Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (583 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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History
  • Screen for psychosis, including onset, duration, triggers, and content:
    • Delusions:
      • “Do you feel anyone is trying to harm you or that you are being followed?”
      • “Is anyone trying to send you messages, steal, control, or block your thinking?”
    • Hallucinations:
      • “Do you ever see or hear things that other people cannot see or hear?”
      • “Do you ever hear voices telling you to do things such as to harm yourself or to harm others?”
  • Suicidal or homicidal behavior or threats
  • Past medical and psychiatric history
  • Social situation and ability to care for self
  • Recent use, increase or cessation of medications, drugs, or alcohol
  • Obtain history from friends, family, and treaters
Physical-Exam

Look for signs of a medical etiology:

  • Vital signs
  • Eye exam (pupils, EOM, fundi)
  • General exam with particular attention to the signs and symptoms of endocrine, liver, and renal disease
  • Neurologic exam, including cognitive exam
  • Careful assessment for signs of delirium
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

The workup is case specific and primarily based on the suspected etiology

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose, calcium
  • Toxicology screen
  • CBC with differential
  • TSH
  • Urinalysis
  • Further specific studies should be guided by the suspected underlying etiologies
Imaging

Consider head imaging for new-onset psychotic symptoms of unclear etiology, especially in setting of focal neurologic symptoms.

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

When clinically warranted consider:

  • Lumbar puncture
  • EEG
  • EKG (monitor QT)
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

See Etiology.

TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Patients can display unpredictable and violent behavior toward themselves and others
  • Patients may require police presence or restraints to maintain safety
  • Local laws vary regarding involuntary restraint
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Safety of patient and staff is paramount and may require presence of security
  • Behavioral interventions should be used first
    • Provide a calm, containing environment
    • Remove all potentially dangerous items
    • Use a reassuring voice and calm demeanor to set boundaries and verbally redirect
  • If safety is a concern, patient needs to be under constant observation
  • Physical or chemical restraints as necessary
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • If a nonpsychiatric etiology is suspected, identify and treat underlying medical condition
  • If a psychiatric etiology is suspected, consider psychiatric consultation or referral
  • Acute agitation is reduced with antipsychotics:
    • Encourage voluntary PO medications prior to IM administration
    • Avoid polypharmacy
  • Rapid tranquilization may be achieved with the addition of a benzodiazepine
  • Monitor for and treat adverse effects from antipsychotic medications:
    • Extrapyramidal symptoms (dystonia, akathisia, pseudoparkinsonism, and tardive dyskinesia)
    • Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a life-threatening complication:
      • Characterized by hyperthermia, muscle rigidity, autonomic instability, and altered consciousness
MEDICATION
  • 1st line antipsychotics:
    • Haloperidol: 2–10 mg PO/IV/IM, repeat q20–60min prn to max. 100 mg/d; elderly 0.5–2 mg/dose
      • Commonly augmented with lorazepam
  • 2nd line antipsychotics:
    • Aripiprazole: 2–15 mg PO/IM, may repeat q2h prn to max. 30 mg/d
    • Chlorpromazine: 25 mg PO/IM, repeat 25–50 mg q60min prn to max. 1,000 mg/d. Caution: Sedating, postural hypotension, do not use in elderly
    • Olanzapine: 2.5–20 mg PO/IM, may repeat dose q2–4h prn to max. 20 mg/d; elderly 2.5–5 mg/dose. Caution: Concurrent use of IM olanzapine and IV benzodiazepines may increase risk of cardiopulmonary collapse
    • Risperidone: 1–2 mg PO, may repeat 2 times; elderly 0.25–0.5 mg/dose. Caution: Orthostatic hypotension
    • Quetiapine: 25–50 mg PO BID, increase by 100 mg/d to max. 800 mg/d; elderly 12.5–25 mg/dose, increase by 25–50 mg/d
    • Ziprasidone: 20–40 mg PO BID, max. 80 mg PO BID; 10 mg IM q2h or 20 mg IM q4h prn to max. 40 mg/d IM, no more than 3 days. Caution: Monitor QT
  • Benzodiazepines:
    • Lorazepam to augment tranquilization: 1–2 mg PO/IM/IV; elderly 0.25–0.5 mg PO/IM/IV
Geriatric Considerations

Black box warning: Elderly patients with dementia-related psychoses treated with antipsychotic drugs are at increased risk of death.

FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • If nonpsychiatric etiology, admit to appropriate medical service
  • If psychiatric etiology and patient is medically stable, patient may require admission to a psychiatric hospital if patient:
    • Is a danger to self or others
    • Is gravely disabled and unable to care for self due to psychosis
    • Has new-onset psychosis and medical etiology has been ruled out
  • Criteria for involuntary hospitalization vary
Discharge Criteria
  • Patient is not a danger to self or others and is able to perform activities of daily living
  • Psychotic symptoms resolved after causative medical issue addressed and patient is medically stable for discharge
Issues for Referral

Consider psychiatric consultation for complicated cases or for psychiatric admission.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Plan appropriate outpatient medical follow-up
  • In patients with psychiatric disorders not requiring admission, plan outpatient psychiatric follow-up within 1 wk
  • Consider referral for detoxification in patients with problems related to substance use
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Psychotic symptoms should be evaluated for treatable medical causes and not assumed to be solely psychiatric in nature even in patients with known mental illness
  • Visual, olfactory, gustatory, or tactile hallucinations should prompt medical workup
  • Avoid using IM olanzapine with IV benzodiazepines as this increases risk for cardiopulmonary collapse
  • Patients who have recently started or increased their antipsychotics who present with fever, rigidity, autonomic instability, and mental status changes should be assessed for neuroleptic malignant syndrome
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Byrne P. Managing the acute psychotic episode.
    BMJ.
    2007;334(7595):686–692.
  • Mathias M, Lubman DI, Hides L. Substance-induced psychosis: A diagnostic conundrum.
    J Clin Psychiatry.
    2008;69:358–367.
  • Nordstrom K, Zun LS, Wilson MP, et al. Medical evaluation and triage of the agitated patient: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta medical evaluation workgroup.
    West J Emerg Med
    . 2012;13(1):3–10.
  • Wilson MP, Pepper D, Currier GW, et al. The psychopharmacology of agitation: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta medical evaluation workgroup.
    West J Emerg Med
    . 2012;13(1):26–34.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Delirium
  • Dystonic Reaction
  • Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
  • Psychosis, Medical vs. Psychiatric
  • Schizophrenia
  • Violence, Management of
CODES
ICD9
  • 292.9 Unspecified drug-induced mental disorder
  • 298.8 Other and unspecified reactive psychosis
  • 298.9 Unspecified psychosis
ICD10
  • F19.959 Oth psychoactv substance use, unsp w psych disorder, unsp
  • F23 Brief psychotic disorder
  • F29 Unsp psychosis not due to a substance or known physiol cond
PSYCHOSIS, MEDICAL VS. PSYCHIATRIC
Richard E. Wolfe
BASICS

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