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Altered Mental Status and Coma. Brian Nelson. Case No. 1. A 21 yo BF presents to the Baltimore City Hospital E.D. in the summer of ‘78. Her family states she is having a bad headache and needs her “Quiet World” tablets. Case continues.
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Altered Mental Status and Coma Brian Nelson
Case No. 1 • A 21 yo BF presents to the Baltimore City Hospital E.D. in the summer of ‘78. • Her family states she is having a bad headache and needs her “Quiet World” tablets
Case continues • No history other than an Ambulance took her to another hospital earlier that day when a neighbor heard her screaming and called EMS • At the other hospital an exam and CBC were said to be normal and she was discharged
General Exam • Patient grossly delirious, oriented to name only • BP 125/70, P 76, RR 24, T 100.2 orally • HEENT: PERRL, fundi difficult to evauate because of roaming eyes, grossly normal • Neck: Very Stiff • Chest: Loud wet rales throughout lung fields
Neurologic Exam • Able to follow only simplest comands, Cranial Nerves grossly intact, Cerebellar could not be tested, specific muslce group strength could not be tested, but patient moved all extremities and fought attempts to test range of motion. Reflexes, gait and Romberg could not be tested
Diagnostic workup • CXR: Complete opacification of left lung • CBC: Hct 43, WBC 10.7 K, 75 segs, 17 bands, 7 lymphs • ABGs on room air: 7.42/37/98 • Lytes, BUN, glucose, Ca, PO4 all normal • Provisional Diagnosis?
Diagnosis and Dilemma • Provisonal Diagnosis: Pneumococcal Pneumonia with secondary meningitis • Plan? Allow that in 1978 the nearest CT scanner was 5 miles away (and slow first generation). Minimum time to get a head CT 3 hours
LP was performed • Opening pressure was 28 cm H2O • 5 cc clear spinal fluid removed • 5 minutes later the patient lost consciousness, dilated her left pupil and stopped breathing
Coma mnemonic for the brain impaired Doc • A for alcoholism • E for encephalopathy • I for insulin • O for opiates • U for uremia • T for trauma and environmental disturbance • I for infection • P for psychiatric • S for syncope
Alcoholics have many reasons to be impaired • Head trauma, hypothermia • Infections: pneumonia, meningitis, sepsis • Withdrawal: delerium tremens, post-ictal • Metabolic: alcoholic ketoacidosis, lactic acidosis • Brain atrophy, Wernicke’s, Korsakoff’s, lead encephalopathy • Toxic alcohols: methanol, isopropyl, ethylene glycol • Liver failure, hypoxia
E for encephalopathy • Post-ictal • Hypertensive Encephalopathy • Intracerebral mass • CVA - vasocclusive • thrombosis • embolism • venous infarct • CVA- hemorrhagic • Intracerebral hemorrhage • Subarachnoid hemorrhage
I for insulin • Too little • Diabetic Ketoacidosis • Hyperosmolar Non-ketotic Coma • Too much • Hypoglycemia
O for opiates • Essentially any chemical including water • sedatives • anticholinergics • hallucinogens • sympathomimetics
U for uremia • Hyper and hypo Na, hyper and hypo Ca, hyper and hypo Mg, hypophosphatemia • Hyper and hypo T4, Hyper and hypo adrenal, panhypopituitarism • Liver, renal, and exocrine pancreas failure, • HYPERCARBIA • HYPOXIA, HYPOXIA, HYPOXIA
T for trauma and environmental disturbance • Epidural, Subdural, Subarachnoid and intracerebral hemorrhage • Concussion and contusion • Hypo and hyperthermia
I for infection • Meningitis • Sepsis • Brain abscess • Encephalitis • The weirdos: cerebral syphillis, malaria, tuberculosis, cystocercosis, nagleria, cryptococcosis, toxoplasmosis, etc
P for psychiatric • Hysteria • Malingering • Catatonia
S is for syncope • Arrhythmias • Infarction • Hypovolemia • Hemorrhage • Vasodepressor syncope
Causes of Stupor or Coma in 500 patients • Diffuse dysfunction 76% • Supratentorial lesions 20% • Subtentorial lesions 12% • Psychiatric 8%
Things that aren’t coma • Dementia • Acute Confusional State (Delerium) • Persistent Vegetative State • Akinetic Mutism • Locked in syndrome • Psychogenic Unresponsiveness • Brain death
When altered but not Coma, check components of consciousness • Wakefulness • Attention • Working Memory • Perception • Long-term Memory • Motivation • Cognition • Purposeful motor response
Initial actions • Check SaO2 and pupils, support respiration and oxygenation, Narcan for suspected narcotics OD • Check BP and conjunctiva, treat shock and anemia • Glucometer, admin glucose if indicated
Two minute exam, Is it structural? • History • Pupillary reactions • Oculocaloric respones • Respiratory pattern • Motor responses • Skeletal tone • Should have 95% accuracy of structural vs diffuse dysfunction
Is it structural: History • Sudden vs. gradual onset • PMH: particulary depression, Diabetes, Drug user, medications prescribed or missing
Is it structural: pupillary reactions • Metabolic: small reactive • Diencephalic: small reactive • Midbrain: midposition, fixed • CN III: unilateral dilated • Pons: pinpoint fixed • Medulla: dilated, fixed • Tox: narcotics -pinpoint reactive, hypoxic, barbs - dilated and fixed
Oculocalorics • Brainstem intact: deviates to cold water • Brainstem damaged: anything else • Low brainstem: no response • COWS is backwards, patient must have live vestibule, no vestibular toxic drugs
Respiratory Pattern • Eupnea: diffuse dysfunction • Cheynes-Stokes: Diencephalon • Sustained hyperventilation: Midbrain • Ataxic: Medullary
Motor Responses and tone • Diffuse: aversive reactions • Early diencephalon: aversive & cogwheeling • Low diencephalon: flaccid or decorticate, tone decreased • Midbrain: flaccid or decerebrate • Medulla: lower extremity flexion
Diffuse dysfunction • Pupils small and reactive • Oculocalorics: tonic deviation • Tone: normal • No posturing, normal tone • Normal breathing of Cheyne-Stokes
Psychogenic unresponsiveness • Eyelids flutter and close actively • Pupils small and reactive • Tone variable, bizarre posturing may be present • Optokinetic testing positive • Oculocalorics: fast component present
Supratentorial Mass • Initially focal signs (the mass) • Signs move rostral to caudal • Signs point to one level at any time • motor signs may be asymmetrical
Supratentorial herniation • Central • Uncal • Combined
Early diencephalic phase • Eupnea • Pupils small and reactive • conjugate deviation • aversive motions • cogwheeling (paratonia)
Late diencephalic • Cheyne-Stokes breathing • Pupils small and reactive • Conjugate deviation: easier less cortical control • Flaccid or decorticate
Mid-brain upper pons • Sustained hyperventilation • pupils mid position, fixed irregular • oculocalorics impaired, dysconjugate • flaccid or decerbrate
Lower pons, upper medulla • Ataxic breathing • pupils midposition fixed irregular • No caloric response • flaccid or L.E. flexion
Uncal herniation - early 3rd nerve • Eupneic • Dilate pupil, sluggish • full or dysconjugate oculocalorics • aversive movements, paratonia, • Patient may be awake