Archive for the ‘Fellowship Exam’ Category

Could this be a Pulmonary Embolism?

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

In a previous blog we looked at the following patient who presented to the emergency department:

62 year old male presents to the Emergency Department with what he calls a flare-up of his congestive cardiac failure.

He states he is short of breath. He is a frequent presenter to the department with this complaint. He has not taken his frusemide for the past 48hours. He states that he feels very tired.

He is a well looking man with normal vitals Heart sounds dual, no murmur. normal JVP, bilateral pitting oedema to mid calves. Chest clear Abdomen soft His ECG and CXR are normal Bloods including a troponin are normal.

I’m unsure of the diagnosis, but given he hasn’t taken his frusemide, I treat him with that. I am going to discharge him, however it is late at night and he lives alone, so we decide to keep him in the department overnight. In the morning, he looks well and feels better, but still lethargic, ECG is unchanged, but for some reason someone does a follow-up troponin and it is 4.

He is diagnosed with a NSTEMI and sent to cardiology.

I now ask the question could it have been a pulmonary embolism and not a NSTEMI?

Certainly if we look at this case we see that the patient had dyspnoea with a normal chest on auscultation and on chest X-ray. Hmmm…

What are the risk factors for pulmonary embolism? Well we know of the classic ones of anything affecting Virchow’s triad. There are the hereditary factors of Protein C and S deficiency as well as others and the acquired factors such as immobility, recent surgery, cancer and others.

This patient had congestive cardiac failure(CCF). Is that a risk factor? As it turns out it is. In a population based study by Helt et al (Arch Intern med. 2002;162:1245-1248), the attributable risk associated with venous thromboembolism was 9.5%. So there is an increased risk in CCF.

What about symptoms and signs? Surely they would help.

Stein et al (Chest 1991;100:598-603), looked at patients with a suspected pulmonary embolism(PE) and with no previous evidence of cardiac or respiratory disease.

He then looked at the symptoms in patients with PE(n=117) and those without PE(n=248) as follows:

Dyspnoea - 73% with PE had it, but 72% of those with no PE also had dyspnoea.

Pleuritic Pain - 66% with a PE had it, and 59% without a PE also had it.

Leg Swelling - 28% with PE had it and 22% without PE had it

None statistically significant.

Well how about signs, surely they must help?

Tachypnoea - 70% with PE had it as did 68% of those without PE

Tachycardia - 30% with PE had it as did 24% of those without PE

Deep venous Thrombosis- 11% had it in both groups

Nothing was statistically significant.

What is interesting is that 97% of patients with a PE had

DYSPNOEA

or

TACHYPNOEA

or

PLEURITIC CHEST PAIN

So be on the lookout for those.

How about the TROPONIN rise- surely a pulmonary embolism can’t cause that?

Well as it turns out it can. Although we are unsure of the pathophysiology, it is postulated that it is due to increase in right ventricular afterload and irreversible ischaemia. It is also a predictor of in-hospital death (Giannitsis et al Circulation;2000;102:211-217). It’s important to say that the troponin rose in a group of patients that had suffered at least a moderate if not a large PE.

Those with a small PE may not have a troponin rise.

So the level of troponin rise is important as a rise of >0.1 is a potential predictor of mortality, however in the above study, none of the troponins rose above 1.0.

One other important characteristic was that the troponins rose earlier, ie., within 3-5 hours, in PE.

Therefore it is important to note that although troponin can rise, it usually does not do so, to as high a level as when true cardiac ischaemia occurs.

So, how about my 62 year old gentleman - could it have been a PE? The answer is yes it could. What is against it, is the level of rise of troponin was probably too high for someone looking so well.

Could it have been a thoracic dissection?

We’ll look at that next time…….

Syncope

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

This is one of my favourite areas, as patients present very frequently with this symptom. That very fact makes syncope a challenge. It is a symptom, not a condition in itself. We have to find the cause of the syncope. We need to be experts in this area as syncope presents some 5% of all emergency department visits and comprises 6-10% of admissions.

Our role is to risk stratify patients and make sure we don’t send home those with potential sinister causes. This is not as easy as it sounds, as there are many causes.

I often hear, “… well he’s still a little hypotensive, so that was probably the cause…..” What was probably the cause? Up to 50% of patients with syncope from whatever cause will be hypotensive. Also beware hypotension in the elderly. In this age group you need to start thinking about the abdominal aortic aneurysm.

Did you know that up to 12% of patients with thoracic aortic dissection, present with syncope as their ONLY complaint? That is a little scary.

We need to differentiate those causes associated with mortality and morbidity. This means working out who has had a cardiac or neurological cause of syncope as well as differentiate syncope from seizure.

WHY IS FINDING CARDIAC CAUSES SO IMPORTANT?

-Because mortality from missed cardiac causes can reach 30%

-Because underlying heart disease, irrespective of the cause of the syncope, is associated with an increased risk of death.

WHAT ABOUT THE NEUROLOGICAL CAUSES?

-We know that patients with a neurological cause of syncope have two times the risk of a stroke, when compared to those without syncope.

TAKING A GOOD HISTORY IS THE KEY

-How did the episode occur? Was there a sudden loss of consciousness, or was there a prodrome of sweating and dizziness etc.?

-This is important as a sudden loss of consciousness with no prodrome leads us to a cardiac cause.

-Was it associated with a change in position or did it occur whilst sitting?

-Again, syncope when sitting or lying can potentially point to a more sinister cause, which includes cardiac or neurological.

-Is there a family history or cardiac disease or sudden cardiac death?

-Here we need to start talking about BRUGADA SYNDROME and thinking about those terminating arrhythmias that can occur.

-Were there other associated symptoms of chest pain, or palpitations, or vertigo or nausea and vomiting?

-Was there a headache and if so was it sudden?

-Let’s not miss the potential subarachnoid haemorrhage.

This is such an important topic. Watch the video which contains parts of a previous lecture I’ve given on this and know that the latest will be covered tis year in the lecture series.

The update at RESUS 2010 will include:

-An approach to the diagnosis of Syncope

-Syndromes such as BRUGADA, that you must learn about and cannot miss.

-A discussion of the rules in use for looking at patients with syncope, such as the San Francisco Syncope Rule and the Boston Syncope Rule.

-We’ll talk about loop recorders, and here’s a really important thing I can’t understand. Some of these loop recorders are there to catch an arrhythmia, yet for them to be activated, the patient has to hold a probe up to them when they feel a syncopal episode coming on. What?! I have never had a patient successfully do that.

-We’ll talk about tilt table testing

-We’ll also talk about some of the latest treatments and MORE!

For now enjoy the snippets of video I’ve put together on the ‘resus blog’ and I hope you’ll take the time to come and listen to some great lectures at RESUS 2010

Hydrofluoric Acid Burns

Monday, January 18th, 2010

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Etched Glass  Photo by Sans Soucie

Hydrofluoric Acid Burns can be very serious burns, with fatalities documented at <5% burns area.

Hydrofluoric acid is a weak acid that is used in industry in electroplating and glass etching and in smaller business in carpet cleaners and other such stain removing products. It’s a weak acid with good tissue penetration, that binds calcium and magnesium.

Presentation is almost always with severe pain. The higher the concentration the earlier the pain presents itself. For example concentrations of >50% will have pain almost instantly, whereas concentrations <20% will have significant delayed pain of several hours.

Pain relief is our gauge of effectiveness of treatment and as such, local anaesthetics should not be used.

Treatments vary depending on the degree of exposure.

TREATMENT

Irrigate for 15 minutes.

1 Ca gluconate gel

2 Local infiltration

0.5ml/cm2 with 10% Calcium gluconate – only in small localised exposures. DO NOT USE Ca Cl as it may cause tissue necrosis.

For perfusion requirements, the textbooks say the following:

3 IV Regional perfusion:

best for forearm and hand, not as good for fingers. Release torniquet in 20 minutes or earlier of pain relieved.

a. Biers block: Inject with

i. 10ml Ca gluconate 10%

ii. 40ml 5% dext

iii. heparin 5000U

4 Intra-arterial regional perfusion:

best for finger or more extensive burns. 2-3 infusions may be required.

a. Radial artery catheter

b. Brachial artery catheter if ring or 5th finger involved.

c. Infuse via pump, chech patency every 30 minutes. Infuse over 4 hours

i. Ca gluconate 10% 15-20 mls to 50ml NSaline or 200ml dext 5%

Beware as this is a very specialised area, and something you may not treat very often. Before you give any of the intravenous treatments you need to consult with a toxicologist.

What do I study if I’m sitting the Fellowship Exam in two weeks?

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Someone asked me the other day, “What topics should I study if I were to sit the Emergency Fellowship exam in two weeks?” My response was “Don’t worry about it, you won’t pass!” The Fellowship exam needs some careful thought and time to digest. There is a difference between being a good emergency physician and passing and exam. Yes there is!

Thinking about it however, I put together 50 topics, given that if you put about 10 hours per day of work into it you could cover them. This is not exhaustive, nor is it what’s on the exam. This is in fact the list that I had when I sat my exam and I have modified it only a little since then.

For what it’s worth, here it is:


CARDIOLOGY

1 Chest pain

2 Arrhythmias

3 Syncope

4 PE

5 Aortic dissection

6 AMI

RESUSCITATION

7 Airway management

8 Cerebral Resus

9 Shock

RESPIRATORY

10 Pneumonia

11 Asthma/COAD

12 Pneumothorax

NEUROLOGY

13 Headache

14 Stroke

15 Seizure

16 Depressed level of consciousness

17 Vertigo/dizziness

GASTROENTEROLOGY

18 Gastroenteritis

19 Bowel obstruction

20 H & M

21 Pancreatitis

UROLOGY

22 Testicular torsion

23 UTI

INFECTIOUS DISEASES

24 PUO

25 Septic arthritis

TRAUMA

26 Cervical spine injuries

27 Head injuries

28 Trauma Resuscitation

ENDOCRINE

29 DKA and HONK

30 Interpretation of EUC

HAEMATOLOGY

31 Anaemia

32 Neutropaenia

33 Interpretation of FBC

OCCULAR/ENT

34 Occular emergencies

35 Epistaxis

36 Foreign Body

O&G

37 Emergency delivery

38 Ectopic

39 PV bleed

ENVIRONMENTAL

40 Heat illness

41 Submersion injury

42 Electrical injury

TOXINOLOGY/TOXICOLOGY

43 Snakebite/Spiderbite

44 Paracetamol

45 Beta Blocker overdose

46 TCAD

PAEDIATRICS

47 Crying infant

48 Febrile child

49 Abdominal pain

50 Rash

Good luck with the exams.