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Exertional Rhabdomyolysis

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Short-term: admit for IVF and serial labs, likely no need for bicarb unless CK 100,000 (d/w renal), watch for signs of compartment syndrome Long-term: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Exertional Rhabdomyolysis


1
Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
  • Liz Delasobera, MD
  • (some slides c/o USU database)

2
3 Things To Remember
  • Know how to risk stratify rhabdo patients
  • Low risk treat like concussion (step-wise
    return to play/duty)
  • High risk more tests and experts, restrict play
  • Heat illnessrhado until proven otherwise
  • Admit for CK gt 5-10K for IVF, to check serial
    labs (CK, DIC, lytes), and to eval for
    compartment syndrome

3
Our Roadmap
  • The Basics Definitions, Epidemiology,
    Pathophysiology, Risk Factors
  • Diagnosis Differentiating Subtypes of Rhabdo,
    Signs, Symptoms, Differential
  • Treatment Short and Long-Term, Prognosis/Return
    to Play, Prevention
  • Cases Test your knowledge

4
Definition of Rhabdomyolysis
  • Skeletal muscle breakdown with release of myocyte
    contents into the circulation caused by a variety
    of stresses
  • Characterized by laboratory findings of
    myonecrosis with clinical spectrum dependent upon
    amount of muscle injury and associated co-morbid
    factors

5
Definition of Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
  • Most frequently ascribed to running activity and
    often associated with exertional heat illness
  • Ranges from asymptomatic muscle injury with minor
    laboratory alterations to immediate life
    threatening syndrome with severe metabolic
    alterations and cardiac dysrythmias

6
Definition of Exertional Rhabdomyolysis
  • Not always pathologic can be a normal response
    to strenous exercise (physiologic
    rhabdomyolysis)
  • Becomes more serious (clinically relevant
    rhabdomyolysis) when coupled with dehydration,
    SC trait, certain drugs, dietary supplements,
    caffeine/alcohol, exertional heat illness, and
    other poorly understood factors
  • Devastating consequences
  • Renal failure
  • DIC
  • Compartment syndrome
  • Death

7
Epidemiology
  • Subclinical rhabdo common in vigorous exercisers
    and collision sports
  • More serious cases seen mostly in endurance
    athletes and military personnel
  • 26,000 per year in US
  • 30 develop renal involvement

8
Pathophysiology
  • Intense exercise -gt hypoxia of tissues -gt failure
    of Na/K pump (K out of cell, Na/Ca into cell)
    anaerobic glycolysis and lactic acidosis -gt cell
    death
  • Muscle injury causes release of myoglobin and
    muscle enzymes (CPK, LDH, AST, ALT)
  • Evolving compartment syndrome due to swelling
    (muscle damage) and fluid shifts
  • Renal failure due to myoglobin and uric acid in
    tubules dehydration nephrotoxic metabolites
    of myoglobin

9
Risk Factors
Intrinsic/Inherited Extrinsic/Acquired
Genetic-Muscle Diseases/Enzyme Deficiency (McArdles, CPT II) Metabolic disorders (DM, Thyroid, Chronic electrolyte disorders, Acidosis) Sickle Cell Trait Autoimmune/Inflam Disorders Familial Recurrent Myoglobinuria Recent trauma or Crush Injury Excessive Muscle Overload Low Fitness Level Heat stroke Infection (EBV, HIV, flu) Drugs or Toxins (alcohol, statins, amphetamines, cocaine) Dehydration
10
Our Roadmap
  • The Basics Definitions, Epidemiology,
    Pathophysiology, Risk Factors
  • Diagnosis Differentiating Subtypes of Rhabdo,
    Signs, Symptoms, Differential
  • Treatment Short and Long-Term Treatment of
    Rhabdo, Prognosis/Return to Play, Prevention
  • Cases Test your knowledge

11
Subtypes of Rhabdo
  • Exertional limited rhabdo
  • Exertional rhabdo with heat stroke
  • Exertional rhabdo without heat stroke
  • Non-exertional rhabdo
  • Trauma
  • Medications

12
Limited Exertional Rhabdo
  • Overload of limited muscle group (ex, quads)
  • Symptoms 1-3 days after event (delayed muscle
    soreness) and persists gt5 days after event
  • Muscles tender, warm, swollen, painful with
    stretch and flex/extension
  • CPK elevations in 10-50 K range
  • Cola colored urine (urine myoglobin) can be
    only symptom
  • Usually self limited

13
Exertional Rhabdo With Heat Stroke
  • Most of muscle injury as a result of intense
    hyperthermia (heat stroke)
  • Risk factors
  • Unacclimated
  • Sickle cell trait
  • High BMI
  • Dehydrated
  • Meds/supplements

14
Exertional Rhabdo With Heat Stroke
  • Clinically present with
  • More global muscle injury
  • Less muscle soreness and quicker recovery
  • Chemistries more reflective of early liver and
    renal injuries
  • High CPK (25,000)
  • Treatment goals
  • Restore normal body temperature and perfusion
  • Effectively manage metabolic/electrolyte/organ
    sequelae

15
Exertional Rhabdo Without Heat
  • Intense exertional effort, typically gt 5 minutes
    and 15 METS
  • Setting rapid conditioning or non-familiar
    exercise (ex, Basic Training)
  • Pain or weakness out of proportion
  • Usually involves large muscle groups
  • May manifest hours after the insult
  • May be additive from earlier training stress with
    fulminant end state
  • Acute management is similar to extertional rhabdo
    with heat except that cooling is unnecessary

16
Differential Diagnosis
  • Guillan-Barre Syndrome (post viral)
  • Electrolyte Abnormalities
  • Periodic Paralysis
  • Compartment Syndrome
  • Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
  • Polymyositis/Myopathy
  • Porphyria

17
Making the Diagnosis of Rhabdo
  • General signs and symptoms
  • Pain
  • Swelling
  • Tenderness
  • Weakness
  • Mental status changes
  • Hyperthermia
  • Cramping
  • Discolored or brown urine

18
Making the Diagnosis of Rhabdo
  • Physical exam
  • Swollen, tender, warm muscle groups
  • Tight muscle compartments
  • Objective weakness
  • Intense pain with passive stretch of muscle
  • Altered gait (lower extremities)

19
Labs
  • Initial studies
  • CPK, UA with micro, Chem 7, Calcium, Phos, CBC,
    AST, ALT, LDH, Uric acid
  • Serum or urine myoglobin - may not be available
    acutely
  • Other studies to consider
  • PT, PTT, Fibrinogen, ABG

20
Labs
  • CPK tends to peak 1-2 days after the insult
  • Persistent elevation or increasing values
    suggests ongoing muscle ischemia/injury
    (compartment syndrome)
  • Laboratory definition of rhabdo is CPK 5x normal
    and/or heme blood without RBCs
  • CPK gt 16,000 U/L is threshold for renal damage

21
Labs
  • AST/ALT/LDH marker for more severe muscle damage
    in exertional rhabdo, and for liver injury when
    heat related
  • Uric acid sensitive but not specific - normal is
    reassuring

22
Labs
  • Urine myoglobin
  • Usually a send out lab
  • This is the toxic effects on distal tubule
  • Sludging and obstruction leads to muddy casts
    (frothy urine)
  • Dehydration worsens toxic effects
  • Load and duration of exposure toxicity

23
Other Tests
  • Compartment pressure testing
  • MRI scan for limited rhabdo (concern for
    myopathy, abscess, etc)
  • EKG (electrolyte changes)
  • Muscle biopsy not acutely
  • Severe, recurrent, or unusual precipitators
  • Concern for neuromuscular disease
  • Special stains and techniques needed (specialty
    center) to get various diagnoses

24
Other Tests
  • Ischemic Forearm Test
  • Forearm exercise with BP cuff inflated gt 200 mm
    Hg
  • Serial lactate and ammonia levels from
    antecubital vein
  • Muscle enzyme deficiencies
  • Low lactate production disorder of carbo
    metabolism (McArdles)
  • Low ammonia production myoadenylate deficiency

25
Our Roadmap
  • The Basics Definitions, Epidemiology,
    Pathophysiology, Risk Factors
  • ?Diagnosis Differentiating Subtypes of Rhabdo,
    Signs, Symptoms, Differential
  • Treatment Short and Long-Term Treatment of
    Rhabdo, Prognosis/Return to Play, Prevention
  • Cases Test your knowledge

26
Short Term Treatment
  • Admit for total CK gt 5-10K (literature varies on
    the exact level)
  • IVF hydration for goal UOP 200 mL/hr (usually 400
    mL/hr IVF) needs up to 12 L in first 24 hours
  • Treat electrolyte abnormalities except
    hypocalcemia
  • Low Ca is a result of Na/K pump but also from
    deposition of calcium in muscles replete Ca
    leads to higher deposition levels, only tx if
    having EKG changes, severe hyperkalemia, tetany,
    etc

27
Short Term Treatment
  • Urine alkalinization (myoglobin and uric acid
    more soluble, less nephrotoxic) with bicarb
    (definitely if CKgt100K otherwise contraversial)
  • If bicarb gt15 some literature suggests using oral
    acetazolamide
  • Furosemide may be needed to maintain kidney fxn
  • Fasciotomy as needed
  • Dialysis in extreme cases
  • Get ortho and renal involved early for help with
    making these decisions!

28
Long Term Risk Stratifying
  • First step to stratify low vs high risk is
    differentiating btwn physiologic and clinically
    relevant rhabdo
  • CK level 5X  normal or greater
  • OR
  • UA that is positive for blood in the absence of
    RBCs
  • If both of these negative then rest for 24 hours
    and repeat, if UA is still negative and CK is
    normal then dx is physiologic rhabdo and can
    gradually return to play/duty
  • If either of these 2 steps are abnormal then they
    have clinically relevant rhabdo, need to further
    risk stratify

29
Long-Term Risk Stratifying
  • Low Risk (at least one of these most be true)
  • Rapid clinical and CK recovery with exercise
    restriction (lt1 week)
  • History of intense training
  • No personal or family history of rhabdomyolysis
    or previous reporting of exercise- induced severe
    muscle pain, muscle cramps, or heat injury
  • Existence of other rhabdomyolysis cases in the
    same training unit, team, etc
  • Drug or supplement use
  • Concomitant viral illness or other infectious
    disease

-Quick recovery -Good reason for this (intensity,
others with same sxs, etc) -Extrinsic
predisposiing factors (virus, drugs, etc)
without intrinsic (no FHx, etc)
30
Long-Term Risk Stratifying
  • Suspicion for High Risk
  • Delayed recover (gt 1 week)
  • Complications (renal failure, metabolic problems
    etc.)
  • Muscle injury with low intensity workout
  • Personal or family history of rhabdo/exertional
    cramps
  • History of severe muscle pains in past
  • Personal or family history of malignant
    hyperthermia
  • Personal or family history of sickle cell trait
  • Prior heat casualty
  • CPK peak gt 10,000

31
Treatment of Low Risk
  • Limited duty/exertion
  • If CK greater than 5-10K admit for IVF (goal UOP
    200 mL/hour usually give 400 mL/hr IVF)
  • Re-evaluate labs 72 hours (CPK, creatinine,
    lytes, and UA)
  • Adequate sleep in thermally controlled
    environment
  • When UA is nl and total CK less than 5x nl, then
    gradual return to play/duty over 2 weeks (3
    phases)
  • If CK doesnt go down within 5x upper limit nl in
    1-2 week then change to high risk algorithm

32
Low Risk Soldier Return to Duty
  • Phase 1
  • Strict light indoor duty for 72hrs
  • Must sleep eight consecutive hours nightly
  • Must remain in thermally controlled environment
  • Must follow-up in 72 hrs for repeat CPK/UA. When
    CPK/UA has returned to normal, begin Phase 2,
    otherwise remain in Phase 1 and return every 72
    hrs for repeat CPK/UA until normal.
  • If persistently abnormal at week 2, refer for
    expert consultation.
  • Phase 2
  • Begin light-outdoor duty
  • Follow-up with care provider in one week. If no
    issues then begin Phase 3
  • Phase 3
  • Return to regular outdoor duty and physical
    training
  • Follow-up with care provider as needed, warn of
    symptoms, pre-disposing factors, etc

33
Treatment of High Risk
  • Consult with a local rhabdo expert (CHAMP
    website)
  • Admit for IV hydration and repeat labs including
    calcium, K, phos, uric acid
  • Can not return to play or duty until further eval
    complete with expert and further testing as
    indicated
  • Consider
  • Muscle Myopathy Panel (McCardles, AMP deaminase,
    CPT2 Deficiency)
  • EMG
  • Sickle cell screen
  • Genetic testing
  • Ryanodine receptor
  • Muscle biopsy
  • Forearm contracture test
  • Caffeine Halothane contracture test (biopsy
    muscle and measure force of contraction, test
    with caffeine and halothane for malignant
    hyperthemia)

34
Rhabdo Tx Algorithm
35
Prevention of Rhabdo
  • Acclimate
  • Gradual progression of training
  • Careful with meds (statins, supplements etc.)
  • Proper fluid intake
  • Identify susceptible individuals (genetics, FHx,
    SC trait, etc)
  • Role of antioxidants (glutathone and
    bioflavinoids, such as quercitin) decreasing
    myoglobinuria

36
Our Roadmap
  • The Basics Definitions, Epidemiology,
    Pathophysiology, Risk Factors
  • ?Diagnosis Differentiating Subtypes of Rhabdo,
    Signs, Symptoms, Differential
  • ?Treatment Short and Long-Term Treatment of
    Rhabdo, Prognosis/Return to Play, Prevention
  • Cases Test your knowledge

37
Case 1
  • 23 year old African American F with b/l arm and
    leg muscle pains after 12 mile run (longer than
    usual run)
  • No meds, no illnesses
  • No heat related illness (winter)
  • No personal or family history of rhabdo
  • Sickle trait positive
  • CPK peaked at 20,000 (nllt120)
  • Symptoms resolved after 7 days
  • Dx? Acute tx? Long-term? Return to running?

38
Case 1
  • Diagnosis Rhabdo without heat illness
  • High risk factors
  • CPK peaked at 20,000
  • Sickle trait positive
  • Low risk factors
  • Quick resolution of symptoms
  • No FHx or personal hx

39
Case 1
  • Treatment?
  • Short-term admit for IVF and serial labs, likely
    no need for bicarb unless CK gt100,000 (d/w
    renal), watch for signs of compartment syndrome
  • Long-term consult with rhabdo expert for special
    testing and to aid with decisions on return to
    running/play

40
Case 2
  • 27 year old male healthy
  • Push ups and weight lifting
  • 1 week laterstill with chest soreness
  • No prior or fhx, no meds, no medical problems
  • Physical very tender pectoralis muscles

41
Case 2
  • Labs
  • CK 8,000
  • UA no blood or RBCs
  • Chem 7 normal
  • Diagnosis and treatment?

42
Case 2
  • Dx Limited rhabdo
  • Tx watch for compartment syndromes, hydrate,
    repeat labs, and gradual return to play assuming
    CK normalizes in appropriate time period,
    asymptomatic, etc

43
Case 3
  • 18 y/o marathon runner who presents to the ER in
    the summer after being initially treated in the
    field for possible heat stroke after falling out
    of a run
  • He was described as out of it and had an
    initial rectal temp of 106 F
  • Others in marathon had heat illness and were
    transported to hospital
  • His initial labs demonstrate a urine that dips
    positive for blood and a CK of 50,000 U/L
  • Diagnosis?
  • Treatment and return to play?

44
Case 3
  • Diagnosis Rhabdo with heat
  • Low risk
  • Others with same presentation
  • Extrinsic risk factors (heat, extreme
    exercises/exertion)
  • No known intrinsic risk factors
  • High risk
  • Level of CK

45
Case 3
  • Acute tx
  • IV hydration and rapid cooling
  • Repeat labs/lytes frequently
  • Eval for compartment syndrome, liver injury, DIC,
    etc
  • Long term tx
  • Consider checking for SC trait
  • If he had any high risk characteristics (prior
    heat illness, delayed recovery, complications,
    etc) or a prolonged recovery or other
    complications (renal, DIC, etc) would send to
    heat/rhabdo expert
  • Otherwise educate patient and allow gradual
    return to running with close follow-up

46
Case 4
  • 32 y/o highly trained athlete who presents to the
    clinic with coca-cola urine and severe
    bilateral biceps pain
  • Did 10 sets x 20 reps of with 50 pound hand
    weights
  • His CK is 60,000 U/L and his urine dips positive
    for blood
  • No prior history, no meds, no illness
  • He recovered in 5 days labs and sxs
  • Diagnosis? Return to sport/lifting?

47
Case 4
  • Dx Limited rhabdo
  • High risk because of total CK, otherwise no high
    risk qualities
  • Short-term hydrate, etc (always the same unless
    CKlt10K and then can consider outpt w/u)
  • Long-term ensure no risk factors (i.e.
    supplements, FHx, personal hx, SC trait, etc), no
    complications, and full recovery then consider
    return to play with step-wise progression, but
    change work-out routine

48
3 Things to Remember
  • Know how to risk stratify rhabdo patients
  • Low risk treat like concussion (step-wise
    return to play/duty)
  • High risk more tests and experts, restrict play
  • Heat illnessrhado until proven otherwise
  • Admit for CK gt 5-10K for IVF, to check serial
    labs (CK, DIC, lytes), and to eval for
    compartment syndrome

49
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