Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (583 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
11.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
History
  • Screen for psychosis, including onset, duration, triggers, and content:
    • Delusions:
      • “Do you feel anyone is trying to harm you or that you are being followed?”
      • “Is anyone trying to send you messages, steal, control, or block your thinking?”
    • Hallucinations:
      • “Do you ever see or hear things that other people cannot see or hear?”
      • “Do you ever hear voices telling you to do things such as to harm yourself or to harm others?”
  • Suicidal or homicidal behavior or threats
  • Past medical and psychiatric history
  • Social situation and ability to care for self
  • Recent use, increase or cessation of medications, drugs, or alcohol
  • Obtain history from friends, family, and treaters
Physical-Exam

Look for signs of a medical etiology:

  • Vital signs
  • Eye exam (pupils, EOM, fundi)
  • General exam with particular attention to the signs and symptoms of endocrine, liver, and renal disease
  • Neurologic exam, including cognitive exam
  • Careful assessment for signs of delirium
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

The workup is case specific and primarily based on the suspected etiology

DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose, calcium
  • Toxicology screen
  • CBC with differential
  • TSH
  • Urinalysis
  • Further specific studies should be guided by the suspected underlying etiologies
Imaging

Consider head imaging for new-onset psychotic symptoms of unclear etiology, especially in setting of focal neurologic symptoms.

Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

When clinically warranted consider:

  • Lumbar puncture
  • EEG
  • EKG (monitor QT)
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

See Etiology.

TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Patients can display unpredictable and violent behavior toward themselves and others
  • Patients may require police presence or restraints to maintain safety
  • Local laws vary regarding involuntary restraint
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Safety of patient and staff is paramount and may require presence of security
  • Behavioral interventions should be used first
    • Provide a calm, containing environment
    • Remove all potentially dangerous items
    • Use a reassuring voice and calm demeanor to set boundaries and verbally redirect
  • If safety is a concern, patient needs to be under constant observation
  • Physical or chemical restraints as necessary
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • If a nonpsychiatric etiology is suspected, identify and treat underlying medical condition
  • If a psychiatric etiology is suspected, consider psychiatric consultation or referral
  • Acute agitation is reduced with antipsychotics:
    • Encourage voluntary PO medications prior to IM administration
    • Avoid polypharmacy
  • Rapid tranquilization may be achieved with the addition of a benzodiazepine
  • Monitor for and treat adverse effects from antipsychotic medications:
    • Extrapyramidal symptoms (dystonia, akathisia, pseudoparkinsonism, and tardive dyskinesia)
    • Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a life-threatening complication:
      • Characterized by hyperthermia, muscle rigidity, autonomic instability, and altered consciousness
MEDICATION
  • 1st line antipsychotics:
    • Haloperidol: 2–10 mg PO/IV/IM, repeat q20–60min prn to max. 100 mg/d; elderly 0.5–2 mg/dose
      • Commonly augmented with lorazepam
  • 2nd line antipsychotics:
    • Aripiprazole: 2–15 mg PO/IM, may repeat q2h prn to max. 30 mg/d
    • Chlorpromazine: 25 mg PO/IM, repeat 25–50 mg q60min prn to max. 1,000 mg/d. Caution: Sedating, postural hypotension, do not use in elderly
    • Olanzapine: 2.5–20 mg PO/IM, may repeat dose q2–4h prn to max. 20 mg/d; elderly 2.5–5 mg/dose. Caution: Concurrent use of IM olanzapine and IV benzodiazepines may increase risk of cardiopulmonary collapse
    • Risperidone: 1–2 mg PO, may repeat 2 times; elderly 0.25–0.5 mg/dose. Caution: Orthostatic hypotension
    • Quetiapine: 25–50 mg PO BID, increase by 100 mg/d to max. 800 mg/d; elderly 12.5–25 mg/dose, increase by 25–50 mg/d
    • Ziprasidone: 20–40 mg PO BID, max. 80 mg PO BID; 10 mg IM q2h or 20 mg IM q4h prn to max. 40 mg/d IM, no more than 3 days. Caution: Monitor QT
  • Benzodiazepines:
    • Lorazepam to augment tranquilization: 1–2 mg PO/IM/IV; elderly 0.25–0.5 mg PO/IM/IV
Geriatric Considerations

Black box warning: Elderly patients with dementia-related psychoses treated with antipsychotic drugs are at increased risk of death.

FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • If nonpsychiatric etiology, admit to appropriate medical service
  • If psychiatric etiology and patient is medically stable, patient may require admission to a psychiatric hospital if patient:
    • Is a danger to self or others
    • Is gravely disabled and unable to care for self due to psychosis
    • Has new-onset psychosis and medical etiology has been ruled out
  • Criteria for involuntary hospitalization vary
Discharge Criteria
  • Patient is not a danger to self or others and is able to perform activities of daily living
  • Psychotic symptoms resolved after causative medical issue addressed and patient is medically stable for discharge
Issues for Referral

Consider psychiatric consultation for complicated cases or for psychiatric admission.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Plan appropriate outpatient medical follow-up
  • In patients with psychiatric disorders not requiring admission, plan outpatient psychiatric follow-up within 1 wk
  • Consider referral for detoxification in patients with problems related to substance use
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Psychotic symptoms should be evaluated for treatable medical causes and not assumed to be solely psychiatric in nature even in patients with known mental illness
  • Visual, olfactory, gustatory, or tactile hallucinations should prompt medical workup
  • Avoid using IM olanzapine with IV benzodiazepines as this increases risk for cardiopulmonary collapse
  • Patients who have recently started or increased their antipsychotics who present with fever, rigidity, autonomic instability, and mental status changes should be assessed for neuroleptic malignant syndrome
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Byrne P. Managing the acute psychotic episode.
    BMJ.
    2007;334(7595):686–692.
  • Mathias M, Lubman DI, Hides L. Substance-induced psychosis: A diagnostic conundrum.
    J Clin Psychiatry.
    2008;69:358–367.
  • Nordstrom K, Zun LS, Wilson MP, et al. Medical evaluation and triage of the agitated patient: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta medical evaluation workgroup.
    West J Emerg Med
    . 2012;13(1):3–10.
  • Wilson MP, Pepper D, Currier GW, et al. The psychopharmacology of agitation: Consensus statement of the american association for emergency psychiatry project Beta medical evaluation workgroup.
    West J Emerg Med
    . 2012;13(1):26–34.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Delirium
  • Dystonic Reaction
  • Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
  • Psychosis, Medical vs. Psychiatric
  • Schizophrenia
  • Violence, Management of
CODES
ICD9
  • 292.9 Unspecified drug-induced mental disorder
  • 298.8 Other and unspecified reactive psychosis
  • 298.9 Unspecified psychosis
ICD10
  • F19.959 Oth psychoactv substance use, unsp w psych disorder, unsp
  • F23 Brief psychotic disorder
  • F29 Unsp psychosis not due to a substance or known physiol cond
PSYCHOSIS, MEDICAL VS. PSYCHIATRIC
Richard E. Wolfe
BASICS

Other books

Farming Fear by Franklin W. Dixon
Overwhelm Me by Marchman, A. C.
Saratoga Trunk by Edna Ferber
Love You to Death by Melissa Senate
The Very Thought of You by Angela Weaver
Point Blank by Hart, Kaily
A Pirate's Wife for Me by Christina Dodd
The Lost World by Michael Crichton
Red Centre by Ansel Gough
A Tale of Two Castles by Gail Carson Levine