Title: Diagnosis of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage in the Emergency Department
1Diagnosis of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage in the
Emergency Department
- Nathan Maust
- MS IV
- Emergency Medicine Sub-Internship
- May 2006
2Overview
- Case JM
- Epidemiology
- How to Diagnose
- History Physical
- ED Diagnostic Testing CT and LP
- Misdiagnosis
- Reasons Consequences
- Summary
3Case JM
- HPI
- 37 yo female with h/o ectopic pregnancy and GERD
p/w acute onset nausea vomiting, followed by
severe HA - HA described as 12/10 and like I was having a
baby in my head - Onset at rest
- Severe sharp pain on the L side of the head
- Denies visual disturbance, any focal neurologic
deficit, or neck pain or stiffness - No h/o migraine or other chronic HA and has never
before had a HA nearly this severe - After 5-10 minutes, pain began to gradually and
modestly improve w/o treatment pain 5/10 at time
of interview
4Case JM
- ROS otherwise negative
- PMH h/o ectopic pregnancy 2001
- Denies HTN, connective tissue disorder
- Meds Allegra D, occasional Benadryl
- NKDA
- Social Denies tobacco, alcohol, and illicits
- Family Denies h/o SAH or any CTD
5Case JM
- Physical Exam
- VS T 96.2 BP 112/80 P 89 RR 14
- Well-appearing 37 yo female in NAD, AO x 3
- PERRLA
- CN II-XII intact
- No focal neurologic deficit, gait intact
- No nuchal rigidity or meningismus
- Labs
- unremarkable
6Case JM
- Differential of Consequence for Severe Headache
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
- Meningitis, encephalitis
- Temporal arteritis
- Acute narrow angle closure glaucoma
- Hypertensive emergency
- CO poisoning
- Pseudotumor cerebri
- Central venous/dural sinus thrombosis
- Acute stroke (esp. hemorrhagic)
- Mass lesion (tumor, abscess, intracranial
hematoma)
7SAH Epidemiology(Edlow JA, et al. N Engl J Med.
2006 342(1)29-36)
- Incidence of aneurysmal SAH is 6 to 10 per 100k
- HA constitutes 1-2 of ED visits and up to 4 of
physician office visits - SAH makes up about 1 of those presenting to the
ED with HA as primary complaint - Worst HA of patients life
- Abnormal neuro exam 25 had SAH
- Normal neuro exam 12 had SAH
- Misdiagnosis is common and causes increases in
MM - 23 to 53 initial misdiagnosis rate
- Common source of ED malpractice suits
8SAH Quick Pathology Pathophys
- Causes
- Ruptured aneurysm (75)
- MF, 5th or 6th decade, acute ? BP
- Usually congenital berry aneurysms in Circle of
Willis - Polycystic Kidney Dz, Coarctation of Aorta,
Ehlers-Danlos - HTN, alcohol, cigarettes, cocaine
- 2-3 are mycotic aneuryms (s/p infective
endocarditis) - Intracranial AVM (10)
- MgtF, 2nd to 4th decades
- Source of symptoms
- Rupture of intracranial artery ? ? ICP
- ? distortion of pain-sensitive structures ? HA
- ? decreased cerebral perfusion ? LOC
- ? compression of intracranial structures ? 3rd n.
palsy,
9History Findings
- History
- Sentinel/Warning/Thunderclap HA 20 to 50 get a
distinct, unusual, severe HA that precedes the
actual HA that causes the pt to seek medical
attention can come days to weeks earlier - Nausea/vomiting
- Exertion at time of HA onset
- Depressed consciousness
- Neck stiffness or pain
- Visual changes
- Gait disturbance
10Physical Findings(Edlow JA, Caplan LR. N Engl J
Med. 2000342(1)29-36)
- Nuchal rigidity
- Diminished level of consciousness
- Papilledema
- Retinal and subhyaloid hemorrhage
- Third nerve palsy
- Sixth nerve palsy
- Bilateral weakness in legs or abulias
- Nystagmus or ataxia
- Aphasia, hemiparesis, or visual neglect
11Current Treatment Algorithm(Suarez JI, et al. N
Engl J Med. 2006354(4)387-96)
- CT scan without contrast
- If positive, perform CT or cerebral angiography
- If negative, perform Lumbar Puncture
- If abnormal CT or cerebral angiography
- If abnormal but equivocal CT or cerebral
angiography - If normal Stop
If aneurysm is found, treat promptly. If
negative, repeat CT angiogram in 1-3 weeks
and image brain, brainstem, and spinal cord.
12Sensitivity of 5th generation CT
scanners(Boesiger BM, et al. J Emerg Med. 2005
Jul29(1)23-7)
- Retrospective chart review of 177 patients in
2002 that presented with HA and had CT and LP
performed to rule out SAH. - Exclusions trauma within 3 months, age 17, not
having r/o SAH as reason for LP on chart, recent
neurosurgery. - Patients were followed up for a minimum of 3
months by chart review and/or phone call to
assess for complications after CT and LP were
performed - Sensitivity of CT for SAH 100 (95 CI
61.0-100) - Specificity of CT for SAH 99.4 CI 96.8-99.9)
13Lumbar Puncture(Shah KH, Edlow JA. J Emerg Med.
200223(1)67-74)
- The gold standard for diagnosis of SAH
- 100 sensitive in detected blood in the CSF
- Traumatic tap occurs in 20 of LPs
- Interpretation
- Three tube test should see a decrease in
traumatic tap vs. steady level of RBCs in true
SAH - Xanthochromia 20 in first 6 hr, 65 between 6
and 12 hr, and 100 after 12 hr - Elevated opening pressure (gt20 cm H2O) seen in
60 of cases
14Case JM
- Head CT
- Normal
- LP results
- Phone call follow-up 14 days s/p discharge.
- Only one instance of mild HA in past two weeks.
- Denies nausea, vomiting, visual disturbance, neck
stiffness or any other complaints.
15Incorrect diagnoses in misdiagnosed SAH(Edlow
JA. Emerg Med Clin N Am. 2003 2173-78)
- No dx/HA or unknown cause
- Primary HA disorder (migraine, cluster, tension)
- Meningitis and encephalitis
- Systemic infection (flu, gastroenteritis, viral)
- Stroke or TIA
- Hypertensive crisis
- Cardiovascular diagnosis (r/o MI, arrythmia,
syncope) - Sinus-related HA
- Neck problem (cervical disc dz, arthritis)
- Psychiatric dx (alcohol intoxication,
malingering) - Trauma-related
- Back pain
8
4
Number of episodes required for diagnosis
according to Int. HA Society
16Misdiagnosis of SAH(Kowalski RG, et al. JAMA.
2004 Feb 18291(7)866-9)
- Inception cohort of 482 SAH patients admitted to
Columbia-Presbyterian in NY between 1996 and 2001 - Goal
- determine the association between initial missed
diagnosis and outcome after SAH - identify factors associated with misdiagnosis
- Main outcome measures
- Modified Rankin Scale (functional outcome) and
Sickness Impact Profile (QOL) at 3 and 12 months
(performed by interview in person or via
telephone)
17Misdiagnosis of SAH(Kowalski RG, et al. JAMA.
2004 Feb 18291(7)866-9)
- Results
- Misdiagnosis occurred in 12 (56/482) of patients
- Location of initial misdiagnosis
- ED (43) or a physicians office (32)
- Diagnostic error
- No CT performed (73)
- CT or LP results misinterpreted (16)
- CT done, but LP not performed (7)
- Initial misdiagnosis
- Migraine/tension HA (36)
- No diagnosis (12)
- Viral syndrome (11)
18Misdiagnosis of SAH(Kowalski RG, et al. JAMA.
2004 Feb 18291(7)866-9)
- Independently associated with misdiagnosis in all
patients - Normal mental status
- Small SAH volume
- Right-sided aneurysm location
- Also associated with misdiagnosis in those
presenting with normal mental status - Education 12 years
- Nonfluency in English
- Being unmarried
19Case Report 1(Wasserberg J, Barlow P. BMJ.
1997315(7122)1598-9)
- 58M p/w LOC x 1 minute, then had severe HA and
hematemesis after awakening - Initial dx hematemesis
- Admitted to hospital, given IM opiates for pain
- Initial sx attributed to EtOH withdrawal, pt
treated with diazepam - HA not improved after 2 days
- SAH was considered, pt booked for elective CT,
next appt 2 days later - 1 day before scan, pt became unconscious, had
fixed, dilated L pupil - ER CT shows extensive SAH ? tx to NICU ? died
shortly thereafter
20Case Report 2(Wasserberg J, Barlow P. BMJ.
1997315(7122)1598-9)
- 17F p/w HA associated with n/v x 1 week
- CT to rule out SAH normal ? reassured, sent home
(CT later reviewed and confirmed normal) - 2 days later she is awakened by sudden HA, she
vomits, and collapses - In coma on arrival, reacting to pain only
- CT shows SAH, angiogram shows terminal carotid
artery aneurysm but patient dies before
completion of angiography
21Summary
- Always consider SAH in a patient who presents
with the worst HA of their life - Avoid certain pitfalls
- The patient with known HA history that presents
with a new, distinct severe HA - The patient whose clinical picture is complicated
by other complaints, intoxication, etc. - Know how to distinguish traumatic tap from SAH to
avoid subjecting patients to unnecessary invasive
diagnostic testing - Despite advancement in CT scanner technology,
todays data does not support the thought that CT
without LP can definitively exclude SAH
22References
- Boesiger BM, Shiber JR. Subarachnoid hemorrhage
diagnosis by computed tomography and lumbar
puncture are fifth generation CT scanners better
at identifying subarachnoid hemorrhage? J Emerg
Med. 2005 Jul29(1)23-7. - Coats TJ, Loffhagen R. Diagnosis of subarachnoid
haemorrhage following a negative computed
tomography for acute headache a Bayesian
analysis. Eur J Emerg Med. 2006 Apr13(2)80-3. - Edlow JA. Diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage in
the emergency department. Emerg Med Clin N Am.
2003 Feb21(1)73-87. Review. - Edlow JA, Caplan LR. Avoiding pitfalls in the
diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage. N Engl J
Med. 2000 Jan 6342(1)29-36. - Edlow JA, Wyer PC. How good is a negative cranial
computed tomographic scan result in excluding
subarachnoid hemorrhage? Ann Emerg Med. November
200036507-516 - Kowalski BS, et al. Initial misdiagnosis and
outcome after subarachnoid hemorrhage. JAMA. 2004
Feb 18291(7)866-9. - Subarachnoid hemorrhage. Lange Neurology. The
McGraw-Hill Companies, 2006. www.accessmedicine.co
m. - Seehusen DA, Reeves MM, Fomin DA. Cerebrospinal
fluid analysis. Am Fam Physician. 2003 Sep
1568(6)1103-8. - Shah KH, Edlow JA. Distinguishing traumatic
lumbar puncture from true subarachnoid
hemorrhage. J Emerg Med. 2002 Jul23(1)67-74. - Suarez JI, Tarr RW, Selman WR. Aneurysmal
subarachnoid hemorrhage. N Engl J Med. 2006 Jan
26354(4)387-96. Review. - Wasserberg J, Barlow P. Lesson of the week.
Lumbar puncture still has an important role in
diagnosing subarachnoid haemorrhage. BMJ. 1997
Dec 13315(7122)1598-9. - Wood MJ, Dimeski G, Nowitzke AM. CSF
spectrophotometry in the diagnosis and exclusion
of spontaneous subarachnoid haemorrhage. J Clin
Neurosci. 2005 Feb12(2)142-6.