Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (102 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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ETIOLOGY
  • Typically, a primary psychiatric disorder, with genetic association
  • May be secondary to medical disorder (e.g., drug toxicity, endocrine, neurologic process)
  • Particularly likely to be secondary if
    • 1st episode
    • patient >40 yr
    • atypical or mixed presentation
    • abnormal sensorium
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Psychiatric history:
    • Recent symptoms of mania (often collateral sources critical): Elevated, expansive, or irritable mood; increased energy and activity; decreased need for sleep; irresponsibility, disregard for negative consequences of actions; talkativeness; distractibility; fast thoughts; grandiosity, overconfidence
    • Past mania or depression
    • Noncompliance with mood stabilizer
    • Recent initiation or discontinuation of antidepressant
    • Recent substance abuse
    • Bipolar family history
  • Medical history:
    • Endocrine, metabolic, or neurologic disorders
    • Current or recent medications
Physical-Exam
  • Appearance:
    • Hyperactive, if not agitated
    • Talkative, often with loud, rapid, or “pressured” speech
  • Affect:
    • Irritable, argumentative, often multiple recent arguments or fights
    • Less commonly euphoric or expansive
    • Often labile with depressed or tearful intervals (may confound diagnosis)
    • Patient likely to describe mood as tense, irritable, or depressed rather than euphoric
  • Neurovegetative:
    • Increased energy, engaged in multiple goal-directed activities many hours per day
    • Racing thoughts
    • Decreased sleep
  • Thought process:
    • Rapid, distractible, may be incoherent, delirious
  • Thought content:
    • Psychosis possible, either mood congruent (e.g., delusions of grandeur or power) or mood incongruent (may be indistinguishable from other psychotic disorders)
  • Judgment:
    • Inflated self-esteem, perhaps to grandiose or psychotic extent
    • Uncharacteristic, irresponsible behavior, such as financial or sexual indiscretions, with inability to recognize negative consequences of actions.
    • Substance abuse is frequent during mania.
  • Sensorium:
    • Typically normal
    • Confusion or delirium possible
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Physical and neurologic exam; vital signs
  • Mania may present as delirium and need workup of full differential diagnosis of delirium.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Toxicology screen (urine or serum)
  • Blood alcohol level
  • Electrolytes
  • Blood glucose
  • CBC
  • TSH
  • Lithium, carbamazepine, valproate serum levels, if relevant
  • Other tests as suggested by history or physical exam
Imaging

CT head only with suspicion of neurologic etiology

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Primary mania of bipolar or schizoaffective disorder
  • Psychosis
  • Agitated depression
  • Personality disorders:
    • Borderline
    • Narcissistic
    • Antisocial
  • Attention deficit disorder
  • Conduct or intermittent explosive disorders
  • Organic brain syndrome
  • Intoxication or withdrawal from alcohol or sedative hypnotics
  • Intoxication with cocaine, amphetamines, phencyclidine, or other sympathomimetics
  • Accidental or deliberate toxic overdose
  • Treatment with antidepressants or electroshock therapy in susceptible individuals
  • Recent discontinuation of antidepressant medication
  • Corticosteroid or thyroid hormones
  • Anticholinergics
  • Treatment of Parkinson disease
  • Cyclobenzaprine (Flexeril)
  • Endocrine or metabolic disorders (particularly thyroid disease)
  • Encephalitis
  • Meningitis
  • Postictal states
  • MS
  • Postcerebrovascular accident
  • CNS tumors
  • CNS vasculitis
  • General paresis
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • High violence potential:
    • Quiet environment
    • Prompt evaluation
    • Nonconfrontational manner
    • Adequate security backup
    • Physical restraint and sedation, as needed
  • For cooperative, but agitated patient:
    • PO neuroleptics (e.g., haloperidol, consider olanzapine or chlorpromazine as alternate) or PO benzodiazepines (e.g., lorazepam)
  • For uncooperative agitated patient:
    • Synergistic combination of IM, IV, or PO haloperidol and lorazepam widely used (some authorities favor monotherapy with benzodiazepine or neuroleptic):
      • Benztropine for prevention of acute dystonic reaction to haloperidol is not usually required when concurrent benzodiazepine is given.
    • Consider lorazepam, olanzapine, ziprasidone, or chlorpromazine IM as alternative.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Outpatient management:
    • Neuroleptics for symptomatic treatment, on temporary or continuing basis
    • Agents for sleep
    • Discontinuation of antidepressant if related to present hypomania or mania
    • Initiation or restart of mood-stabilizer therapy:
      • Action of mood-stabilizing agents requires days or weeks, even after full serum level attained.
  • Inpatient management:
    • Sedation or initiation of mood stabilizer in consultation with admitting psychiatrist
MEDICATION
  • Acute agitation:
    • Lorazepam: 2 mg PO/IM (lower dose in mild agitation or in frail or elderly); may repeat q30min, generally not to exceed 12 mg/24h
    • Haloperidol: 5 mg PO (lower dose in mild agitation or in frail or elderly); may repeat q30min, generally not to exceed 20 mg/24h
    • Synergistic combination of haloperidol, 5 mg IM/IV/PO + lorazepam 1–2 mg IM/IV/PO, repeat q30min, as required (doses may be smaller in elderly or frail patients)
    • Olanzapine 10 mg IM, ziprasidone 10 mg IM, aripiprazole 9.75 mg IM or chlorpromazine 50 mg IM may be useful parenteral alternatives, perhaps at a lower dose in frail or elderly (avoid chlorpromazine in hypotension; ziprasidone may have more QT prolonging effect than other neuroleptics but the clinical relevance of such effect at this dose is unclear).
  • Typical outpatient medications:
    • Aripiprazole: 5–20 mg PO QD
    • Benztropine: 1 mg PO BID
    • Carbamazepine: 400–2,000 mg/d (often in div. doses or in sustained-release dose forms)
    • Clonazepam: 0.5–2 mg PO QHS or 0.5–2 mg PO BID
    • Haloperidol: 0.5–5 mg PO BID
    • Lamotrigine: 25–200 mg/d in 1 or 2 div. doses (typically up to 100 mg/d in patients taking valproate, up to 500 mg/d in patients taking carbamazepine or certain other cytochrome inducers, but not valproate)
ALERT
  • Lamotrigine must be started by a gradual dose escalation schedule specified by manufacturer to avoid increased risk of severe dermatologic reactions; if resumed after discontinuation for more than 5 half-lives (about 5 days), the gradual dose escalation schedule must be used again (half-life is shorter with certain antiepileptics, OCPs, rifampin; see prescribing literature).
    • Lithium: 600–3,000 mg/d (often in div. doses or in sustained-release dose forms; in acute mania, initiate at 300 mg PO TID)
    • Olanzapine: 1.25–30 mg/d, QHS or in div. doses
    • Perphenazine: 4–32 mg/d PO QHS or in div. doses
    • Quetiapine: 50–400 mg PO QHS or 100–400 PO BID; quetiapine XR PO 50–800 mg QHS
    • Risperidone: 0.5–6 mg/d PO QHS or in div. doses
    • Valproate (e.g., Depakote): 750–3,000 mg/d (often in div. doses; in acute mania, initiate at 250 mg PO TID)
Pregnancy Considerations

The safety of psychotropic medications in pregnancy is a complex issue: Lithium, valproate, and carbamazepine are Pregnancy Category D and pose particular risks, highest in early pregnancy.

FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Involuntary hospitalization is required by danger to self:
    • Suicidal risk, especially if mixed or labile mood or psychotic
    • Unsafe behaviors due to impaired judgment
    • Medically unstable
    • Hospitalization diagnostically required
  • Involuntary hospitalization also required by:
    • Risk of behaviors dangerous to others
    • Inability to care for self (unable to obtain basic needs, such as food, clothing, or shelter)
Discharge Criteria
  • Patients with mild symptoms may be discharged on medications noted above if:
    • necessary supports to ensure safety are in place.
    • patient is compliant with treatment plan.
    • consultation with outpatient psychiatrist is available within 1–3 days.
  • Some patients who are not legally committable may refuse treatment; explain availability of future treatment to patient and any involved friends or family.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Manic patients are more likely to appear dysphoric or irritable, rather than “happy.”
  • Patients presenting with depression should be asked about features suggesting mania and hypomania; 70% of bipolar patients have previously been misdiagnosed.
  • Individuals with bipolar disorder are at high risk for addiction, further complicating treatment.
  • Prompt recognition of the earliest signs of mania may allow prevention of a full episode.
  • Bipolar disorder in children frequently manifests as behavioral disinhibition or irritability.

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