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Interesting Case Rounds

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Interesting Case Rounds Mark Boyko EM Resident REDIS Reason For Visit Penis caught in the net CASE 30-year old middle-eastern woman presents to the ER ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Interesting Case Rounds


1
Interesting Case Rounds
  • Mark Boyko
  • EM Resident

2
REDIS Reason For Visit
  • Penis caught in the net

3
CASE
  • 30-year old middle-eastern woman presents to the
    ER with complaints of a bilateral, throbbing
    headache, located in the occipital region.
  • Heart rate 34 on REDIS.
  • Stable when you see her
  • Difficult history because of language barrier.
    Baby is present in stroller by bed.

4
CASE
  • VITALS
  • HR 34, regular
  • BP 170/105 right arm
  • RR 18
  • O2 96 on RA
  • Temp 37.3

5
CASE
  • It came on gradually 2 days earlier, was 10/10
    but now is 8/10.
  • Unresponsive to Tylenol, worried about taking
    anything else because shes breastfeeding.
  • No visual changes, no photophobia, no dizziness
  • Has some neck stiffness, has been nauseated but
    has not vomited
  • H/A worse when she lies down, has not been able
    to sleep
  • Has not been very mobile since delivery, still
    quite sore in the abdomen
  • Denies chest pain, dizziness, shortness of breath
  • Denies bleeding per vagina
  • Please just make the headache stop

6
Past Med Hx
  • Born in Saudi Arabia
  • Denies any medical conditions
  • Denies previous heart problem
  • Mostly inactive
  • No medications
  • No drugs/EtOH

7
Pregnancy Hx
  • First baby, no previous pregnancy
  • Spent first 6 months of pregnancy in Saudi
    Arabia, then moved to Canada
  • Denies any complications during pregnancy
  • Blood pressure was always low
  • Carried baby 40 weeks, delivered at PLC
  • SROM but failed to dilate beyond 5cm, was taken
    for c-section, baby was out under 24hrs from ROM.
    No fever for mom or baby
  • Had epidural but took them a few tries, it was
    painful near my lower back
  • Stayed in hospital 4 days, they were checking
    out my heart

8
Phx
  • HR fluctuating between 32-40 BPM
  • General Sweaty, but A/O
  • CNS
  • PERL, EOM normal, fields normal
  • able to flex/extend neck, not objectively stiff
  • no pronator drift
  • symmetrical movements UL LL, power 5
  • reflexes 1 in UL LL

9
Phx (cont)
  • CVS
  • JVP not elevated
  • N S1 S2, II/VI mid-systolic murmur LUSB
  • pulses equal R L radial
  •  
  • RESP
  • normal A/E, equal, no crackles
  •  
  • ABDOMEN
  • incision looks okay
  • bulky mass left side of midline just above
    incision, very tender
  • Otherwise no peritoneal signs
  •  
  • BACK
  • 4 puncture wounds near site of epidural, tender
    near area, no cellulitis or mass
  • LEGS
  • no calf tenderness or swelling
  • pedal pulses present

10
Thoughts So Far?
  • About that heart rate

11
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12
Blood Work
  • Na 142
  • K 3.8
  • Cl- 105
  • HCO3- 2.3
  •  
  • WBC 8.0
  • Hgb 143
  • Plts 211
  • Hct 0.45
  • Glucose 7.6
  •  
  • Cr 50
  • BUN 3.1

13
Old Charts Come Down
  • Cardiology saw her post-op day 1 after nurse
    noticed low HR in the morning, and ECG showed
    2nd degree heart block Mobitz II
  • Holter done, untypable 2nd degree block
    possibly Mobitz I
  • ECHO was done, results normal
  • discharged home with follow-up in 1 month

14
What do you want to do right now?
  • BP control
  • Hydralazine 10mg IV x 1
  • Pain control
  • Morphine 5mg IV now

15
Reassess
  • HR 40, BP 154/92
  • Headache slightly improved but still there

16
Imaging

17
Imaging Results
  • Non-contrast CT Head
  • Normal
  • CT Venogram
  • Normal

18
More Blood Work
  • ALT normal
  • Bili normal
  • Mg2 normal
  • Ca2 normal
  • Alb 34
  • Uric Acid 410 (140-360)
  • LDH 336 (100-235)
  •  
  •  
  • Urinalysis I dont have to pee

19
She Finally Pees
  • Leuks Neg
  • Nitr Neg
  • Protein 1
  • RBCs 20/HPF

20
What to do
  • Treat as pre-eclampsia !!
  • Mg2 IV
  • Consult MTU
  • They are puzzled by heart rate
  • Consult Cardio OB
  • You go home and watch a Whos the Boss re-run

21
Late Post Partum Pre-eclampsia
  • Does this actually exist?
  • --gt YES
  • Pre-eclampsia symptoms in a woman 48hrs to 4
    weeks post-partum
  • Overall incidence of pre-eclampsia is declining,
    but incidence of post partum pre-eclampsia is
    rising (likely from early d/c out of hospital)
  • Up to 25 of pre-eclampsia cases are post-partum
  • 50 of these cases are beyond 48hrs
  • 70 of these cases develop convulsions
  • HEELP syndrome and more classic pre-eclampsia lab
    work is appreciated only in a minority of late
    post partum pre-eclampsia, thus have a lower
    threshold for treating these patients.

22
Late Post Partum Pre-eclampsia Treatment
  • Treat the same as you would regular
    pre-eclampsia, but you dont have a baby to
    deliver at the end
  • Mg Sulfate 4g loading dose over 15minutes, then
    2g/hr infusion for 24-48 hrs while monitoring
  • Mg2 levels
  • reflexes
  • urine output (Mg2 is excreted by the KIDNEYS)
  • Blood work 2-3x daily

23
  • Post-Partum Headache Is Your Work-Up Complete?
  • American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology -
    Volume 196, Issue 4 (April 2007)
  • Primary Headache
  • vs
  • Secondary Headache
  • Dural Venous Thrombosis
  • Post Puncture Headache
  • SAH
  • Post Partum Cerebral Angiopathy
  • Sheehans Syndrome

24
What about Post LP Headache?
  • Post partum incidence roughly 2-22
  • 90 present within first 3 days of procedure, 66
    within first 2 days, but can develop up to 14
    days after procedure
  • An increase of the headache upon standing is the
    sine qua non symptom ? Unless a headache with
    postural features is present, the diagnosis of
    post-dural puncture headache should be
    questioned. By definition, it worsens within 15
    min of standing, improves within 30min of lying
    down.
  • Diagnosis ? is for the most part CLINICAL.

25
What About Dural Venous Thrombosis?
26
Dural Venous Thrombosis
  • Incidence in North America 10-20 cases per
    100,000 deliveries, much higher in developing
    nations
  • Most often occurs post-partum versus during
    pregnancy
  • Mortality rate 4
  • Intracranial venous congestion and damage to
    vessel endothelium secondary to mechanics of
    labour, in combination with the increased
    hypercoagulability that occurs postpartum
  • Women remain hypercoagulable 2 weeks post
    partum!

27
Whats the deal with the heart block?
  • Why did cardiology say it was untypable 2nd
    degree block?

28
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29
Which Mobitz izit?
  • Mobitz I block within the AV Node, progressive
    lengthening of PR interval
  • Mobitz II block below the AV Node, presumed to
    be healthy. Most often, QRS is wide. A narrow QRS
    essentially excludes infra-nodal heart block.
  • Our patient was a perfect 21 block with a narrow
    QRS hard to figure out!
  • Only way to truly differentiate is intra-cardiac
    EPS. All Mobitz Type IIs get a pacemaker,
    regardless of whether or not they are
    asymptomatic.

30
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31
Hows Our Patient Doing?
  • BP controlled, oral long-acting Ca2 blocker
    (Dihydropyridine!)
  • Was on IV Mg 2 infusion for 48hrs, had 2
    proteinuria next urine check, now zero
  • Never had elevated liver enzymes
  • No seizures
  • U/S showed 5cm fibroid, no retained POC
  • Cardiology will do EPS study

32
Any link between heart block and labour?
  • Case report following Ergot alkaloids
  • Case report mom with Listeriosis during pregnancy
  • Congenital? A small percentage present late in
    life

33
It could be worse
34
Take Home Points
  • Late Post Partum Pre-eclampsia can happen up to
    28 days after delivery
  • Lower threshold to treat
  • CT Venogram is the first choice to look for dural
    thrombosis
  • Lots of confounders, stick to the big things you
    need to rule out given the context
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