Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (593 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
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Discharge Criteria

None

Issues for Referral

Surgical consultation concurrent with correction of electrolytes and fluid deficits

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Follow growth pattern after surgery.

PEARLS AND PITFALLS

Suggestive clinical presentation combined with lab evaluation should lead to imaging and correction of electrolyte abnormalities.

ADDITIONAL READING
  • Heller RM, Hernanz-Schulman M. Application of new imaging modalities to the evaluation of common pediatric conditions.
    J Pediatr
    . 1999;135:632–639.
  • Krogh C, Fischer TK, Skotte L, et al: Familial aggregation and heritability of pyloric stenosis
    JAMA.
    2010;303:2393–2399.
  • Mahon BE, Rosenman MG, Kleiman MB. Maternal and infant use of erythromycin and other macrolide antibiotics as risk factors for infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis.
    J Pediatr
    . 2001;13:380–384.
  • Najmaldin A, Tan HL. Early experience with laparoscopic pyloromyotomy for infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis.
    J Pediatr
    . 1995;30–37.
  • Safford SD, Pietroban R, Safford KM, et al: A study of 11003 patients with hypertrophic pyloric stenosis and the association between surgeon and hospital volume and outcome.
    J Pediatr Surg
    . 2005;40:967–973.
  • Siddiqui S, Heidel RE, Angel CA, et al: Pyloromyotomy: randomized control trial of laparoscopic vs. open technique.
    J Pediatr Surg.
    2012;47:93–98.
CODES
ICD9

537.0 Acquired hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

ICD10

K31.1 Adult hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

QT SYNDROME, PROLONGED
Jason A. Tracy
BASICS
DESCRIPTION

A disorder of myocardial repolarization characterized by a prolonged QT interval on the electrocardiogram

  • The pathophysiology is complex and incompletely understood:
    • Alteration in cardiac sodium, potassium, or calcium ion flow
    • Imbalance in the sympathetic innervation of the heart
  • Prolonged ventricular repolarization results in lengthening of QT interval on surface ECG:
    • “Pause-dependent” lengthening due to short–long–short sequence in which a sinus beat is followed by an extrasystole (short), then a postextrasystolic pause (long), concluding with a ventricular extrasystole (short)
    • “Adrenergic-dependent” pauses found in congenital cases
  • Symptoms often preceded by vigorous exercise, emotional stress, or loud noise.
  • Nocturnal bradycardia can lengthen QT interval, causing sleep-related symptoms.
  • Re-entrant rhythm can lead to torsades de pointes, ventricular tachycardia, and ventricular fibrillation.
  • Hemodynamic compromise following dysrhythmia leads to syncope or death.
  • Independent risk factor for sudden cardiac death.
RISK FACTORS
Genetics
  • 10 genes linked to long QT syndrome:
    • Autosomal recessive form associated with deafness (Jervell and Lange–Nielsen syndromes)
    • Autosomal dominant form not associated with deafness (Romano–Ward syndrome)
    • Adrenergic stimulation (fright, exertion, delirium tremens, and loud auditory stimulus) becomes prodysrhythmic in certain genotypes, while sleep-related symptoms are found in others.
  • 10–15% of carriers have baseline normal QTc.
  • Death occurs in 1–2% of untreated patients per year.
    • Drug-induced QT prolongation may also have a genetic background.
    • Congenital form occurs in 1 in 3,000–5,000, with mortality of 6% by age 40 yr.
Pediatric Considerations
  • Diagnosis suspected in the young with syncope, cardiac arrest, or sudden death
  • Syncope following emotional stress or exercise suggestive
  • Death occurs without preceding symptoms in 10% of pediatric patients.
ETIOLOGY
  • Drugs:
    • Complete list at
      www.QTDrugs.org
    • Class Ia antidysrhythmics—quinidine, procainamide, disopyramide
    • Class III antidysrhythmics—sotalol, ibutilide, amiodarone
    • Antibiotics—erythromycin, pentamidine, chloroquine, trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole
    • Antifungal agents—ketoconazole, itraconazole
    • Psychotropic drugs—phenothiazines, haloperidol, risperidone, STCAs
    • Cisapride
    • Antihistamines
    • Organophosphates
    • Narcotics—methadone
  • Electrolyte abnormalities
    • Hypokalemia
    • Hypomagnesemia
    • Hypocalcemia
  • Cardiac
    • Bradyarrhythmias
    • Arteriovenous block
    • Mitral valve prolapse
    • Myocarditis
    • Myocardial ischemia
  • CNS
    • Subarachnoid hemorrhage
    • Stroke
  • Congenital (idiopathic)
  • Other
    • Protein-sparing fasting
    • Anorexia nervosa
    • Hypothyroidism
    • Hypothermia
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Palpitations
  • Light-headedness
  • Dizziness
History
  • Syncope
  • Near syncope
  • Seizure
  • Family history of syncope or sudden death
  • Congenital deafness
  • Medication use
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Cardiac monitor:

  • ECG
  • QTc (QT corrected for heart rate) >0.44 sec in men and >0.46 sec in women
  • QT measured from beginning of quasi-random signal to end of T wave:
    • Measured best in the limb leads and should be averaged over 3–5 beats
    • There is no expert consensus on best heart rate correction (QTc) formula.
    • Bazett formula (QT divided by square root of RR interval) is most commonly used
    • Increase in QT variability
  • T-wave abnormalities (T-wave alternans, biphasic)
  • Appearance of U waves
  • Ventricular tachycardia
  • Ventricular fibrillation
  • Torsades de pointes
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Full electrolytes including calcium and magnesium
  • Toxicology screen
Imaging

Echocardiography to exclude other cardiac causes

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • ECG stress testing to induce a prolonged QT interval in suspected cases
  • Holter monitoring of QTc
  • Genetic counseling/testing in suspected congenital forms
  • Familial ECG testing
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Myocardial infarction
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
  • Valvular defect
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Supplemental oxygen
  • IV access
  • Monitor
ALERT
  • Stable patients with prolonged QT transported without intervention
  • Cardioversion for unstable patients with confirmed torsades de pointes
  • Magnesium sulfate for stable patients with evidence of torsades de pointes
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • IV access
  • Monitor
  • Determine hemodynamic stability
  • Unstable patients require immediate cardioversion
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • IV magnesium sulfate for torsades de pointes
  • IV potassium to serum levels of 4.5–5 mEq/L
  • Temporary transvenous cardiac pacing (rates from 100–120 beats/min) for recurrences of torsades de pointes refractory to magnesium sulfate therapy (shortens QTc)
  • IV isoproterenol for refractory cases or hemodynamically unstable patients with acquired long QT (ineffective in congenital cases) who do not respond to transvenous pacing
  • Remove any offending medications and correct metabolic derangements.
  • Consult with cardiology in those with symptomatic long QT regarding use of β-blockers at maximum doses.
  • No ED treatment needed (in consultation with cardiology) for those with suspected idiopathic long QT and no history of syncope, family history of sudden cardiac death, or ventricular arrhythmias.
  • Pacemaker or defibrillator placement with or without cervicothoracic stellectomy (to reduce adrenergic stimulation) may be required in high-risk patients.
  • β-Blockers prevent 70% of cardiac events in congenital cases.
MEDICATION
First Line
  • Magnesium sulfate: 2 g (peds: 25–50 mg/kg) IV bolus over 2–3 min followed by IV infusion at 2–4 mg/min
  • Isoproterenol: 1 μg/min (peds: 0.05–0.1 μg/kg/min) IV continuous infusion, titrate for effect, up to 10 μg/min
Second Line

Propranolol: 2–3 mg/kg/d (peds: 2–3 mg/kg/d) PO (in consultation with cardiology)

FOLLOW-UP

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