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Floor Calls. Bonnie K. Dwyer, MD Maternal Fetal Medicine Palo Alto Medical Foundation. Introduction Words of Wisdom. All of the answers lie in the Differential Diagnosis. Topics. General Principles Fever- Intra Partum, Post Partum, General Low Urine Output Shortness of Breath
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Floor Calls Bonnie K. Dwyer, MD Maternal Fetal Medicine Palo Alto Medical Foundation
IntroductionWords of Wisdom All of the answers lie in the Differential Diagnosis
Topics • General Principles • Fever- Intra Partum, Post Partum, General • Low Urine Output • Shortness of Breath • Chest Pain
General Principles • Does the patient need to be seen? • What are the patient’s vitals? • Is there an abnormal vital sign? • Is the patient symptomatic? • Does the patient need to be seen NOW? • Decide if you need help.
General Principles • RUN vs. WALK • Run for any unstable vital sign • Go immediately for SOB /Chest Pain/Altered Mental Status
General Principles • While running or walking • Think about the differential diagnosis • Think about what more information you will need to diagnose the problem • Decide on a plan of action
General Principles • Be systematic in your thinking • Divide every problem into the following categories: • Differential diagnosis • Diagnostic plan • Treatment plan • Have a memorized or “Rote” diagnostic plan for each problem– you may later adjust it according to circumstance
Fever The definition and management of fever is different depending on the setting Intra-partum Post-Partum General
Fever: Intrapartum • Definition- Temperature ≥ 38 • Differential diagnosis • Chorioamnionitis • Exertional temperature elevation = “dehydration” • “Anesthesia related fever” = “dehydration” • Previously existing disease
Fever: IntrapartumDiagnostic Plan • Physical exam • Exertional temperature elevation/ “anesthesia related fever”- includes only low grade temperatures, ie T< 38.0 (F100.4) • Research definition of “chorio” includes maternal fever and one more sign/symptom including maternal tachycardia (>100 bpm), fetal tachycardia, foul smelling lochia, or tender uterus • Clinical definition, “chorio” is T ≥ 38.0 (F100.4)
Fever: IntrapartumTreatment • Diagnosis determines treatment • Exertional temperature elevation“Bolus” • Chorioamnionitis Ampicillin/Gentamicin during labor • PCN allergic-->Kefzol • If PCN anaphylaxis-->clinda/erythro if known GBS sensitivities available. Vanco if unknown. • If C/S is performed, add anaerobic coverage. Generally continued for 48 hours post-op. • Studies have shown that a single dose of antibiotic post vaginal delivery is as good as 24 hour doses.
Fever: Post Partum • Whole different world! • Definition • Temperature greater than 38.5 X1, or • Temperature greater than 38.0 X2 after the first 24 hours post partum
Fever: Post PartumDiagnosis • Differential Diagnosis (head to toe) • Mastitis • Atelectasis/Pneumonia—aspiration or hospital acquired • Endometritis • Pyelonephritis • Cellulitis/Wound Abscess • Vaginal hematoma/abscess • DVT/other thrombosis (septic pelvic thrombophlebitis) • Drugs and other usual suspects
Fever: Post PartumDiagnosis • Endometritis- • Uterine tenderness, foul smelling lochia • Absence of other obvious source • Know your bugs- On Creogs • Polymicrobial • 80% involve anaerobic organisms—peptostreptococci, bacteroides, etc. • Gram neg rods (E.coli), Gram pos cocci (GBS), etc. • Late endometritis—that is two weeks out may involve chlamydia—so add doxy to this regimen
Fever: Post PartumDiagnostic Plan • Physical Exam • +/- U/A, Ucx • +/- CBC • +/- Blood cultures X2 • +/- CXR • +/- stool culture
Fever: Post PartumTreatment • Diagnosis determines treatment type and length • If you start ABX before you send your cultures, you may be sorry • Assume endometritis if no other obvious source on exam
Fever: Post PartumTreatment • Endometritis • This is the only bacterial infection that I know of for which you stop ABX when pt. is afebrile!! • Most will stop ABX when a pt. has been afebrile for 24-48 hours. If the pt. is s/p C/S—usually 48 hours. • Traditional antibiotics are “Triples,” but other broad spectrum antibiotics have been shown to be just as efficacious -Amp/Gent/Clinda—daily or thrice daily dosing -Clinda/Gent alone – recommended by ACOG -Zosyn, Unasyn, Cefotetan, Augmetin (po!!)
Fever: Post PartumEndometritis • Blood cultures are done in a patient with endometritis to direct care if the patient NOT responding. • 10-20% of endometritis will have positive blood cultures. • 10-20% of endometritis will be secondary to inadequately covered enterococcus. • Although most cultures reveal a single organism, the infection is STILL polymicrobial!
Fever: Post PartumTreatment • Pyelonephritis • Traditional treatment is Amp/gent, new studies show Cephalosporins also OK—Kefzol and Ceftriaxone are fine. • When afebrile X 24 hours, change to po’s, need 14 day course (if pt. not breast feeding, fluroquinolones ok, then only need 7 days) (+ blood cultures help with diagnosis, but do not alter treatment) NO MACRODANTIN for PYELO!!!!
Fever: Post PartumTreatment • Mastitis- Typically T≥38.3 with systemic symptoms • Dicloxicillin or Keflex (traditional)—both OK for breast feeding and cover staph and strep. (Nafcillin or Kefzol if IV ABX needed.) • New emphasis to cover MRSA if recent hospitalization, consider clindamycin 300 mg qid • 10-14 day course • Breast feeding or pumping hastens recovery. • NSAIDS • Abscesses must be drained and can be diagnosed by ultrasound
Fever: General • Rote • Physical Exam • Blood culture X2 • U/A, Ucx • +/- CXR • +/- stool cultures, ie C.diff
Fever: GeneralDifferent World! • Definition- Temperature >38.5 (101.5) • Differential Diagnosis • Infection • Drug • Thrombus- DVT-upper or lower extremity/PE • Atelectasis • Cancer • Inflammatory disease/Vasculitis/Other
Fever: GeneralDiagnostic Plan Individualize according to the patient. Think through anatomically: • Head: Sinusitis, Meningitis, otitis/pharyngitis • Heart: Endocarditis • Lungs: Pneumonia, pleural effusion • Chest: Line infection • Abdomen- abscess, pyelonephritis, biliary, infectious diarrhea, spontaneous or secondary bacterial peritonitis • Pelvis- PID/TOA, abscess • Back- Decubitus ulcers, rectal abscess • Extremities- cellulitis, septic thrombus, line infection, osteomyelitis
Fever: GeneralDiagnostic Plan • If the patient is immunocompromised, expand your differential diagnosis • If no obvious source of bacterial infection, think about viral causes of fever and the rest of the differential diagnosis
Fever: GeneralTreatment Plan • Diagnosis determines treatment type, dose, and duration. • Empiric treatment only if patient is septic or in danger of sepsis or life threatening complication.
Fever: GeneralTreatment Plan • Broad spectrum antibiotics • Know what category of bug each antibiotic covers, ie gram positive, negative, anaerobic, atypicals • Neutropenia: Each institution has its own hierarchy of Broad spectrum coverage. • Chronic illness or hospitalization: Add coverage for resistant gram positives with Vanco • If pt. in danger of dying or has a nosocomial infection, consider “double coverage” of gram negatives, specifically pseudomonas • Traditional Pseudomonal ABXs include: Gent/Tobra, Ceftaz, Cefepime, Zosyn/Timentin, Cipro, Imipenem/Meropenem, Aztreonam
Low Urine Output Low urine output is not the problem, it signifies a problem Your goal is not to make the patient pee, but to figure out why she is not peeing
Low Urine OutputDefinition • Low Urine Output- • Less than 0.5cc/kg/hr (30-40cc/hr in a typical woman) • Oliguria- 400-500 cc/day • Anuria- Less than 50cc/day
Low Urine Output • Differential Diagnosis • Intravascularly dry- • True hypovolemia: intravascular depletion • Hypervolemia with intravascular depletion: 3rd spacing or low albumin states • “Intravascularly Dry”: low cardiac output, or low SVR (the kidney thinks the body is intravascularly dry) • Acute kidney injury (Acute renal failure) • Obstruction/Mechanical problem-outlet obstruction, ie FOLEY BLOCKADE, or hole in the bladder
Low Urine OutputDiagnostic Plan: Rote • On the phone- rule out easy things first • Does the pt. have a foley • If yes—flush foley • If no- Place foley and call me with the output • Determine volume status • Vital signs- HR, BP, O2 sat • Physicial exam- mucous membranes, neck veins, lungs, extremities
Low Urine OutputDiagnostic Plan- Extras Still can’t figure out volume status? Here are some tools: • Blood- BUN/Cr, Na+, HCO3 • Urine – sp. Gravitiy, urine Na+, urine creatinine (calculate your FeNa!!!) • CVP if you have a central line in place
Low Urine OutputTreatment • Intravasculary Dry: True Hypovolemia, including 3rd spacing and low albumin states • Give volume • NS or LR • Hesban or albumin • Avoid nephrotoxins, specifically NSAIDS, ACEI’s, contrast dye • Follow volume status on exam, O2 sat, I’s/O’s, daily wt.s very closely
Low Urine OutputTreatment • “Intravascularly Dry”- CHF, Cirrhosis, sepsis • Treatment is illness and circumstance specific • You have to make the kidney see more perfusion– ie increase cardiac output, increase SVR, and/or increase intravascular volume • Avoid Nephrotoxins as above
Low Urine OutputTreatment • Acute Kidney Injury (Acute renal failure) • Pre-renal azotemia- see Intravascularly dry above • Intra renal- in the hospital usually ATN • ATN- • If secondary to pre-renal azotemia- fluid may help some, but beware of fluid overload • Avoid nephrotoxins- NSAIDS, ACEI’s, contrast dye, Aminoglycosides, Ampho B, Vanco • Interstitial Nephritis- avoid nephrotoxins- NSAIDS, PCN/Cephalosporins • Glomerulonephritis/Vascular lesion—much less common “hospital acquired problem” • Post-renal (ureteral/bladder/urethral obstruction)- see next
Low Urine OutputTreatment • ATN can either be oliguric (no pee) or non-oliguric (yes pee) • Lasix can convert oliguric to non-oliguric but will not change the renal prognosis • Lasix will only help you control volume status/electrolytes, NOT IMPROVE RENAL FUNCTION • ATN is managed supportively. Typical duration is 7-21 days, but may be months. A pt. may need dialysis for this time.
Low Urine OutputTreatment Again !!!! • Lasix is used to treat symptoms of volume overload– not low urine output • Remember, low urine output is not your problem, it is what is causing the low urine output that is your problem
Low Urine OutputTreatment • Obstruction/Mechanical -You can treat this by removing or circumventing the obstruction - After an obstruction is fixed, a pt. can develop “post-obstruction diuresis” which is an inappropriate diuresis– causing a pt. to become intravascularly dry if not monitored appropriately
Shortness of Breath Differential Diagnosis: • LOW O2 SAT • Hypoxemia • Normal O2 SAT • Airway obstruction • Irritation of the pleura/lung parenchyma • Metabolic- Acidosis, Sepsis • Cardiac Ischemia equivalent • Anemia • Anxiety
Shortness of BreathDifferential Diagnosis • Hypoxemia • Pulmonary edema- cardiogenic, non-cardiogenic • Pneumonia • Pulmonary embolism • Atelectasis • Pleural Effusion • Pneumothorax • Large Airway Obstruction • Reactive Airway Disease/ COPD • Restrictive Pulmonary Disease
SOB: Diagnostic PlanRote • Current Vital signs, including a ROOM AIR SAT • Evaluate the patient immediately
Diagnostic Rote Plan • Physical Exam- SICK vs. NOT SICK • Is the pt. in distress? • Diaphoretic? Tachypneic? • Altered Mental Status? • Cardiac exam- Tachycardic? Neck Veins? • Lung exam- Crackles? Wheeze? • Abdomen- Pain? • Extremities- Symmetric? DVT?
SOB: Diagnostic PlanRote • If the pt. is sick- by virtue of vital signs or physical exam • CXR • EKG • Room Air ABG—if pt. too hypoxic to take off oxygen, an ABG on O2 is still useful to evaluate ventilation
SOB: Diagnostic PlanRote • CXR • Pulmonary infiltrates- Water, pus, or blood (pulmonary edema, pneumonia, diffuse alveolar hemorrhage) • Low lung volumes- poor breath, atelectasis, pleural effusion, pneumothorax • Large lung volumes COPD • Normal lung fields think PE • Heart size
SOB: Diagnostic PlanRote • EKG • Rate • Rhythm • Evidence of ischemia • Evidence of cardiac strain- via hypertrophy and axis • Evidence of PE
SOB: Diagnostic PlanRote ABG • Two components of respiratory distress • Oxygenation- Calculate the Aa gradient (on room air) • Ventilation- What is the pCO2? • If the pCO2 is low (<40)– this is appropriate for someone who is hypoxic and trying to compensate with respiratory rate • If the pCO2 is normal or high (near 40 or above)- • Is normal appropriate?—if the pt. appears to be working hard to breathe, a nl or elevated pCO2 may represent resp. failure • This may be secondary to chronic pCO2 retention from COPD You can check the HCO3-, if elevated you’re OK
SOB: Diagnostic PlanExtras • After the CXR, EKG, and ABG– you still may not know • For example: • Is the pulmonary edema cardiogenic or non-cardiogenic? • Is it a PE? • Consider other diagnostic tools, such as ECHO, V/Q scan, or CT angiogram
SOB: Treatment • Diagnosis Determines Treatment • Supportive Care- know code status -hypoxemia- give O2, Keep Sat >92% -Ventilatory failure- BIPAP, intubation/ ventilator, narcan -Airway protection- Intubation 2. Treat underlying cause
SOB: Treat Underlying Cause • Pulmonary edema- may need ECHO or SWAN to distinguish. These have different treatments and different prognoses. • Cardiogenic- Diurese, if pt. not in Sinus rhythm- convert or slow to nl rate • Ask yourself, why she decompensated • If pt. on Mg++--Turn off the Mg++, give Ca gluconcate • ?MI, arrythmia, fluid overload, valvular lesion, peripartum cardiomyopathy • Non-Cardiogenic- Diuresis may help • Otherwise known as acute lung injury (ALI) or ARDS– depending on extent • Treat underlying cause/Treatment primarily supportive
SOB: Treat Underlying Cause • Pneumonia- Supportive care and ABX • Inpt.- 10- 14 day course of ABX, generally empiric treatment. • Community Acquired- • cefotaxime/ cetriaxone/unasyn AND macrolide (azithro/clarithro/erythro) OR • Fluoroquinolones (moxi, gemi, levofloxicin) • ICU- • beta lactam AND azithro • Beta lactam AND fluoroquinolone • Aztreonam AND fluoroquinolone • Aspiration- Zosyn (Clinda OK for outpt. Aspiration)
SOB: Treat Underlying Cause • Pneumonia • Outpt. Community Acquired PNA • OK, if pt. <65, can take Po’s, has nl O2 sat, has capability of aquiring and taking ABX, has no comorbid illness, and is not pregnant • May be bacterial or viral or mycobacterial! • For bacterial: Azithro/doxy/fluoroquinolone OR Amoxicillin/Augmentin AND macrolide— 10-14 day course