Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (81 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
8.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria

Medical Wards

  • PEFR <40% and minimal air movement
  • Persistent respiratory distress:
    • Factors that should favor admission:
      • Prior intubation
      • Recent ED visit
      • Multiple ED visits or hospitalizations
      • Symptoms for more than 1 wk
      • Failure of outpatient therapy
      • Use of steroids
      • Inadequate follow-up mechanisms
      • Psychiatric illness

Observation Unit

  • PEFR >40% but <70% of predicted
  • Patients without subjective improvement
  • Patients with continued wheeze and diminished air movement
  • Patients with moderate response to therapy and no respiratory distress
Discharge Criteria
  • PEFR >70% should be >300
  • Patient reports subjective improvement
  • Clear lungs with good air movement
  • Adequate follow-up within 48–72 hr
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Encourage patients to contact their PMD or pulmonologist for asthma related problems over the next 3–5 days.

PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Altered mental status in asthma equals ventilatory failure.
  • Patients should be able to demonstrate the correct use of their inhaler or nebulizer:
    • Discharge with a peak flow meter
  • If no signs or symptoms of dehydration, no evidence that IVF will clear airway secretions.
  • Antibiotics should generally be reserved for patients with purulent sputum, fever, pneumonia, or evidence of bacterial sinusitis.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Camargo CA Jr, Rachelefsky G, Schatz M. Managing asthma exacerbations in the emergency department: Summary of the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program Expert Panel Report 3 guidelines for the management of asthma.
    J Emerg Med
    . 2009;37(2):S6–S17.
  • Fanta CH. Asthma.
    N Engl J Med
    . 2009;360:1002–1014.
  • Lazarus SC. Emergency treatment of asthma.
    N Engl J Med
    . 2010;363(8):755–764.
  • Marx JA.
    Rosen’s Emergency Medicine
    . 7th ed. Asthma. 2009.
  • National Asthma Education and Prevention Program Expert Panel Report 3. Guidelines for diagnosis and management of asthma. U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services, October 2007.
CODES
ICD9
  • 493.90 Asthma, unspecified type, without mention of status asthmaticus
  • 493.91 Asthma, unspecified type, with status asthmaticus
  • 493.92 Asthma, unspecified type, with (acute) exacerbation
ICD10
  • J45.901 Unspecified asthma with (acute) exacerbation
  • J45.902 Unspecified asthma with status asthmaticus
  • J45.909 Unspecified asthma, uncomplicated
ASTHMA, PEDIATRIC
Nathan Shapiro
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • 2.7 million children (<18 yr) affected in US
  • 850,000 ED visits per year in US
  • Inflammatory events, usually viral, lead to bronchoconstriction:
    • Compounded by hyper-reactivity of airways
    • Mediators of the inflammatory cascade exacerbate symptoms
  • Airway obstruction produces increased airway resistance and gas trapping:
    • Mucosal edema
    • Bronchospasm
    • Mucous plugging
  • Infants more vulnerable to respiratory failure:
    • Increased peripheral resistance
    • Decreased elastic recoil with early airway closure
    • Unstable rib cage
    • Mechanically disadvantaged diaphragm
  • Family history of allergy
  • Medical history of early injury to airway (bronchopulmonary dysplasia, pneumonia, intubation, croup, reflux, passive exposure to smoking), reactions to foods and drugs, other allergic manifestations
  • Environmental exposures such as pets, smoke, carpets, or dust may trigger or exacerbate
ETIOLOGY
Precipitating/Aggravating Factors
  • Infection:
    • Viral
    • Bacterial
  • Allergic/irritant:
    • Environment: Pollens, grasses, mold, house dust mites, and animal dander
    • Occupational chemicals: Chlorine, ammonia—food and additives
    • Irritants: Smoke, pollutants, gases, and aerosols
    • Exercise
    • Cold weather
    • Emotional: Stress, phobia
    • Intoxication: β-blockers, aspirin, NSAIDs
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
General
  • Fatigue, somnolence
  • Diaphoresis, agitation
  • Hypoxia, cyanosis
  • Tachycardia
  • Dehydration
  • Pulsus paradoxus
Respiratory
  • Wheezing, rales, rhonchi
  • Cough, acute or chronic
  • Tachypnea
  • “Tight chest”
  • Dyspnea, shortness of breath with prolonged expiratory phase
  • Retractions, accessory muscle use, nasal flaring
  • Hyperinflation
  • Often a history of recurrent episodes and chronic restrictions
  • Complications:
    • Recurrent pneumonia, bronchitis
    • Atelectasis
    • Pneumothorax, pneumomediastinum
    • Respiratory distress/failure/death
History
  • Precipitating events or known triggers
  • Chronicity of symptoms
  • Comorbid illnesses
  • History of disease:
    • Previous hospitalizations for asthma
    • Previous intubations and intensive care
    • Regular and sporadic medications
Physical-Exam
  • Vital signs, including oximetry and respiratory status
  • Wheezing: Absence of wheezing may be associated with markedly impaired air movement and decreased breath sounds
  • Signs of hypoxia
  • Skin and nail bed color bluish
  • Signs of respiratory fatigue, distress, or failure:
    • Use of accessory muscles of respirations or retractions
    • Lethargy or confusion
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Clinical diagnosis based primarily on physical exam and history; assess ventilation by observation for retractions and use of accessory muscles as well as auscultating for air exchange.
  • Follow response to bronchodilator therapy with present illness and past episodes.
  • Exclude other differential considerations.
  • Pulse oximetry:
    • Initial SaO
      2
      <91% (sea level) associated with significant illness: Admission, relapse, prolonged course
  • Peak flow meters in cooperative patients (usually >5 yr old)
    • <50–70% predicts moderate to severe obstruction.
    • >70–90% associated with mild to moderate obstruction
    • >90% considered normal
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Arterial blood gas (ABG) may be an adjunct to pulse oximetry to measure oxygenation and clinical exam to assess ventilation; not mandatory or routinely done.
  • CBC as a nonspecific marker of infection
  • Theophylline level: Only for patients on theophylline (not recommended)
Imaging

Chest radiograph considered in the following patients, esp. focusing on the presence of infiltrates, bronchial wall thickening, or hyperexpansion.

  • <1 yr of age to exclude foreign body or atelectasis
  • First episode of significant wheezing (suggested to assess chronicity of illness and assist in excluding other conditions)
  • Increasing respiratory distress or minimal response to therapy
  • Respiratory distress/failure
  • Shortness of breath in the absence of wheezing
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

Peak flow measurement (see above)

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Infection/inflammation:
    • Bronchiolitis: Clinically difficult to differentiate except by age and clinical history.
    • Pneumonia: Viral, bacterial, chemical, or hypersensitivity
    • Aspiration
    • Retropharyngeal/mediastinal abscess/mass
    • Anaphylactic reaction
  • Anatomic:
    • Pneumothorax
    • Foreign body
  • Vascular disorder:
    • Compression of trachea by vascular anomaly
    • Pulmonary embolism
    • CHF
  • Congenital disease:
    • Cystic fibrosis
    • Tracheoesophageal fistula
    • Bronchogenic cyst
    • Congenital heart disease
  • Intoxication: Metabolic acidosis
  • Neoplasm
  • Vocal cord dysfunction (VCD)
  • Pulmonary edema—cardiogenic or noncardiogenic
  • Gastroesophageal reflux
TREATMENT

Other books

A Pirate's Dream by Marie Hall
A Cowgirl's Pride by Lorraine Nelson