Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (500 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
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

Cultures unhelpful unless done by tympanocentesis

Imaging

CT scan if associated mastoiditis is suspected

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • Tympanocentesis—indications:
    • Severe pain or toxicity
    • Failure of antimicrobial therapy
    • Suspicion of suppurative complication
    • Sick neonate
    • Immunocompromised patient
  • Tympanometry and acoustic otoscopy may be useful with difficult exams
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Infection:
    • Otitis externa
    • Mastoiditis
    • Dental abscess
    • Allergic rhinitis
    • Cholesteatoma
    • Peritonsillar abscess
    • Sinusitis
    • Lymphadenitis
    • Parotitis
    • Meningitis
  • Trauma:
    • Perforation of the TM
    • Foreign body in ear
    • Barotrauma
    • Instrumentation
  • Serous OM or eustachian tube dysfunction
  • Impacted ear cerumen
  • Impacted 3rd molar
  • Temporomandibular joint dysfunction
TREATMENT
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Most mild cases could resolve without antibiotics
  • Antibiotics are indicated for:
    • All infants <6 mo
    • Children <2 yr with bilateral OM
    • Bilateral OM in kids <2 yr
    • Children >6 mo with severe infection (otalgia for >48 hr or temperature 102.2°F or higher)
    • Bilateral OM in kids <2 yr
    • Children >6 mo with ruptured TM with drainage
  • For otherwise normal healthy patients ≥6 mo with mild symptoms and/or uncertain diagnosis, consider no antibiotics and repeat evaluation in 2–3 days:
    • For reliable parents, may provide a prescription for oral antibiotics, which the family can fill if the child’s symptoms get worse or persist after 2 days
  • Considerations should include recurrent nature of OM, lack of clinical response, and resistance patterns in community
  • Parenteral antibiotics are indicated in febrile toxic children <1 yr or with immunocompromise
  • Antihistamines, decongestants, and steroids have no proven efficacy
  • Antipyretics and analgesics are important (avoid local analgesics in perforated TMs)
MEDICATION
  • Antibiotics:
    • Amoxicillin: 500–875 mg PO q12h (peds: 80–90 mg/kg/d PO div. q12h) for 10 days
    • Amoxicillin–clavulanic acid: 500–875 mg PO q12h (peds: 90 mg/kg/d PO q12h) for 10 days
    • Azithromycin: 10 mg/kg PO day 1, then 5 mg/kg/d PO days 2–5
    • Cefuroxime: 500 mg PO q12h (peds: 30 mg/kg/d PO div. q12h)
  • Analgesia:
    • Acetaminophen: 500 mg PO q6h (peds: 15 mg/kg per dose orally/rectally every 4–6 hr); not to exceed 4 g/24 h
    • Antipyrine/benzocaine (5.4%/1.4% solution): 2–4 drops in ear QID PRN
    • Ibuprofen: 400–600 mg PO q6–8h (peds: 10 mg/kg per dose orally every 6 hr)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria

Febrile toxic children who are:

  • <1 yr, immunocompromised
  • Moderately or severely dehydrated
  • Unable to tolerate oral fluids or medications
  • Suspected or proven associated significant infection
  • Suspected abuse
  • Unreliable caretaker
Discharge Criteria

Children without any of the aforementioned criteria

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Follow-up in 10–14 days to ensure resolution
  • Indications for earlier follow-up:
    • Child does not get better in 24–48 hr
    • Any progression of signs or symptoms
    • New problems develop, including a rash
    • Any concerns arise
COMPLICATIONS
  • Recurrent OM:
    • 3 episodes within 6 mo or
    • 4 episodes in 1 yr with the last within 6 mo
  • Perforated TM
  • Serous OM
  • Hearing loss (conductive and sensorineural)
  • Facial nerve injury
  • Mastoiditis
  • Cholesteatoma
  • Meningitis
  • Subdural empyema
  • Labyrinthitis
  • Epidural abscess
  • Venous sinus thrombosis
PEARLS AND PITFALLS

For otherwise normal healthy patients ≥6 mo with mild symptoms and/or uncertain diagnosis, consider no antibiotics and repeat evaluation in 2–3 days.

ADDITIONAL READING
  • American Academy of Pediatrics Subcommittee on Management of Acute Otitis Media. Diagnosis and management of acute otitis media.
    Pediatrics
    . 2004;113:1451–1465.
  • Coker TR, Chan LS, Newberry SJ, et al. Diagnosis, microbial epidemiology, and antibiotic treatment of acute otitis media in children: A systematic review.
    JAMA.
    2010;304:2161–2169.
  • Fischer T, Singer AJ, Lee C, et al. National trends in emergency department antibiotic prescribing for children with acute otitis media, 1996–2005.
    Acad Emerg Med
    . 2007;14:1172–1175.
  • Greenberg D, Hoffman S, Leibovitz E, et al. Acute otitis media in children: Association with day care centers–antibacterial resistance, treatment, and prevention.
    Paediatr Drugs.
    2008;10:75–83.
  • Gunasekera H, Morris PS, McIntyre P, et al. Management of children with otitis media: A summary of evidence from recent systematic reviews.
    J Paediatr Child Health
    . 2009;45:554–562.
  • Lieberthal AS, Carroll AE, Chonmaitree T, et al. The diagnosis and management of acute otitis media.
    Pediatrics
    . 2013;131:e964–e999.
  • Powers JH. Diagnosis and treatment of acute otitis media: Evaluating the evidence.
    Infect Dis Clin North Am
    . 2007;21:409–426.
  • Spiro DM, Arnold DH. The concept and practice of a wait-and-see approach to acute otitis media.
    Curr Opin Pediatr
    . 2008;20:72–78.
CODES
ICD9
  • 381.4 Nonsuppurative otitis media, not specified as acute or chronic
  • 381.60 Obstruction of Eustachian tube, unspecified
  • 382.9 Unspecified otitis media
ICD10
  • H65.90 Unspecified nonsuppurative otitis media, unspecified ear
  • H66.90 Otitis media, unspecified, unspecified ear
  • H68.109 Unspecified obstruction of Eustachian tube, unspecified ear
OTOLOGIC TRAUMA
David A. Pearson

Chelsea Kolshak
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Pinna
  • Ear cartilage has no blood supply and isnutritionally dependent on perichondrium
  • Hematomas often disrupt perichondrium and cartilage
    • Can lead to:
      • Ischemia
      • Perichondritis
      • Necrosis
      • Cauliflower ear
  • Penetrating injuries or bite wounds may lead to infection of cartilage
Middle Ear
  • Air-space cavity containing ossicles; susceptible to injuries disrupting pressure (blast, diving)
  • Bordered by medial cranial fossa (including temporal and mastoid bones)
  • Traumatic fractures can lead to CSF leak (otorrhea/rhinorhea)
    • May disrupt enclosed vestibular system
  • Facial nerve passes through cavity—injury to cavity may cause peripheral nerve paralysis
ETIOLOGY
  • Blunt trauma:
    • Contact sports such as wrestling
    • Motorcycle helmets
  • Penetrating trauma such as tympanic membrane (TM) perforation from cotton swabs
  • Human or animal bites
  • Blast injury
  • Lightning injury:
    • TM and ossicular disruptions occur in 50% of lightning strikes
  • Chemical exposure
  • Thermal injury
  • Diving injuries:
    • Inner ear barotrauma
    • TM rupture
Pediatric Considerations

Consider nonaccidental trauma

DIAGNOSIS

Other books

Model Murder by Nancy Buckingham
Gryphon in Glory by Andre Norton
The Confabulist by Steven Galloway
Chicken Soup for the Soul 20th Anniversary Edition by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Amy Newmark, Heidi Krupp
The Dreaming Suburb by R.F. Delderfield
A Matter of Trust by LazyDay Publishing
A Calculated Romance by Violet Sparks
The Silent Dead by Tetsuya Honda
Ciao by Melody Carlson