Trauma, Abdominal Pain, Nausea/Vomiting 9/18/2013 Disclosure of Commercial Relationships:
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Trauma, Abdominal Pain, Nausea/Vomiting 9/18/2013 Disclosure of Commercial Relationships:
9/18/2013 Disclosure of Commercial Relationships: Trauma, Abdominal Pain, Nausea/Vomiting Matthew A. Wheatley, MD FACEP Grady Memorial Hospital Medical Director, Clinical Decision Unit • Nature of Relationship Name of Commercial Entity • • • • • • • • Advisory Board Consultant Employee Board Member Shareholder Speaker’s Bureau Patents Other Relationships None None None None None None None None Objectives • List factors in favor of observation for traumatic conditions • Identify conditions for which observation is beneficial • Discuss role of imaging and observation in patients with suspected appendicitis • Discuss observation unit management of patients with renal colic Why observation? • • • • • Trauma is common Some conditions require time to rule in or rule out Inpatient care for minor conditions is expensive Observation is more cost-effective Observation has been shown to be safe in certain settings Trauma The Numbers • Trauma is common – 41.9 million injury-related visits to EDs nationally – 1/3 of total ED visits • NHAMCS study • 52% of trauma expenditures for patients with minor injuries • MacKenzie et al. J Trauma 1990 • Davis et al. J Trauma 2007 • Minimally-injured patients stay > 24 hours awaiting studies • Cowell et al. J Trauma 1988. 1 9/18/2013 Safety of observation Certain conditions require observation • Initial physical exam is insensitive for diagnosing pathology – Hemoperitoneum • 39% sensitive 90% specific – Pneumothorax – Perforated viscous • Need for serial exams/studies – Penetrating chest trauma – Blunt/penetrating abd trauma • Pts with flank wounds develop signs and symptoms requiring laparotomy appear within 18 hours (94% within 6 hours). – MacLeod et al. Am Surg. Jan 2007. – Head injury What can be observed? • Closed head injury • Chest trauma – Blunt – Penetrating – Stab wound • Abdominal trauma – Blunt – Penetrating – Stab wound • Anterior • Flank or back • Soft tissue/orthopedic injuries • Pain control • Henneman, et al. – 984 with abd trauma • 230 (23%) observed 12 hours • 105 blunt trauma; 115 penetrating trauma – 82% discharge – No surgeries – Reduction in costs and admissions demonstrated • Ammons, et al. J. Emerg med 1996 – 150 pts with thoracic trauma • 129 discharged • No increased morbidity/mortality in admitted pts • 6-8 hour obs What shouldn’t be observed? • Gun Shot wounds – Thorax – Abdomen • Polytrauma • Thoracoabdominal injuries • Trauma in pregnancy • Unable to ambulate Initial Work-up • Blunt Trauma – Initial physical exam insensitive in blunt trauma – FAST has improved sensitivity (86%) – Soyuncu et al. Injury. 2007. – Negative scan does not rule out traumatic organ injury – Stengel, et al. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2005 – CT study of choice for most centers • Not 100% sensitive for bowel, mesenteric or diaphragmatic injury Initial work-up • Penetrating Trauma – Local wound exploration • Discharge if no violation of peritoneum • Observe if violation demonstrated or unsure – US • Murphy et al: 59% sensitive, 100% specific in detecting facial wound – CT • Triple contrast CT in the case of flank or back stab wound – DPL 2 9/18/2013 Abdominal Trauma – Goals of observation • To determine the patients with peritoneal injury require laparotomy and which may be discharged • The Alternatives – Discharge home – Admit to inpatient service – Non-selective laparotomy results in 30-40% unnecessary surgery – Arikan et al. J Trauma. 2005. Thoracic trauma – Patient Selection • Inclusion Criteria – – – – Normal initial studies (CXR, EKG, etc) Normal vital signs Alert Low clinical suspicion of serious injury • Exclusion Criteria – – – – Unstable Uncooperative Central chest stab wound Concern for thoracolumbar injury Duration of obs – penetrating trauma • Pts may be managed as an outpt if 6 hr CXR is negative – Kerr et al. Surg Gynecol Obstet. 1989 • Ordog et al. J trauma 1994 – Prospective study, 10,544 pts – 4,106 pts with asymptomatic wounds, negative initial CXR – NPV initial CXR 87.4% – 519 pts (12.6%) had delayed injuries • All diagnosed within 8 hours of obs Obs unit management • • • • • • Serial examinations Pain control Pulse oximetry CXR EKG, Cardiac biomarkers Other studies – CT/Echo 3 hour rule-out? • Seamon et al. J Trauma 2008 – 100 low-risk patients – Negative initial CXR – 2 pts developed ptx/htx at 0-3 hurs – No pts developed ptx or hts 3-6 hrs – Mean LOS 8.8 hrs 3 9/18/2013 CT vs CXR • Magnotti et al. Am Surg. 2007 – 118 pts with initial negative xr • Immediate non-contrast CT chest • 6 hr xr if CT negative – CT identified 6 ptx and 2 htx • 2 pts required operative intervention – No delayed findings found on XR if CT negative – Mean obs time 8 hours Other wound types • Require more extensive ED eval • Central Chest wound – 24 hour obs recommended for asymptomatic patients • Aaland et al. Am Surg. 1994. • Thoraco-abdominal wound Blunt Chest Trauma • Myocardial contusion – – – – – No gold standard for diagnosis Difficult to estimate rate of delayed complications Potential interventions Serial enzymes Echo • TEE preferred due to no limitations from rib fractures • Recommended for high risk patients – Nuclear studies not predictive of complications • Rib fractures – Can be observed for pain control and pulmonary care Minor head injury What about delayed bleeding? • Definition – GCS 14-15 – LOC or amnesia to event • Nagy et al. J trauma 1999 – 1170 minimal head injury pts – 96.7% with normal CT – No adverse outcomes in 23 hour obs for these pts – Conclusions: CT for everyone, pts may go home with negative CTs • Single site case series • 97 consecutive patients • 24 hour obs and repeat CT scan – 5 pts (6%) had delayed bleeding • 3 requiring hospitalization, 1 craniotomy • 2/5 had INR > 3.0 • Relative risk of delayed bleeding for INR > 3 was 14 4 9/18/2013 OU role in minor ICH? • Nishijima et al. Ann Emerg Med May, 2013 • Multicenter retrospective cohort study • 11,240 adult patients – GCS 15, injury severity score < 16 (no major organ injury) – OU used at 4 sites • 55 patients total – 847 of 888 patients (95%) admitted to ICU did not receive critical intervention – 3 of 524 (0.6%) admitted to floor, OU or discharged required critical intiervention – Conclusion: Possible over use of ICU for these patients. • Retrospective cohort review • 827 patients seen in ED 285 (34%) admitted to OU – 98% had head CT • Skull fractures 39% • ICH 13% – 13 patients (5%) required admission • • • • • • Continued IVF (n=5) Venous Thrombosis (n=2) Persistent CSF leakage (n=3) Decreased LOC (n=1) Pain management (n=1) C-spine clearance (n=1) – Median LOS 13 hours Pediatric Emergency Care 2005 Take Home points • Low acuity patients with blunt and penetrating trauma can be safely observed – Serial exam, US, H/H in ant abdominal wounds to detect need for laparotomy – 6-8 hours obs with 6 hour CXR for penetrating trauma to thorax – Central chest wounds require longer monitoring • Consider a period of observation for patients with closed head injury and persistent symptoms or on anticoagulation. Scope of the problem • Most common ED complaint Abdominal Pain, Nausea/Vomiting The Slippery Slope? – 8% of visits – McCaig. National Hosp Amb Med Care Survey: 1997 • 20-25% require admission – Graff et al. Ann Emerg Med. 1991. • 3% of discharged patients return to ED within 3 weeks – Lukens et al. Ann Emerg Med. 1993. • Over 40% have uncertain diagnosis – Leads to more admissions, negative work-ups, surgeries, etc – Brewer et al. Am J surg 1976 5 9/18/2013 Make it about something • Single condition/problem – Rule-in or rule out disease – Diagnostic study • 70-80% chance of discharge in 24 hours • Admit if not improved in 15-18 hours Abdominal Pain – Inclusion criteria • • • • Stable VS Non-surgical abdomen Negative pregnancy test Ancillary signs/sx – anorexia, N/V, fever, elevated WBC • Ruling in or out a specific condition – Appendicitis – Cholecystitis Abdominal pain – exclusion criteria • Hemodynamcially unstable • Surgical abdomen • Uncertain endpoints Suspected Appendicitis – Chronic pain • Special patient populations – Transplant – Immunosuppressed – Terminal illness Appendicitis: Background • Appendicitis is the most common surgical emergency • Missed appendicitis is the 4th largest source of medical malpractice (15% of payout) • Surgeons need to balance missed appy with negative surgery Limitations of CT In undifferentiated abdominal pain patients: – CT sensitivity 92% specificity 85% – PPV 75%, NPV 95% – Overall accuracy 90% – Alternative diagnosis 66% of negative patients 6 9/18/2013 Limitations of CT Goals of observation • Reduce unnecessary operation in patients without appendicitis presenting with typical symptoms • Reduce delay in diagnosis/perforation risk in patients with appendicitis presenting with atypical symptoms • CT use in the diagnosis of appendicitis has increased from 12% in 1998 to 86% in 2004 • In the ENTIRE modern CT era: – No change in negative laparotomy rate – No change in perforation rate – Indeterminate change in improper discharge or complication rate (although most papers argue for reduced complication rate and quicker disposition) Observation: an old technique • Serial examination is the best tool for minimizing perforation and reducing delays in diagnosis • Graff et al. Ann Emerg Med 1991 – Patients with appendicitis develop more signs and symptoms during EDOU stay – Used MANTRELS score • Lewis et al. Arch Surg 1975. • Increasing physical exams from qday to tid improved normal appendix rate 15% to 1.9% • White et al. Am Surg 1975 • Thompson et al. Am J surg 1986 – – – – – Performance of Observation Prospective trial, single observer exams, hourly vs 88% of patients completed 12 hour obs without laparotomy 11.8% required surgery No complications due to delay in surgery No return visits for abd pain in discharged pts. Observation: MANTRELS score • • • • • • • Characteristic M = Migration of pain to the RLQ A = Anorexia or acetone in urine N = Nausea and vomiting T = Tenderness in RLQ R = Rebound pain E = Elevated temperature (100.4F or 38C) 1 • L = Leukocytosis (>10,500) 2 • S = Shift of WBC to the left (>75% neutrophils) 1 • Total MANTRELS score Score 1 1 1 2 1 10 • Low score (0-3) may benefit from observation • Moderate score (4-6) may benefit from immediate imaging (15-32% pretest probability) • High scores 7+ should have urgent surgical consult • Average scores: – With appendicitis: 6.8, increasing during observation – Without appendicitis: 3.8, decreasing to 1.6 during observation 7 9/18/2013 MANTRELS score Abdominal Pain: Renal Colic Graff et al. Ann Emerg Med 1991 “Kidney Stones” . . . or ureteral colic • Effects 5-15% of population worldwide – ~ 50% recurrence rate • Economic impact – Indirect cost and loss of productivity = $1.7 billion/yr • U.S. ED visits – 4.4% (5 million) for genito-urinary emergencies Renal Colic – Criteria to consider: Transfer Criteria • Diagnosis of renal colic established – CT or ultrasound • Persistent pain or vomiting despite medication • Acceptable VS Exclusion Criteria • Unstable VS • Associated fever, UTI, pyelonephritis, sepsis • Single kidney or anatomic variant Renal Colic – Criteria to consider: Potential Intervention • IV Hydration • Parenteral narcotics, toradol • Expulsive therapies – tamsulosin, steroids, or calcium channel blockers • Parenteral antiemetics • Serial exams and vital signs • Strain urine, stone analysis, U/A if not yet don • Randomized patients to placebo or Tamsulosin plus steroids. • Found more rapid expulsion rate with treatment. • Demonstrated that a significant portion of stones will pass with a period of observation e 8 9/18/2013 Renal Colic Outcomes • Hostetler (Rush) - Kidney stones / UTI – Discharge rate = 72% – LOS = 13.8 hr • Ross (WBH) – Renal Colic – Discharge rate – LOS Take-Home Points • Focused observation period with serial physical exams helps to improve diagnostic accuracy of appendicitis – Fewer unnecessary operations – Fewer return visits in discharged patients = 80% = 13.1 hr • Observation with medical expulsive therapy for patients with renal colic helps improve symptoms and spontaneous passage. Resources • Observation Protocols Questions – http://www.obsprotocols.org/tiki-index.php – Emory Observation Services Manual available on iTunes book store (it’s free) – ACEP website >> Clinical & Practice management>> Resources >> Observation Medicine • Graff’s Observation medicine text book • Sample protocols • Clinical policy statements • Coding & Billing – http://www.acep.org/Clinical---PracticeManagement/Observation---Physician-Coding/ 9 9/18/2013 Bibliography Bibliography (cont.) • • Flum DR, Morris A, Koepsell T, Dellinger EP. Has misdiagnosis of appendicitis decreased over time? A population-based analysis. JAMA. 2001 Oct 10;286(14):1748 • • Graff LG 4th, Robinson D. Abdominal pain and emergency department evaluation. Emerg Med Clin North Am. 2001 Feb;19(1):123-36. • • • • • Graff L, Mahadevan M, Russell J. Observation Improves CT Scan Utilization in Abdominal Pain Evaluation for Appendicitis Graff L, Radford MJ, Werne C. Probability of appendicitis before and after observation. Ann Emerg Med. 1991 May;20(5):503-7. Graff L, Russell J, Seashore J, Tate J, Elwell A, Prete M, Werdmann M, Maag R, Krivenko C, Radford M. False-negative and false-positive errors in abdominal pain evaluation: failure to diagnose acute appendicitis and unnecessary surgery.Acad Emerg Med. 2000 Nov;7(11):1244-55. Lee CC, Golub R, Singer AJ, Cantu R Jr, Levinson H. Routine versus selective abdominal computed tomography scan in the evaluation of right lower quadrant pain: a randomized controlled trial. Acad Emerg Med. 2007 Feb;14(2):117-22. Paulson EK, Kalady MF, Pappas TN. Clinical practice. Suspected appendicitis.N Engl J Med. 2003 Jan 16;348(3):236-42. Welch, RD. Management of the Traumatically injured patient in the Emergency Department Observation Unit. Thank You 10