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Scope of the Problem. US Dept of Health and Human Services 1 in 10 children in USA (4 million) suffers from a mental illnessOnly 20% will receive needed carePsychotherapy recommended for < 50% of patients evaluated for suicide attempt in the ED with even fewer actually complying with referralWorld Health OrganizationBy 2020 childhood neuropsychiatric disorders will be 1 of the top 5 causes of morbidity, mortality and disability among youth worldwide.
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1. Psychiatric Emergencies in the Pediatric Emergency Department Michael F. Ziegler, MD
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Emergency Medicine
Emory University/Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta
2. Scope of the Problem US Dept of Health and Human Services
1 in 10 children in USA (4 million) suffers from a mental illness
Only 20% will receive needed care
Psychotherapy recommended for < 50% of patients evaluated for suicide attempt in the ED with even fewer actually complying with referral
World Health Organization
By 2020 childhood neuropsychiatric disorders will be 1 of the top 5 causes of morbidity, mortality and disability among youth worldwide
3. Scope of the Problem Overall ED use increasing, same seen for psychiatric concerns
1993 to 1999 (Sills and Bland)
1.6% of all ED visits in the < 19yo age group were for mental health
326.8 visits/10,000 people/year were psychiatric
13.6% diagnosed as suicide attempt
10.8% diagnosed as acute psychosis
Largest increase seen in nonurgent diagnoses (i.e. same as non-psych visits)
Increase felt to be due to decreased availability of mental health providers (actual numbers vs. access)
1995 to 1999 (Page)
59% increase in pediatric psychiatric visits to a children’s hospital ED
4. Scope of the Problem Higher rate of admissions
1 year study by Khan, et al ‘02
227 children with psychiatric illness evaluated
32% admitted
60% to medical floors due to lack of facilities for mental health
Longer turn around times to discharge, admission and transfer to floor when compared to non-psych
19,734 children with non-psychiatric illness evaluated
5.5% admitted
5. Scope of the Problem Suicide
2 million US adolescents attempt suicide each year
2000 succeed
Third leading cause of death for age 15-24 years
Fourth leading cause of death for age 10-24 years
19% of US adolescents report serious consideration of suicide in the past year
6. Scope of the Problem PECARN workgroup
5 site project to define incidence and character of psychiatric emergency visits to pediatric emergency departments and to develop intervention strategies to address increasing utilization
7. “Psych” vs. “Non-psych” An artificial distinction based on our lack of knowledge and understanding of psychiatric illness
Seizures used to be a psychiatric diagnosis
Schizophrenia now understood in a physiologic model with increased dopamine levels
Many psychiatric problems are exaggerated responses of normal coping and adaptive functions in the brain/psyche (i.e. PTSD, Panic Attacks, Dissociative Disorders)
8. General Approach Crisis intervention
Usual coping and adaptive patterns of child and family disrupted
Risk to patient’s health and wellbeing
Risk to patient’s safety
Risk to others
Assessment, treatment and disposition must include the child and the family
Ensure physical and emotional safety of child
Provide support and nurturance
Set limits on behavior
9. The ED environment Everything should be done in a non-judgmental and caring manner
“Check your own pulse first”
Patients should be searched
Removal of weapons or drugs that might be used to hurt self or others
Clothing should be removed and confiscated
Decreases elopement
Place in a safe and quiet environment
Decrease stimulation
Minimize access to dangerous materials
Chemical or physical restraints as necessary and appropriate
10. Evaluation Orienting data
Relevant history
Acute vs. sub-acute presentation
Medical history and physical examination
Assess for organic causes
Mental status of the patient
Assess for organic causes
Define specific problem
Family evaluation
Disposition viability
11. Mental Status Exam Orientation
Appearance
Memory
Acute and remote
Cognition
concentration
Behavior
Relating ability
Speech
Pressured?
Affect
Thoughts
Looseness of associations
Flight of ideas
Hallucinations
Insight and judgment
Strengths
Synthesis
12. Ancillary studies Not generally necessary if history and physical can exclude organic etiology of symptoms, however, reasonable considerations include:
13. Ancillary studies Urine or serum drug screens
Assessment of pregnancy in females
Chemistries
CBC
ABG
Liver enzymes
Thyroid studies
LP
CT/MRI
Blood lead level
Ammonia level
HIV/RPR
ESR/ANA
Cortisol
EEG
14. Toxidromes Sympathomimetics
Tachycardia/HTN/hyperthermia/euphoria/dilated pupils
Opioids
Pinpoint pupils/bradypnea/hypotension
Anticholinergic delirium
“red as a beet, dry as a bone, blind as a bat, and mad as a hatter”
Cholinergic excess
SLUDGE
Extrapyramidal symptoms
15. Required work-up for “medical clearance” Grady 13b
CBC, BMP, UDS, Urine Beta for females
Peachford Pediatric Psychiatric Hospital
UDS and Urine Beta for females
Rest depends on your judgment
17. Pharmacotherapy Agitated, violent or psychotic patients
Antihistamines
Benzodiazepines
Neuroleptics
Atypical antipsychotics
Mood stabilizers primarily for bipolar disorder
Lithium
Depakote-better for childhood bipolar
Tegretol-better for childhood bipolar
18. Benzodiazepines Ativan 0.05-0.1mg/kg/dose
Rapid sedation
No active metabolites
Short half-life
Route: PO/IM/IV/PR/SL
Problems
Respiratory depression
Paradoxical reaction
Worse in developmentally delay or organic brain syndromes
19. Neuroleptics Antipsychotic effects take 7-10 days, but sedation immediate
Haloperidol
Children: 0.025-0.075mg/kg/dose (max 2.5mg)
>12yo: 2-5mg/dose
Route: PO/IM (IV with caution)
Problems
EPS
Treat with diphenhydramine or benztropine
NMS
Treat with Dantrolene
20. Droperidol Better sedation than Haldol
“Black box” warning for prolongation of QT interval leading to Torsades de Pointes
Several new studies disputing this point
No strong evidence to support a causal relationship between use of Droperidol and fatal arrhythmias
Dose 0.03-0.07mg/kg/dose (max 2.5mg)
Problems
Orthostatic hypotension
Serotonin syndrome (esp. seen with LSD)
21. Atypical antipsychotics Lower incidence of EPS
Ziprasidone
No dosage info available for children
Associated with prolonged QT
Olanzapine
Route: ODT/IM
0.12-0.29mg/kg/dose
22. Combo therapy Diphenhydramine with Neuroleptics/Atypical antipsychotics
Reduced EPS
Increased sedation
Benzodiazepines with Neuroleptics/Atypical antipsychotics
Increased sedation
23. Depression Inflexible sad mood
Anxiety
Self-deprecation
Loss of functioning
Suicidal/homicidal ideation
Most important aspect to assess
Associated with
School problems
Chronic illness
Genetic predisposition
Developmental differences
Infancy
Childhood
Adolescence
24. Suicide Most acute aspect of psychiatric emergencies
Greatest benefit from intervention
Suicidal tendencies are typically fleeting with increases after stressors, but decrease to zero within several weeks after the acute event in most adolescents
25. Suicide Stats Rare before puberty, but not non-existent
Age perceptions of death
Attempts more common in females
Ingestions most common method in attempts
Completion more common in males
Firearms most common method in completed attempts
Neighborhood
Rural-firearms
Suburban-carbon monoxide
Urban-jumping from buildings
Suicide attempts via ingestion in age 5-14 years 5 times more common than all forms of meningitis
26. Completed suicides >90% have a psychiatric condition
Depression and substance abuse
Psychosis (small percentage, but high risk)
Impaired judgment, hallucinations, delusions of persecution
1/3 have made previous attempts
1/2 have been ill for over 2 years
Family history of suicide
History of physical or sexual abuse
Gay, lesbian or bisexual sexual orientation
27. AssessmentASK!!! Frequency of thoughts about suicide
Intensity of these thoughts
Duration of these thoughts
Specificity of plan
Hopelessness
Rapid denial in apparent significance of attempt worrisome
Remember that lethality of past attempts is not synonymous with intention!!!
28. Treatment Psychiatric consultation
Never prescribe antidepressant medications
Encourage family to tell patient they want him or her to live and that suicide is forbidden
Tender, but firm with setting boundaries
29. Disposition Inpatient
No studies exist that show a reduction in risk of future suicide attempts or completed suicides for patients hospitalized Outpatient
Follow up within days
“Sanitized” residence
Contract for safety
No evidence this prevents suicide
30. Psychosis Severe disturbance in patient’s mental functioning
Cognition
Perception
World is threatening
Mood
Ecstatic or despondent
Impulses
Reality testing
31. Age at onset Autism
Onset before 30 months of age
Other developmental disorders
Onset between 30 months – 12 years
Asperger’s syndrome (intelligent autism)
Schizophrenia
Onset in adolescence
Acute reactive psychosis and Bipolar disorder
Onset in late childhood or adolescence
32. Organic vs. Psychiatric
33. Organic causes of psychosis CNS lesions
Structural and functional
CNS hypoxia
Metabolic disorders
Collagen-vascular disease
SLE
PAN
Infections
Toxins
35. Management Psychiatric consultation
Admission to medical unit if organic cause suspected
Avoid antipsychotic meds if possible
Use physical restraints if toxin induced psychosis not suspected
36. Schizophrenia 0.5% prevalence in population
Males = females
Possible excess of Dopamine
Common features
Flat or bizarre affect
Loose associations
Auditory hallucinations
Thoughts spoken aloud
Delusions of external control
Concrete thinking
37. Acute Reactive Psychosis Time limited loss of reality caused by externally imposed traumatic events
Not a permanent psychiatric disorder
Prognosis depends on ability to reestablish safe and dependable support
38. Manic-Depressive or Bipolar Disorder 0.5% prevalence
Adult and Childhood forms
Childhood form aka “rapid cycling”
Strong family history connection Common features
Insomnia
Hyperactivity
Pressured speech
Emotional lability
Flight of ldeas
Inflated self-esteem
Aggressive and combative
Reckless behavior
Hypersexual
Buying sprees
39. Other psychiatric disorders PTSD
Reexperiencing, avoidance, hyperarousal
Dissociative Disorders
Extreme trauma leads to splitting of integrated functions of identity, memory and consciousness
Includes conversion reactions, fugue states and multiple personality disorders
School refusal
Main goal is restoration of normal function
Do not do excessive labs!
Send them back to school!
40. ADHD Associated with depression and suicide attempts
Associated with bipolar disorder
Associated with antisocial personality disorder
41. Conduct Disorders Repetitive, socially unacceptable behavior, without evidence of medical or other psychiatric disorder
Males 5 times more likely to develop than females
High incidence of violence
Usually seen in conjunction with law enforcement
Diagnosis of exclusion
42. Conduct Disorders Narcissistic
Manipulative
No remorse or guilt
Angry at detection and punishment
Persecution complex
Substance abuse
Sexual promiscuity
43. Assessment and Treatment Assess for medical or psychiatric illness
Firm control and detailed expectations with assistance of security and restraints when necessary
Parents should be directed to assist with control of behavior in department
44. Antisocial Personality Disorder Classic triad
Bed wetting
Pyromania
Cruelty to animals
Common to many serial killers
45. Thank you for your time and attention! Now, can someone please get me a change of underwear, a match, some gasoline and a puppy?