Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (725 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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ADDITIONAL READING
  • Bakdash S, Yazer MH. What every physician should know about transfusion reactions.
    CMAJ
    . 2007;177:141–147.
  • Goodnough LT, Levy JH, Murphy MF. Concepts of blood transfusion in adults.
    Lancet
    . 2013;381:1845–1854.
  • Morton J, Anastassopoulos KP, Patel ST, et. al. Frequency and outcomes of blood products transfusion across procedures and clinical conditions warranting inpatient care: An analysis of the 2004 healthcare cost and utilization project nationwide inpatient sample database.
    Am J Med Qual.
    2010;25:289–296.
  • Spahn DR, Goodnough LT. Alternatives to blood transfusion.
    Lancet.
    2013;381:1855–1865.
  • Squires JE. Risks of transfusion.
    South Med J
    . 2011;104(11):762–769.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
  • Allergic Reaction
  • Anaphylaxis
  • Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation
  • Sepsis
CODES
ICD9
  • 780.66 Febrile nonhemolytic transfusion reaction
  • 999.80 Transfusion reaction, unspecified
  • 999.84 Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction, incompatibility unspecified
ICD10
  • R50.84 Febrile nonhemolytic transfusion reaction
  • T80.910A Acute hemolytic transfusion reaction, unspecified incompatibility, initial encounter
  • T80.92XA Unspecified transfusion reaction, initial encounter
TRANSIENT GLOBAL AMNESIA
Kama Guluma
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Transient global amnesia (TGA) has the following features:
    • Episode of amnesia with abrupt onset
    • No focal neurologic signs or symptoms
    • Temporary, severe, anterograde amnesia:
      • Acute inability to form new memories
      • Permanent memory gap after the episode
    • Temporary short-range retrograde amnesia:
      • More recent memories at more risk
      • Previously encoded memories unavailable only temporarily
    • Gradually improves until only remaining memory deficit is the gap induced by the anterograde amnesia
  • Incidence between 3 and 8 per 100,000 people:
    • 75% occur in people of 50–70 yr old
    • TGA rare <40 yr
  • Most attacks last between 1 and 8 hr (range 15 min–7 days)
ETIOLOGY
  • Multimodal MRI, SPECT, and PET have shown some abnormalities of regional blood flow in selectively vulnerable hippocampal structures
  • The exact etiology of TGA is unknown; speculation is controversial
  • Speculated causes:
    • Vasoconstriction due to hyperventilation:
      • Psychogenic hyperventilation in setting of age-related cerebrovascular autoregulatory dysfunction
    • Hippocampal venous congestion with Valsalva:
      • Ultrasonography has suggested internal jugular vein incompetence
    • Migraine (in younger patients)
  • No correlation between TGA and thromboembolic cerebrovascular disease has been found
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Diagnostic criteria:

  • Attack must be witnessed
  • Acute onset of anterograde amnesia
  • No alteration in consciousness
  • No cognitive impairment except amnesia
  • No loss of personal information (e.g., name, birth date, address, etc.)
  • No focal neurologic symptoms
  • No epileptic features
  • No recent history of head trauma or seizures
  • Attack must resolve within 24 hr
  • Other causes of amnesia excluded
History
  • Often precipitated by stressful condition:
    • Cough, Valsalva
    • Physical exertion
    • Sexual intercourse
    • Extreme fright or shock
    • Intense heat or cold
  • Patient will likely feel something is wrong:
    • May ask “how did I get here?”
    • May be repetitive in questions
    • Will be generally aware of attack
  • May have other subtle transient symptoms at onset, such as headache, dizziness, nausea
  • Historical features helpful in excluding other diagnoses are:
    • Onset of attack witnessed, with no seizure activity or epileptiform features noted
    • No history of seizures in prior 2 mo
    • No history of recent traumatic brain injury
    • Acute anterograde amnesia with relatively preserved remote memory
Physical-Exam
  • Marked anterograde amnesia
  • Most cases (≥90% in case series) will demonstrate repetitive questioning
  • Neurologic and general exam normal
  • TGA patient
    WILL NOT
    be:
    • Somnolent
    • Inattentive
    • Globally confused
    • Confabulate
  • TGA patient
    WILL
    be:
    • Oriented to name, birth date, address, phone number, date
    • Able to perform complex tasks and following complex commands
  • Aphasia, apraxia, and agnosia are NOT findings consistent with TGA
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • True TGA can be diagnosed with a careful history and physical exam alone
  • If clinical diagnosis is certain, no other workup is essential
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION

Testing indicated only when the diagnosis is uncertain

Lab
  • CBC, comprehensive chemistries including glucose, LFTs, NH
    3
    , thyroid studies, and UA for organic–metabolic etiologies were implicated
  • Tox screen, alcohol level for toxic etiologies were suspected
Imaging
  • Consider MRI if indicated.
    • In true TGA, MRI may show a focal hippocampal DWI or T2 lesion that resolves over time
  • Head CT for intracranial mass if indicated
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
  • EEG for seizure or nonconvulsive status if suspected
  • Lumbar puncture and CSF analysis for encephalitis if suspected
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Other entities may present somewhat similarly but will likely have historical or physical exam features that readily distinguish them from TGA:
    • Anterior choroidal artery or posterior cerebral artery or TIA:
      • Additional related neurologic signs such as hemianopia
    • Acute confusional state/Korsakoff syndrome/metabolic disorder:
      • Alcohol, medication, or toxin ingestion
      • Decreased attention or other findings of an encephalopathy
      • Impairment with serial 7s or spelling “world” backward
      • Able to lay down new memory if allowed time to encode
    • Complex partial seizures/epileptic amnestic attacks:
      • Witnessed epileptiform activity or features (e.g., blank stares, automatisms, lip-smacking, olfactory hallucinations)
      • Short duration (typically <30 min; TGA lasts hours)
      • No repetitive questioning
      • Frequent and rapid recurrences
    • Psychogenic amnesia:
      • Younger patient with a known psychiatric stressor
      • Prominent retrograde amnesia
      • Psychogenic memory loss for personal identification, name, birth date, etc.
    • Temporal lobe brain lesion or encephalitis affecting the temporal lobe:
      • Has other associated neurologic symptoms (e.g., visual field cut, confusion)
      • Progressive and permanent amnesia
    • Previously unrecognized Alzheimer dementia:
      • Memory loss for personal information such as date, phone number, address
      • Signs of additional global cognitive impairment
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

There are no considerations in true TGA that are specific to the pre-hospital environment

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

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