How to approach an unconscious patient in Emergency Department:
One of the most challenging approach is to an unconscious patient presenting to emergency department. An emergency physician needs to keep him/herself gathered to approach a patient like this; in order not to miss a life threatening condition in a silent patient.The 4 core components of care, history, examination, investigation and treatment should go in parallel. A systematic & structured approach should be employed by teams caring an unconscious patient i.e. ABCDE (Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure), Vital signs, CPR, Intubation or Oxygen?, Blood samples, To give Glucose and/or Thiamine, History, Examination & Observation, etc
All steps should be followed simultaneously giving importance to TIME.
Time Constrained Approach:
'Time is Brain, Time is Heart'What can kill the patient first?
Initial thought is 'How to make the patient survive next few minutes' then 'Further Minutes of survival' and then 'Hours' and 'To survive this event'.
Within First Minute:
First thing first:
Simultaneously Assess for:- Cardiac Arrest: Check Pulse
- Airway: While checking pulse, assess airway patency and look for any Foreign body if obvious
- Breathing: Pattern of breathing
What next to do::
- Low blood sugar 2.8 to 3.0 Mmol/dl or 50 to 54 mg/dl
- Return to usual state after Dextrose bolus
- No residual deficit
What else can Kill patient in next few Minutes:
Assess for:
- Signs of Shock: Capillary Refil/Cold or Warm Skin
- Neuro: Check Pupils, Eye movements, Corneal reflex, moving all 4 extremities, any asymmetry?
- Toxidrome: Pupils, Vital Signs, Skin
- Breathing Pattern: Regular, Irregular
- Abdomen: Any signs of Pulsating masses, Pain?
- Chest: Any sign of tension Pneumothorax, deformity?
- Trauma: Any obvious deformity or trauma?
Toxidromes:
- In case of Opioid toxicity: Inj Nalaxone 0.2-0.4mg IV, start at lower doses if patient is stable to avoid precipitating rapid opioid withdrawal.
- Wernicke's ncephalopathy: Inj Thiamine 100mg IV
What else should be done simultaneously:
- ECG: check rate, abnormal rhythm, look for Ischemia, Hyperkalemia (Confirm by STAT VBG) (be prepared for Pacing/Defibrillation)
- Portable Chest X ray: Hemo/Pneumothorax
- Bedside U/S: RUSH Exam
- STEMI: Stabilize patient, Cath Lab activation
- Pulmonary Embolism: Tachycardic, Hypotensive, Sob, Arrested> Thrombolysis, Deteriorating patient>thrombectomy
- AAA: Stabilize and early involvement of Vascular / Cardiology/ Critical Care specialist
- Tension Pneumothorax: Needle decompression via large bore in 2nd intercostal space midclavicular line
- Hypotension: Start IV fluids/ blood products according to context
- Anaphylaxis: Inj Epinephrine 1:1000 (each ml contains 1mg of 1:1000) intramuscular should be given with following dosage
- Age More than 12 years/ Adults: 0.5mg (500mcg) IM (0.5ml of 1:1000 solution)
- Age 6-12 years: 0.3mg I/M (0.3ml of 1:1000 solution)
- Age 6 Months to 6 years: 0.15mg IM (0.15ml of 1:1000 solution)
- Less than 6 Months: 0.01mg/kg IM (0.01ml/kg of 1:1000 solution)
- Hyperkalemia: Inj Ca-Gluconate 10% of 10ml over 10min (equal to 1gm of calcium gluconate), Prefer Inj Calcium chloride in patients with cardiac arrest instead of calcium gluconate because the chloride formulation has approximately 3 times the amount of elemental calcium compared with the gluconate formulation.
- Treat Seizures with anticonvulsants
- Consider Encephalitis if altered LOC with fever history and start Acyclovoir
What else?
- Hypertensive emergencies/ Intracranial hemorrhage
- Delirium Tremens/ withdrawl
- Infection like Necrotizing fasciitis: Look for sites of infection
- Metabolic disorders like DKA, HHS, severe hyponatremia
- Addisonian's Crisis
- Myasthenic Crisis