Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (250 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
  • Competitive and recreational injuries
  • Traumatic injuries
  • Child abuse
  • Extreme cold
  • Radiation injury
  • Genetic, neurologic, and metabolic disease
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Most commonly occurs after a fall
  • Extreme cold and radiation can injure the physeal plate.
Physical-Exam
  • Focal tenderness
  • Swelling
  • Limited mobility
  • If lower extremity involved, patient may be nonweight bearing
  • Joint laxity:
    • Can be due to physeal injury and not ligamentous injury
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Radiographs to classify the extent of the injury
  • Assess pulses and capillary filling distal to injury.
  • Evaluate distal motor and sensory function.
  • Verify integrity of skin overlying injury.
  • Address and manage coexisting injuries.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Imaging
  • Plain radiography of injured extremity:
    • Type I fractures:
      • Usually normal
      • May appreciate a slightly separated physis or an associated joint effusion
      • Consider comparison views of contralateral joint to detect small defects.
      • Callus may be present on follow-up films.
    • Types II–IV: Films diagnostic of fracture
    • Type V:
      • Initial film often normal
      • Subsequent radiographs may reveal premature bone arrest.
  • Ultrasound can be helpful in infants whose cartilage has not ossified.
  • CT scan: Helpful in assessing orientation of comminuted fragments
  • MRI:
    • Most accurate in the acute phase of injury
    • Can identify physeal arrest lines
    • Recommended if diagnosis remains equivocal and identification of a specific fracture would alter management
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Strain
  • Sprain
  • Contusion
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Immobilize limb in position found if no compromise in vascular status
  • Apply ice or cold packs to injury.
  • Assess injured extremity for neurologic and vascular function.
  • Consider concomitant injuries.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Analgesia
  • Apply sterile dressings to open wounds.
  • Control bleeding of open wounds.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Reduction/alignment required in displaced fractures:
    • Need to achieve anatomic alignment
  • Vascular or neurologic compromise distal to injury requires immediate intervention.
  • Immobilization of all suspected or radiographically confirmed physeal injuries:
    • Splint must immobilize joint proximal and distal to injury in anatomic alignment and neutral position.
    • Limit activity of the injured limb.
  • Open fractures:
    • IV antibiotics for
      Staphylococcus aureus
      , group A streptococcus, and potential anaerobes depending on mechanism and after cultures are obtained
    • Copious irrigation with saline
    • Sterile dressing
    • Orthopedic consultation
  • Consultation:
    • Open fractures
    • Type II with displacement and Types III and higher
MEDICATION
First Line

Pain management:

  • Fentanyl: 2–3 μg/kg IV; transmucosal lollipops 5–15 μg/kg, max. 400 mg; contraindicated if <10 kg
  • Morphine: 0.1 mg/kg IV/IM

If open:

  • Cefazolin: 25–50 mg/kg/d IV/IM q6–8h
  • Penicillin G: 100,000–300,000 U/kg/24 h IM, or IV in 4–6 div. doses—has better strep and corynebacterium coverage—for farm injuries
  • Gentamicin: 5–7.5 mg/kg/d—for obviously contaminated injuries
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Open fractures
  • Open surgical reduction required
  • Consider with Type III and IV fractures
Discharge Criteria
  • Low-grade fractures and fractures with higher grade if follow-up is definite
  • Splint
  • Analgesics
  • Ice packs
  • Elevation of affected limb
  • Orthopedic follow-up within 1 wk
Issues for Referral

All injuries involving the physis should follow-up with a musculoskeletal specialist.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Usually necessary, especially with higher-grade injuries, to monitor limb length:

  • Involves periodic physical exam and radiographic evaluation
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Long-term complications:
    • Limb length discrepancy if entire growth plate affected
    • Angulation if only a part of the physis is affected
  • In patients with suspected SH fracture and negative radiograph, immobilization with follow-up in a few days is appropriate.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • RathjenKE,BirchJG. Physeal injuries andgrowth disturbances. In: BeatyJH,Kasser JR,eds.
    Rockwood & Wilkins’Fractures in Children
    . 6th ed.Philadelphia, PA:Lippincott Williams and Wilkins;2006:11.
  • Rodríguez-Merchán EC. Pediatric skeletal trauma: A review and historical perspective.
    Clin Orthop Relat Res
    . 2005;432:8–13.
  • Salter R, Harris W. Injuries involving the epiphyseal plate.
    J Bone Joint Surg
    . 1963;45:587–622.
  • Wilkins KE, Aroojis AJ. Incidence of fractures in children. In: Beaty JH, Kasser JR, eds.
    Rockwood & Wilkins’ Fractures in Children
    . 7th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2010.
CODES
ICD9
  • 812.09 Other closed fracture of upper end of humerus
  • 813.42 Other closed fractures of distal end of radius (alone)
  • 813.43 Closed fracture of distal end of ulna (alone)
ICD10
  • S49.009A Unsp physeal fx upper end of humerus, unsp arm, init
  • S59.009A Unsp physeal fracture of lower end of ulna, unsp arm, init
  • S59.209A Unsp physeal fracture of lower end of radius, unsp arm, init
EPISTAXIS
Richard E. Wolfe

Christopher M. McCarthy II
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Nosebleeds are a common emergency presentation that is usually minor and self-limited but rarely may be life threatening:
    • Lifetime incidence of ∼60%:
      • The incidence decreases with age, with most cases seen in children <10 yr.
      • Male > female
      • Severe bleeds requiring surgical intervention are more common in patients >50 yr.
      • Occurs more frequently with low humidity during the winter, in northern climates, and at high altitude
  • The nasal cavity is supplied with blood vessels originating from both the internal and external carotid arteries.
  • Location of the hemorrhage determines therapy:
    • Anterior epistaxis (90% of cases): Bleeding can be visualized in anterior nose.
      • Most commonly bleeding is located at Kiesselbach plexus, an anastomotic network of vessels on the anteroinferior nasal septum.
      • Rarely, bleeding is found on the posterior floor of the nasal cavity or the nasal septum.
  • Posterior epistaxis (10% of cases): Bleeding source not within range of direct visualization.
    • Posterolateral branch of sphenopalatine artery
ETIOLOGY
  • Idiopathic:
    • Dry nasal mucosa (low humidity)
  • Nasal foreign body:
    • Children, mentally retarded patients, psychiatric patients
  • Infection:
    • Rhinitis
    • Sinusitis
    • Nasal diphtheria
    • Nasal mucormycosis
  • Allergic rhinitis
  • Trauma:
    • Nose picking
    • Postoperative
    • Facial trauma
    • Barotrauma
  • Environmental irritants:
    • Ammonia
    • Gasoline
    • Sulfuric acid
    • Glutaraldehyde
  • Intranasal neoplasia: Most commonly Papilloma
  • Coagulopathy:
    • Hemophilia A or B
    • Von Willebrand disease
    • Thrombocytopenia: Liver disease, leukemia, chemotherapy viral illness, or autoimmune disease.
    • Platelet dysfunction: Renal impairment or chronic alcohol consumption
  • Drug induced:
    • Salicylates
    • NSAIDs
    • Heparin
    • Coumadin
  • Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (Osler–Weber–Rendu disease)
  • Atherosclerosis of nasal vasculature
  • Endometriosis

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