Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (501 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

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SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Severe ear pain
  • Bleeding
  • Signs of auricular deformity:
    • Edema
    • Hematoma:
      • Bluish, fluctuant, or doughy swelling of auricle
    • Laceration
    • Amputation
    • Loss of contour of the pinna
  • Signs of middle ear trauma:
    • Decreased hearing:
      • Partial loss suggests TM rupture
      • Complete loss suggests injuries to ossicles or inner ear
    • Tinnitus
    • Middle ear effusion or canal drainage
    • Peripheral facial nerve paralysis
    • Vestibular symptoms, i.e., nystagmus or vertigo:
      • May also result from inner ear injury
  • Signs of basilar skull fracture:
    • Hemotympanum or serous effusion
    • Retroauricular hematoma (battle sign)
    • CSF otorrhea or rhinorrhea
    • Peripheral facial nerve paralysis
History
  • Mechanism
  • Associated injuries
  • Past otologic history
  • Medications and allergies
Physical-Exam
  • Head
  • Cranial nerves
  • Vascular structures
  • Pinna
  • External ear canal
  • TM
  • Hearing
  • Consider the Weber and the Rinne test to evaluate for conductive hearing loss due to TM rupture or perforation:
    • Rinne test: Place a struck tuning fork to mastoid tip, hold until patient no longer hears ringing, then place fork near external auditory opening:
      • Normal: Patient still hears ringing; air conduction > bone conduction
      • Abnormal: No sound heard; air conduction < bone conduction; implies a conductive hearing loss
    • Weber test: Place a struck tuning fork to center of forehead:
      • Normal: Equal sound perception in both ears
      • Abnormal due to neurosensory loss: Patient will have decreased sound perception in the impaired ear
      • Abnormal due to conductive loss: Increased sound perception in the impaired ear
  • Be sure to evaluate for concomitant injuries
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

Wound culture if signs of infection

Imaging
  • Consider head and/or facial CT to evaluate for intracranial injury or bone fracture
  • Consider CT temporal bone without contrast if evidence of serious middle ear injury
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Infection
  • Hemangioma
  • Foreign body in ear
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

If auricle is amputated, wrap in moist gauze and place in plastic bag

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Check ABCs; full trauma evaluation; resuscitation as appropriate
  • Sterile dressing to injured site
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • All injury types:
    • Anesthesia:
      • Local anesthesia via nerve block to auriculotemporal branch of mandibular nerve, lesser occipital nerve, greater auricular nerve, and auricular branch of vagus nerve; use 1% lidocaine or 0.25% marcaine
      • Alternative: Inject ring of anesthetic around base of pinna
  • Tetanus prophylaxis if necessary
  • Specific injury types:
    • Auricular hematoma: Drainage imperative to reapproximate perichondrium to cartilage to prevent cartilage necrosis, ideally within 72 hr; however, no clearly defined best treatment
      • Antistaphylococcal antibiotics for 7–10 days
      • Aspiration: Preferred alternative if clot not yet formed; use 18G–20G needle for aspiration milk hematoma until totally evacuated; apply pressure dressing
      • Incision and drainage: More effective with larger and/or clotted hematomas; incise along curvature of pinna with no. 15 scalpel, evacuate, and irrigate; apply pressure dressing
      • Vaseline gauze pressure dressing: Place to fill crevices of pinna; place over and behind pinna; wrap soft gauze firmly around head
      • Alternative pressure dressing: Suture dental rolls into place over incised area
      • If patient has 2nd presentation due to reaccumulation, hematoma should be reaspirated and a wick placed for drainage
  • Laceration:
    • Prophylactic antibiotics are controversial but for human and animal bites treat with amoxicillin–clavulanate
    • Clean and debride wound, anesthetize as necessary
    • Superficial abrasions: Clean, dress with antibiotic ointment
    • Simple lacerations: 5 or 6 monofilament nylon or polypropylene suture, then pressure dressing; may use absorbable suture to avoid having to bend ear for suture removal
    • Exposed auricular cartilage: Carefully debride jagged edges; completely cover cartilage to prevent perichondritis; can remove small amount of cartilage to allow skin coverage; approximate cartilage 1st with absorbable sutures at major landmarks; include anterior and posterior perichondrium in stitch
    • Avulsions:
      • <2 cm total avulsions may be used as graft and survive
      • >2 cm: Consult or urgently refer to otolaryngologist or plastic surgeon
MEDICATION
  • Amoxicillin–clavulanate: Adults: 875/125 mg PO BID (peds: 40 mg/kg/d PO BID)
  • Dicloxacillin: 250–500 mg PO QID (peds: 30–50 mg/kg/d PO div. q6h)
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Concomitant serious traumatic injuries
  • Need for IV antibiotics
  • Immunosuppressed persons with serious infections, perichondritis, or chondritis
Discharge Criteria
  • Able to tolerate oral antibiotics
  • Able to arrange close follow-up
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Follow up wound suture repair in 5 days
  • Follow up hematomas in 24 hr to evaluate for reaccumulation
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Ghanem T, Rasamny JK, Park SS. Rethinking auricular trauma.
    Laryngoscope
    . 2005;115:1251–1255.
  • Jones SE, Mahendran S. Interventions for acute auricular haematoma.
    Cochrane Database Syst Rev
    . 2004;(2):CD004166.
  • McKay MP, Mayersak RJ. Facial trauma. In: Marx J, Hockberger R, Walls R, eds.
    Rosen’s Emergency Medicine
    . 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2009.
  • Riviello RJ, Brown NA. Otolaryngologic procedures. In: Rogers JR, Hedges J, eds.
    Clinical Procedures in Emergency Medicine
    . 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: WB Saunders; 2009.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Barotrauma
  • Tympanic Membrane Perforation
CODES
ICD9
  • 380.00 Perichondritis of pinna, unspecified
  • 920 Contusion of face, scalp, and neck except eye(s)
  • 959.09 Injury of face and neck
ICD10
  • H61.009 Unspecified perichondritis of external ear, unspecified ear
  • S00.439A Contusion of unspecified ear, initial encounter
  • S09.91XA Unspecified injury of ear, initial encounter
OVARIAN CYST/TORSION
Reneé A. King

Lynne M. Yancey
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Ovarian cysts:
    • Generally asymptomatic until complicated by hemorrhage, torsion, rupture, or infection
    • Follicular cysts:
      • Most common
      • Occur from fetal life to menopause
      • Unilocular; diameter 3–8 cm
      • Thin wall predisposes to rupture, which usually causes minimal or no bleeding
      • Rupture during ovulation at midcycle is known as mittelschmerz
    • Corpus luteal cysts:
      • Most significant
      • Diameter 3 cm, but usually <10 cm
      • Rapid bleeding from intracystic hemorrhage causes rupture
      • Rupture is most common just before menses begins
      • Can cause severe intraperitoneal bleeding
      • Gradual bleeding into cyst or ovary distends capsule and may cause pain without rupture
  • Adnexal torsion:
    • 5th most prevalent surgical gynecologic emergency
    • Twisting of vascular pedicle of ovary, fallopian tube, or paratubal cyst
    • Causes adnexal ischemia leading to necrosis
    • Occlusion of lymphatics and venous drainage lead to rapid enlargement of adnexa
    • Greatest risk with cysts 8–12 cm

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