FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Ventilatory failure, especially if intubation is necessary
- Hemodynamic instability
Discharge Criteria
- Maintenance of O
2
saturation >85% for several hours using oxygenation or ventilation equipment available to the patient at home
- Very low likelihood of decompensation overnight
- Patients with sleep apnea who present after motor vehicle crashes:
- Manage initially like other blunt trauma patients.
- Later, consider the increased risk with sleep apnea and intervene to prevent future accidents.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- PCP referral for sleep apnea and associated comorbidities
- Encourage compliance, use of CPAP
- Referral of patients with suspected sleep apnea to a pulmonologist
- Encourage weight loss and diet control
- Cardiology referral is appropriate when sleep apnea is complicated by heart failure or dysrhythmias.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Sleep apnea increases risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and diabetes mellitus.
- CPAP is the standard of treatment.
- Avoid the use of sedatives.
- Preparation is essential, as sleep apnea increases intubation complications.
- Primary care referral and CPAP compliance education improve therapy.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Buchner NJ, Sanner BM, Borgel J, et al. Continuous positive airway pressure treatment of mild to moderate obstructive sleep apnea reduces cardiovascular risk.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med
. 2007;176(12):1274–1280.
- Caples SM, Gami AS, Somers VK. Obstructive sleep apnea.
Ann Intern Med
. 2005;142(3):187–197.
- Epstein LJ, Kristo D, Strollo PJ Jr, et al. Clinical guideline for the evaluation, management and long-term care of obstructive sleep apnea in adults.
J Clin Sleep Med
. 2009;5(3):263–276.
- Mulgrew AT, Fox N, Ayas NT, et al. Diagnosis and initial management of obstructive sleep apnea without polysomnography: A randomized validation study.
Ann Intern Med
. 2007;146(3):157–166.
- Qaseem A, Holty JE, Owens DK, Dallas P, Starkey M, Shekelle P, for the Clinical Guidelines Committee of the American College of Physicians. Management of obstructive sleep apnea in adults: a clinical practice guideline from the American College of Physicians.
Ann Intern Med.
2013;159:471--483.
- Rosenberg R, Doghramji P. Optimal treatment of obstructive sleep apnea and excessive sleepiness.
Adv Ther
. 2009;26:295–312.
- Sharma SK, Agrawal S, Damodaran D, et al. CPAP for the metabolic syndrome in patients with obstructive sleep apnea.
N Engl J Med
. 2011;365:2277–2286.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
The author gratefully acknowledges Mark Sagarin for his previous edition of this chapter.
CODES
ICD9
- 327.21 Primary central sleep apnea
- 327.23 Obstructive sleep apnea (adult)(pediatric)
- 780.57 Unspecified sleep apnea
ICD10
- G47.30 Sleep apnea, unspecified
- G47.31 Primary central sleep apnea
- G47.33 Obstructive sleep apnea (adult) (pediatric)
SLIPPED CAPITAL FEMORAL EPIPHYSIS
Virag Shah
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Femoral epiphysis translates (slips) posteriorly and inferiorly relative to the femoral head/neck
- Classification systems:
- Degree of femoral head “slip” as a percentage of femoral neck diameter:
- (Mild, grade 1) <33.3%
- (Moderate, grade 2) 33.3–50%
- (Severe, grade 3) >50%
- Temporal:
- Acute: <3 wk of symptoms
- Chronic: >3 wk of symptoms
- Acute on chronic: >3 wk of symptoms, now with acute pain
- Stability:
- Stable: Bears weight w/or w/o crutches
- Unstable: Unable to bear weight
- Epidemiology:
- Peak age: 12–14 yr (boys), 11–12 yr (girls)
- Male > female (1.6:1)
- Bilateral slips: 20% at presentation; additional 20–40% progress to bilateral
- Atypical SCFE: Endocrinopathy associated:
- Patient may be <10 yr age, >16 yr age, or weight <50th percentile
- High risk of bilateral SCFE (up to 100%)
ETIOLOGY
- Proximal physis position changes in adolescence from horizontal to oblique; hence hip forces shift from “compression” to “shear”
- Shear force > strength of femoral physis
- Weakest point of physis = zone of hypertrophy
- Risk factors:
- Obesity: May contribute to shear forces
- Down syndrome
- Endocrinopathy such as hypothyroidism, growth hormone deficiency, renal osteodystrophy (2° hyperparathyroidism): May contribute to growth plate weakening
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Determine chronicity of symptoms and whether or not the patient can bear weight
- Pain in the knee, thigh, groin, or hip (referred pain from the obturator nerve):
- Vague and dull for weeks in chronic SCFE
- Severe and sudden onset in acute SCFE, often in the setting of trauma
Physical-Exam
- If stable, presents with limp or exertional limp
- If unstable (patient cannot ambulate), avoid further ambulation attempts
- Commonly presents with leg externally rotated
- Restricted internal rotation, abduction, and flexion (cannot touch thigh to abdomen)
- Anterior hip joint tenderness
- Test: Apply gentle passive hip flexion → if hip externally rotates + abducts → highly suggestive of SCFE
- Gait:
- Antalgic (patient takes short steps on affected side to minimize weight-bearing during “stance” phase of gait)
- Trendelenburg (shift of torso over affected hip; sign of moderate/severe slip)
- Waddling (sign of bilateral SCFE)
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Plain radiographs:
- Further imaging with aid from consultant
- Orthopedic consultation
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- If no diagnostic radiographic abnormality, the practitioner may consider the following to help risk stratify possible alternative diagnoses:
- CBC with differential, sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein
- If endocrinopathy suspected, consider thyroid function testing
Imaging
- Both hips should be imaged for comparison
- Some clinicians prefer cross-table lateral view in acute SCFE instead of frog-leg view (theoretical risk of worsening displacement)
- Anteroposterior radiograph:
- Widened or irregular physis
- Bird’s beak appearance of the epiphysis “slipping” off of the femoral head
- Klein line: Parallel line drawn from superior border of the femoral neck; line intersects the epiphysis in normal patient
- Lateral radiograph (frog-leg or cross-table)
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
If septic hip is suspected, aspiration and fluid analysis may be needed to exclude.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Legg–Calvé–Perthes:
- Typically seen in 4–9-yr-old age range
- Septic arthritis of hip
- Osteomyelitis
- Toxic synovitis
- Femur or pelvic fractures
- Inguinal or femoral hernia
TREATMENT