Title: Symptom Management in Palliative Care
1Symptom Management in Palliative Care
- Delirium, Dyspnea, Oncologic Emergencies
2Delirium
Cognitive Failure, Confusion
- Pathophysiological disorder which manifests
itself in impaired cognitive functioning and
perceptual, emotional, and behavioral alterations - Transient global disorder of cognition and
attention - Incidence - from 25 -85
- Higher in elderly, hospitalized
3Delirium
Cognitive failure, confusion
- May interfere with recognition and control of
other physical or psychological symptoms - Often a pre-terminal event
4Possible causes
- Drug Toxicity
- Accumulated opioid metabolites
- Undesired effects of drugs acting on CNS
- Infection, sepsis
- May be earliest indication
5Possible causes (contd)
- Metabolic - electrolyte imbalance
- Hypercalcemia, hyponatremia, hypokalemia, uremia,
liver failure - Dehydration
- Hypoxia
6Causes of Delirium
usually multifactorial ( research n94)
- Primary cause Secondary
cause
Metabolic
44 89 - Medication 29
44 - CNS metastasis 32
--- - Infection - fever and symptoms in 50, but only
4 had positive blood cultures
7Clinical subtypes
- Hyperactive
- Hallucinations, delusions, agitation
- Hypoactive
- Hypoarousal, hypoalert, lethargic -may be taken
for depression - Mixed
- Alternates between features of hyper and
hypoactive
8Delirium vs Dementia
- Feature Delirium Dementia
- Onset Acute Slow
- Duration Brief
Chronic - Consciousness Fluctuates Static
- Attention Always impaired May be intact
-
9Delirium vs Dementia (contd)
- Feature Delirium
Dementia - Perception Disturbed, vivid Less florid
- Thinking Disorganized Impaired
Rich
Empty - Sleep Always disturbed Usually
normal - EEG Abnormal
10Diagnosis of Delirium
- MiniMental Status Exam - determines cognitive
function - Delirium Rating Scales
11Groups of 3
- Is the MMSE an adequate measure for diagnosing
delirium? - Explain your thinking.
12Factors that may exacerbate confusion
- Disruption to usual routine
- Strange environment
- Lack of control
- Sensory deprivation
- Pain
- Forced immobility
13Management of Delirium
- Treat the cause
- Family information and support
- Pharmacological
- Haldol drug of choice
- Consider changing narcotics to deal with
accumulated metabolites
14Management of Delirium (contd)
- Provide calm, nonstimulating environment
- Adequate lighting
- Eyeglasses, hearing aids
- Frequent reminders of time and place
- Bring in familiar possessions
15Management of Delirium (contd)
- Request family to stay with pt
- Organize care to allow for uninterrupted sleep
periods - Avoid physical restraints
- Reminder - grasp reflex returns in delirium
(avoid labelling behav as combative)
16Delirium
The destructive triangle
-
- Pt agitated confused
-
-
-
- Family distress Caregiver
distress -
17Sedation for intractable distress in the dying
-Terminal sedation
- Definition- deliberately inducing and maintaining
deep sleep, but not deliberately causing death
18Sedation for intractable distress in the dying
-Terminal sedation
Circumstances
- For relief of one or more intractable symptoms
when all other interventions have failed - Patient must be perceived to be near death
- For relief of profound anguish not amenable to
spiritual, psychological, or other intervention
19Sedation for intractable distress in the dying
-Terminal sedation
Survey of 61 practitioners, Chater et al., 1998
- Sometimes necessary 89
- Used in past year 77
- Successful 90
- Would use again 98
20Sedation for intractable distress in the dying
-Terminal sedation
- Reasons for using
- Pain
- Anguish
- Agitation
- Dyspnea
- Restlessness
- Unendurable emotional distress
- Panic, terror
21Take 5 minutes to write your thoughts on the
practice of terminal sedation
- Possible themes
- - benefits, risks
- - effect on family
- - would you want your mother to be sedated in
this circumstance? - - would you want to be?
22Dyspnea
- An uncomfortable awareness of breathing or the
urge to breathe - Subjective - indiv with comparable degrees of
lung impairment experience varying degrees of
dyspnea - Objective signs often dont match with pts
perception or with degree of functional
impairment
23Dyspnea
- Occurs in at least 70 of terminally ill pts in
last 6 weeks - Research shows often not adequately addressed
- Possible causes- tumor, infection, CHF, SVCS,
pleural effusion, pulmonary embolus, airway
obstruction, anemia
24Dyspnea
Causes in palliative care
- Direct tumor effects
- Indirect tumor effects
- Treatment-related
- Unrelated to cancer
25Dyspnea Pathophysiology
- 3 components of control
- 1. Brain
- A) medulla - respiratory centre (autonomic)
- Integrates peripheral and central input
and generates efferent activity such as resp
rhythm - B) cerebral cortex -controls voluntary
respiration -
26Dyspnea
Pathophysiology (contd)
- 2. Respiratory receptors
- A) chemical -aorta and carotid body
-send input to medulla - B) mechanical -bronchial, Jreceptors
-lungs -
- 3. Respiratory muscles - diaphragm, intercostal
muscles, sternomastoid muscle
27Opioids for dyspneaMain pharmacological
intervention
- Reduces awareness of muscle exertion
- Suppresses ventilatory drive (lowers demand on
resp muscles) - Eases vascular resistance
- Eases anxiety
28Titration of Opioids for dyspnea
- All strong Opioids appropriate
- Use short-acting preparations
- If already on Opioids for pain, increase dose by
25 -100 - Dyspnea crisis aggressive response, give double
current dose s/c or s/l q 30 min until settled - Duration of effect in dyspnea will be less than
in pain
29Treatment Approaches
- Sedatives and tranquilizers -promethazine,
chlorpromazine - Oxygen
- Breathing techniques - pursed lip breathing,
diaphragmatic breathing - Positioning
30Treatment Approaches
- Air circulation - fans, open windows
- Anxiety reduction techniques -meditation,
imagery, music, etc - Reassurance that wont be abandoned
- Family support
31How do you know that the aggressive use of
Opioids doesnt actually bring about or speed up
the patients death?
32Symptoms of excessive opioid dosing
- Gradual slowing of respiratory rate
- Breathing deep and regular
- Pinpoint pupils
33Oncologic EmergenciesSuperior Vena Cava Syndrome
- Caused by tumor pressing on superior vena cava in
mediastinum - Most commonly associated with lung cancer (75
SVC - 3 of lung ca pts) - Lymphoma (15)
- Other solid tumors eg. Breast (10)
34SVCS
- Early signs
- Facial, trunk, and upper extremity edema
- Pronounced venous pattern on trunk
- Neck vein distention
- Cough
35SVCS
- Late signs
- Hoarseness, stridor
- Engorged conjunctiva, visual disturbances
- Headache, dizziness
- Change in mental status
- Respiratory distress
36SVCS
- Treatment possibilities
- Radiation
- Diuretics
- Steroids
- Comfort measures
37Spinal Cord Compression
- Caused by tumor encroachment upon spinal cord or
cauda equina - Most common in cancers that involve bone mets
- Eg. Lung, breast, prostate
38Spinal Cord Compression
- Early signs
- Back pain, radicular or localized
- Motor weakness
- Sensory loss
- May occur gradually or suddenly
39Spinal Cord Compression
- Late signs
- Motor loss
- Urinary retention, overflow, incontinence
- Difficulty expelling stool, constipation,
incontinence - Poor sphincter control
40Spinal Cord Compression
- Diagnosis
- Myelogram
- CT scan
- MRI
41Spinal Cord Compression
- Treatment
- Radiation
- Steroids
- Surgery
- Comfort measures
42Hypercalcemia
- Occurs in 10 all cancer pts
- Myeloma most common
- Also breast, lung, and renal cancers (bone mets,
lytic lesions)
43Hypercalcemia
- Factors in Production
- Increased osteoclast activity
- Increased bone resorption
- Decreased renal clearance of calcium
- Tumor secretion of peptides
44Hypercalcemia
- Symptoms
- Lethargy, Confusion
- Muscular weakness, Incoordination
- Polyuria, Thirst
- Nausea, Vomiting, Constipation
- Cardiac toxicity- arrhythmia
45Hypercalcemia
- TREATMENT
- IV rehydration
- Diuretics
- Bisphosphonates