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Published byMartha Pitts Modified over 9 years ago
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Approach to the comatose patient Stephen Lo
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Introduction Focus on developing a structured approach to coma Can be also applied to exam questions
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Case 50 year old polynesian lady presented with headache followed by LOC How would you assess and manage this patient?
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Investigations
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My approach Initial management Differential diagnosis Investigations Management
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Initial steps: safety + ensure adequate resources Ask for resources ABC, basic resuscitation
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Assessment of airway, breathing, and circulation Airway patency Airway protection: What is the GCS Is there protective reflexes present What is the risk of aspiration Are there secretions Rate and pattern of ventilation Circulation: signs of shock, hypotension. Consider maintaining CPP. In this case, I would put Blood sugar levels at the priority of the ABCs
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Differential diagnosis Need to construct a list of differential diagnosis at this point.
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Approach to the diagnosis Need a simple way of classifying causes Intracranial Extracranial
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Intracranial Consider surgical sieve or other pneumonics Need to include the key ones such as: bleed, stroke, infection, trauma, Seizures, rarer causes such as tumours, autoimmune, vasculitis, PRES context specific differentials such as vasospasm, hydocephalus in SAH
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Extracranial These are generally metabolic in nature. Again, have a sieve that you are familiar with, but need to include the most common ones including: Drugs: direct effect, indirect effects Acid base Hypoxia/hypercarbic Temperature Organ function: Kidney and liver Nutritional Electrolyte disturbance Endocrine Sepsis
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Mimics of coma Severe peripheral neuropathy Guillain Barre syndrome Botulism Critical illness neuropathy Locked in syndrome Akinetic mutism
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Assessment History and examination to rule out or in your differentials Catagorize into three broad categories based on patient’s signs Coma with focal signs: Suggests an intracranial event Coma with meningism: Suggests meningitis, SAH Coma without signs: Suggests a very diffuse intracranial lesion or an extracranial cause
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Investigations Consider all your options Systemic investigations CT head Lumbar puncture: MCS, PCR, antibodies CT angiogram EEG MRI SSEPs Cerebral angiogram
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What’s your management now? Medical management Specific management Position of patient, CO2 control, BP control, Osmotherapy, sedation, sugar, seizure control, temperature General management Interventions Radiological interventions Surgical management
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Case 2 49 yo male thai chef that was found collapsed at home, brought in by ambulance. How would you manage this patient?
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Assessment ABC: Noisy breathing GCS: E1V2M5 Sats: 84 % on 6L BP 190/80, HR 90/min
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Further clinical assessment Right side movement less than left Pupils equal and reactive
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Investigations
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Finding underlying causes Thromboembolic Consider source of clot Bleeding Is there an underlying abnormality Infection Are there underlying structural abnormality or immunosuppression Epilepsy Adult onset always need to consider cause
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Further investigations ASD on echo Paradoxical embolus and therefore infarct
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Other learning points That an extensive unilateral lesion can also cause reduced LOC
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