pricking
  • Time of occurrence, duration
  • Severity; impact on quality of life
  • With or without skin lesions
  • Anatomic area (e.g., exposed skin only)
  • Exacerbating or alleviating factors (e.g., water, heat, dryness, dampness, coolness)
  • Medications
  • New products (e.g., soap, cosmetics, laundry detergents, fabric softeners)
  • Age
  • Family history of atopic dermatitis or skin disease
  • Personal history of allergies or asthma
  • Pruritus in other family members
  • Systemic or associated symptoms (e.g., night sweats, fever, tremors, weight loss, fatigue, jaundice, anemia, neurologic symptoms)
  • Sexual history, history of HIV or AIDS
  • Social: Occupation, hobbies, pets, travel
Physical-Exam
  • Dermatologic:
    • Absence of rash
    • Diffuse or localized rash
    • Location: Genitals, interdigital webs, axilla, wrists, etc.
    • Generalized morbilliform eruptions
    • Discrete weeping patches with vesicles
    • Dry skin
    • Jaundice
    • Follicular (around the hair)
    • Nonfollicular (e.g., insect bites, scabies)
    • Primary lesions:
      • Papular, pustular, urticarial, or polymorphic
    • Secondary lesions:
      • Excoriations
      • Lichenification
      • Hyperpigmentation
      • Prurigo papules: Thickened papular areas of skin from constant rubbing
  • Psychogenic: Constant rubbing in areas patient can readily reach
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Detailed history is key in the ED workup
  • Physical exam to characterize skin lesions
  • Look for evidence of systemic disease
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

Indications for specific studies (e.g., CBC and differential, ESR, CRP, BUN/creatinine, glucose, LFTs, TSH, free T4, HIV, RPR, cancer screening, CXR, abdominal ultrasound, CT/MRI) vary based on the clinical presentation and should be guided by clinical judgment.

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Skin scrapings for scabies and dermatophytoses
  • Skin biopsy performed by dermatologist at follow-up visit
  • Skin culture for bacterial, viral, or fungal infection
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Dermatologic
  • Xerosis (dry skin)
  • Insect infestations:
    • Scabies: Vesicles and burrows on intertriginous areas
    • Pediculosis (lice)
  • Insect bites: Localized clusters of papules
  • Dermatitis:
    • Atopic dermatitis
    • Contact dermatitis (e.g., poison ivy contact)
    • Nummular dermatitis: Round eczematous or vesicular eruption
  • Drug induced (suspect when no rash):
    • Opiates and derivatives
    • Aspirin/NSAIDs
    • Quinidine; amiodarone
    • Certain antibiotics, antifungals, antimalarials
    • Phenothiazines
    • Estrogens, progestins, testosterone
    • Statins
    • Others
  • Lichen planus: Lichenification, hyperpigmentation, skin thickening
  • Urticaria
  • Bullous pemphigoid
  • Eosinophilic folliculitis
  • Psoriasis
  • Dermatitis herpetiformis: Burning itch
  • Sunburn
  • Aquagenic pruritus
  • Fiberglass dermatitis
  • Seborrheic dermatitis: Scaly plaques on sebaceous gland-bearing areas
  • Swimmer’s itch, schistosome cercarial dermatitis, or schistosomiasis:
    • Repeated freshwater exposure
    • Itching starts as water evaporates
    • Highly pruritic papules develop hours later
  • Miliaria rubra (prickly heat)
Pregnancy Considerations
  • Polymorphic eruption of pregnancy
  • Pemphigoid gestationis
  • Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy
  • Atopic eruption of pregnancy
Infectious
  • HIV
  • Parasites:
    • Ankylostomiasis/helminthiasis (hookworm)
    • Onchocerciasis/river blindness (nematode)
    • Ascariasis (roundworm)
    • Trichinosis (roundworm)
Cholestatic
  • Obstructive biliary disease
  • Primary biliary cirrhosis
  • Hepatic cholestasis secondary to drugs
  • Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy
  • Extrahepatic biliary obstruction
  • Chronic hepatitis, especially hepatitis C
Hematologic
  • Polycythemia vera
  • Iron-deficiency anemia
  • Paraproteinemia
  • Waldenström macroglobulinemia
  • Mastocytosis

Other books

Updrift by Errin Stevens
The Cinderella Hour by Stone, Katherine
Marysvale by Jared Southwick
Alien Invasion 04 Annihilation by Sean Platt, Johnny B. Truant
Free Fall by William Golding
Chain of Custody by Anita Nair
The Murderer's Daughters by Randy Susan Meyers
The First Last Kiss by Ali Harris