Title: Problem Rounds
1Problem Rounds 12/7/06
3 yo female with abdominal pain and vomiting
2CC Abdominal pain and vomitingHPI Patient was
in good health without any problems until 3 days
prior to admission (11/9/06) when she developed
diarrhea (described as soft stool) and emesis
(yellow in color) once after breakfast. She was
seen in the pediatric emergency department,
diagnosed with AGE and discharged home. A urine
culture was sent at that time. She has remained
afebrile since then. On the night prior to
admission, she had one episode of emesis
(non-bloody, non-bilious). She has also had soft
stools (not watery) that are darker than usual.
THE CONTINUED EMESIS ALONG WITH ABDOMINAL PAIN
WAS THE REASON FOR PARENTS TO BRING THE PATIENT
BACK TO THE EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT.
3HPI (continued) The patient has had decreased
PO intake for two days. Urine output decreased
to 4 diapers with dark yellow urine small in
volume, compared to her usual 6 or more wet
diapers of light yellow urine. On initial
presentation to the emergency department with
review of her visit 2 days prior, it was noted
that her clean catch urine specimen from the
initial ER visit grew two species of 104
Enterococcus (11/9/06). 11/12/06 Early in the
morning, patient was admitted to the hospital by
the emergency department
4Take a moment to consider your differential
diagnosis
5WCH ED The patient was given a bolus of normal
saline (20cc/kg), several labs drawn (see ER
sheet significant values WBC 23.5 with 74N lt
10 bands, I O UA with pH 6, SG 1.025, trace
blood, no nitrites or leukocytes), patient given
1gram of ceftriaxone for presumed pyelonephritis,
and the patient was admitted to the
hospital. Immediately on admission, the patient
was placed on triple antibiotics (ampicillin,
gentamicin, and metronidazole) for presumed
perforated appendicitis (clinical/laboratory).
6Labs
URINE DIP (I/O CATH) PH 6.0, SP GR
1.025, TRACE BLOOD, TRACE PROTEIN, NEG LEUK, NEG
NITRITES
7- Past Medical History
- PMD Dr. Evans T-7A
- Birth Hx
- FTNSVD at WCH
- 6-7 day NICU stay for fever (and mom with fever)
IV antibiotics - Jaundice hyperbilirubinemia requiring
phototherapy for 1 day - PMHx no surgeries, no hospitalizations, no
known medical problems - Allergies NKDA
- Meds None
8- Past Medical History (continued)
-
- Immunizations UTD (card verified)
- Family Hx
- Mom 22, Dad 30
- No known medical problems in the family
- Social Hx
- 1BR house in LA with above family
- no drugs/alcohol/smoking/pets
-
- Developmental Hx
- Walked at 1 year, runs, climbs up and down
stairs - 1st word at 8 months (per parents), speaks in
sentences (at least 4-5 words)
9- Past Medical History (continued)
-
- Diet
- Eats everything (meals with parents)
- 24 oz whole milk daily
10Take a moment to consider your differential
diagnosis
11- PE Patient seen in the emergency department
during ongoing initial work-up -
- Height 107cm (gt95), Wt (19.1kg (gt95), Ratio
75 - Vitals (on the floor) T 98.8, BP 106/68, HR 103,
RR 26, P 0/10 (reported, but appears 3-4/10
FACES) - General Sleeping, but easily arousable,
especially with light palpation of the abdomen.
When awake the patient appears uncomfortable. - HEENT NCAT. PERRL/EOMI. No conjunctival
injection. TM wnl B, OP pink/mmm/ no LAD - CVS RRR, no murmur, CR lt 2sec, 2 pulses B
12- PE (continued)
- Lungs CTA B, no w/r/r, no retractions
- Abdominal
- Bowel sounds present throughout
- Soft, non-distended
- Tender to palpation diffusely, definite guarding
- Patient AWAKENS to light palpation of the
abdomen (whereas she did not awaken with
stethoscope placed on chest or with palpation of
extremity pulses) - RLQ exquisitely tender with guarding, LLQ and
BUQ also tender to palpation. - No organomegaly appreciated
- No masses palpable
- GU Tanner I female
13- PE (continued)
- Extremities
- No c/c/e
- Full passive range of motion. Uncooperative for
active motion. - Neuro Alert. Sensation in tact. 2 DTR
14Take a moment to consider your differential
diagnosis
15- Hospital Day 1 11/12/06
- Abdominal CT scan performed
- Initial read thickened sigmoid colon and
bowel, no evidence of appendicitis. - Non-trauma saw the patient, reviewed the CT
scan, and decided that no surgical intervention
was needed. - That night, the patient started having
watery/bloody/mucous-containing stools, which
were sent for multiple studies.
16Abdominal CT Extraluminal fluid in pelvis with
intramural edema of distal sigmoid and rectum.
Although the appendix is not identified, these
findings are suspicious for appendicitis with
perforation.
17- Hospital Day 2 11/13/06
- Tm98, 101-113/60-88, 113-131, 26-30, 0/10
(reported) 2559/1900 - Surgery re-consulted surgery vs. submarine.
Perforated appendicitis outside the operative
window, recommendation for 5 days antibiotics
and then OR in 6 weeks. - Surgery note 2 from the day given
bloody/mucous stools, more clinically suspicious
for infection/invasive diarrhea/colitis.
18- Hospital Day 3 11/14/06
- Tm99, 108-118/70-85, 119-129, 20-28, 0/10,
2315/1975 -
- Bloody stools continued
- CLD started
19- Hospital Day 4 11/15/06
- Tm 99.2, 110-124/67-84, 120-140, 26-30, 0/10,
2501/1970 (670PO) - Bloody stools continued 2-3 per day
- Abdomen now tender
- Labs resulted
- Ucx 100CFU gamma hem strep
- E.coli negative
- C.diff negative
- OP prelim negative
- GI consult obtained
- KUB and RLQ ultrasound performed
20KUB There is questionable thumbprinting in
several segments of bowel. This may indicate
edema or bowel wall thickening. There is a
nonobstructive pattern. No abnormal
calcifications are seen. Bones are
unremarkable. Impression bowel wall
thickening versus ascites.
21RLQ Ultrasound
() mesenteric inflammation. Loops of small
bowel with wall thickening. Moderate amount of
free fluid in pelvis. Cecum appears normal.
Suggests ileitis and colitis.
22- Hospital Day 4 11/15/06 (continued)
- That night, patient developed 2 punctate red
lesions on the left inner thigh (not palpable) as
well as non-palpable purpuric areas on the
plantar aspect of both feet (especially at the
base of the toes)
23Take a moment to consider your differential
diagnosis
24- Hospital Day 5 11/16/06
- Tm100, 113-120/73-76, 126-133, 24-30, 2711/2415
(PO590) -
- 170 cc of bloody stools.
- Given clinical picture and labs, HSP considered
most likely. - CBC WBC 30.9, 80N, 10-24 bands
25- Hospital Day 6 11/17/06
- Tm98.8, 101-117/68-77, 126-135, 24-26, 0/10
-
- Diarrhea no longer bloody
- All cultures resulted NEGATIVE (final)
- Antibiotics continued given initial concern for
possible ongoing bacterial translocation
26- Hospital Day 7 11/18/06
- Tm98.8, 101-125/70-83, 86-131, 20-22, 0/10,
2201/2770 (PO 480) -
- Abdomen NOT tender
- One soft stool, NO BLOOD
- Antibiotics discontinued
27- Hospital Day 8 11/19/06
- Patient remained afebrile
- Patient discharged home with close follow-up in
continuity clinic
28Henoch Schonlein Purpura
- Most common vasculitic disease of childhood
- Annual incidence 20 per 100,000 children lt17yo
- Peak incidence 70 per 100,000 children 4-6 yo
- Half of cases preceded by URI
- Usually Streptococcus
- Also adenovirus, parvovirus, and mycoplasma
29Pathogenesis
- Poorly understood
- Small vessel vasculitis
- Perivascular infiltration of PMNs and
mononuclear cells - IgA deposition
30Most commonly affected organs
Joints
Kidneys
GI tract
Skin
Erythematous macular wheals ? ecchymoses,
petechiae, palpable purpura
Transient or migratory arthritis/ arthralgia,
large joints
N/V Abd pain Transient paralytic
ileus Hemorrhage Bowel ischemia
necrosis Intussusception Bowel perforation
Hematuria Proteinuria Nephritic syndrome Renal
insufficiency Nephrotic syndrome
100 of cases
60-84 of cases
21-54 of cases
Up to 76 of cases
31 Palpable purpura
32Palpable purpura
33Palpable purpura
34Classification Criteria for HSP
- EULAR/PReS endorsed consensus criteria for the
classification of childhood vasculitides - Ozen S, et al. Ann Rheum Dis 200665936-941.
- Palpable purpura (mandatory criterion) in the
presence of at least one of - Diffuse abdominal pain
- Any biopsy showing predominant IgA deposition
- Arthritis or arthralgia
- Renal involvement (any hematuria and/or
proteinuria) - European League against Rheumatism/Paediatric
Rheumatology European Society
35Differential Diagnosis of HSP
Septicemia ITP HUS Leukemia Coagulopathies AHEI Hy
persensitivity vasculitis Wegeners
granulomatosis Microscopic polyangiitis Churg-Stra
uss syndrome SLE
Purpura
SLE JRA Septic arthritis
Arthritis/Arthralgia
Abdominal pain
Appendicitis
IgA nephropathy Bergers disease
Renal disease
36Diagnosis of HSP
- Clinical diagnosis
- When to biopsy
- Unusual presentation no rash or atypical rash
- Significant renal disease
- Labs non-diagnostic, nonspecific findings
- Serum anemia, thrombocytosis, leukocytosis (esp
if following bacterial infection), elevated ESR - Need normal platelet count and PT to distinguish
from other causes of purpura - UA RBCs, WBCs, casts, proteinuria
37Treatment of HSP
- Self-limited disease, mainstay is supportive
care - Hydration
- Rest
- Symptomatic relief of pain
- When to hospitalize
- Cannot tolerate PO intake
- Severe abdominal pain
- Significant GI bleeding
- Changes in mental status
- Severe joint involvement limiting ambulation
- Renal insufficiency, HTN, nephrotic syndrome
38Treatment of HSP
- Watch out for complications most common GI
complication is intussusception ? evaluate with
abdominal ultrasound - Role of steroids controversial, can help
alleviate severe abdominal pain, but has not been
shown to alter course of disease
39Prognosis of HSP
- Most cases resolve within one month
- HSP recurs in 1/3 of cases, usually within 4
months - Main cause of morbidity due to renal disease
- Follow-up
- UA and BP monitoring
- Weekly for first two months, then monthly or
every other month for one year
40HSP in Adults
- Presentation is very similar
- 2 main distinctions
- Intussusception is extremely rare
- Increased risk for significant renal involvement
41References
- Dedeoglu F, Kim S. Clinical manifestations and
diagnosis of Henoch-Schonlein purpura. UpToDate,
2006. - Dedeoglu F, Kim S, Sundel R. Management of
Henoch-Schonlein purpura. UpToDate, 2006. - Jennette JC and Falk RJ. Small-Vessel
Vasculitis. The New England Journal of Medicine.
1997 Nov337(21)1512-1523. - Haroon M. Should children with Henoch-Schonlein
purpura and abdominal pain be treated with
steroids? Archives of Disease in Childhood. 2005
Nov90(11)1196-8. - Ozen S, et al. EULAR/PReS endorsed consensus
criteria for the classification of childhood
vasculitides. Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
200665936-941.
42- Thanks to Sean Williams who provided the write up
of the case and Alicia Lwin who put it all
together into this power point and provided the
excellent case discussion at the end.