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Postoperative Hypotension: acute adrenal crisis. Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics. Case #1. 21 yo morbidly obese man MVC BP 70, P 128, RR 20 c/o chest pain and pelvic pain PE: crepitus R chest wall R CT placed dislocated R shoulder
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Postoperative Hypotension:acute adrenal crisis Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics
Case #1 • 21 yo morbidly obese man MVC • BP 70, P 128, RR 20 • c/o chest pain and pelvic pain • PE: • crepitus R chest wall R CT placed • dislocated R shoulder • abdominal wall contusion • pelvic tenderness • Labs: Hct 40 ABG 7.29/42/151
Case #1 • Studies • CXR - small R PTX with CT, multiple rib fxs • Pelvis - B rami fx • Lat Csp - neg • Cystogram - normal • CT ABD - left perinephric and pelvis hematoma, multiple pelvic fx • IV crystalloids/blood given
Case #1 • T 39 C, SBP 90, UOP < 30 cc/hr • Resp. distress with tachypnea/hypoxia • Intubated • Started on dopamine and norepinphrine • ? Dx and plan
Case #1 • Echo = normal • PA catheter • CI 8.5, Wedge 11, SVR 494 • Cultures sent • Exploratory laparotomy • nonexpanding retroperitoneal hematoma • ? Dx and plan
Case #1 - Adrenal Insufficiency • Cortisol level drawn • Dexamethasone 10 mg IV given • Within hours, SBP > 100 off pressors , T 38C • UOP 800 cc/hr • Cortisol level 1.2 • Cosyntropin stim test: baseline 1.6, 60 min. 2.3 • Continued on glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid
Case #2 • 63 yom admitted with large cell diffuse lymphoma • CT scan - massive retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy • Given 4 drug chemotherapy • Developed fever 39, lethargy, and abdominal pain • ? Dx and plan
Case #2 • Exploratory laparotomy • SB perforation from lymphoma • SB resection and primary anastomosis • POD1 extubated and doing well • POD 2 • hypotension, tachycardia, fever, and resp. distress • CXR - diffuse pulm edema • intubated • CV collapse despite IVF and dopamine/norepinephrine • ?Dx and plan
Case #2 • PA catheter • CI 6, Wedge 22, SVR 350 • Repeat laparotomy performed • negative • ? Dx and plan
Case #2 - Adrenal Insufficiency • Cortisol level drawn • Dexamethasone 10 mg IV given • Several hours dramatic improvement • SBP 140 and weaned from pressors • SVR 1000 • Cortisol baseline = 6, cosyntropin stim test = 7 • Hydrocortisone 100mg q 8hrs • D/C 1 month later on oral glucocorticoids
Case #3 • 57 yo m s/p XRT with recurrent invasive bladder TCC • OR - radical cystectomy, ileal loop urinary diversion • POD 4 • DVT L leg • started on heparin qtt • prompt decrease in swelling and pain • POD 8 • LGI bleeding • HCT 31 to 19
Case #3 • Heparin discontinued and FFP/Vit k given • Tagged red cell scan + ileoileal anastomosis • Transfused and HCT stabilized at 32/PLT 292K • Progression of DVT • restarted heparin for goal of 40 -50 • Developed fever 101, nausea, and LUQ pain • PE • BS decrease at L lung base • abdomen distended and tender LUQ • ? DX and plan
Case #3 • CXR neg, EKG neg, VQ scan neg • LFT/amylase/lipase normal • PLT decreased to 60K - heparin stopped/IVC placed • POD 9-12 • abdominal complaints resolved • increased confused and disoriented • labs WNL with slowly resolving thrombocytopenia • developed hypotension, tachypnea, and fever 102
Case #3 • Required intubation • Dopamine/norepinephrine qtt started • EKG and electrolytes WNL • WBC 23K • PA gram - negative • ? Dx and plan
Case #3 • Dx ( preliminary) - septic thrombophlebitis • ABX started and slight improvement • Cultures sent and subsequently neg • Continued to deteriorate with fever/hypotension • Gallium scan - increased uptake L pelvis • Exploratory laparotomy - negative • ? Dx and plan
Case #3 - Adrenal Insufficiency • Hydrocortisone given prior to OR • Prompt improvement • Fever resolved and BP returned to normal • Cosyntropin stim. test- low baseline, no response • Placed on dexamethasone • Required fludrocortisone for hyponatremia and hyperkalemia on restricted NA diet
Postoperative Hypotension • Hemorrhage • Intravascular hypovolemia • Sepsis • Cardiac failure • Adrenal insufficiency
ICU Adrenal disorders • Adrenal insufficiency (AI) • Pheochromocytoma and “ crisis” • Aldosterone deficiency
Adrenal Insufficiency • Incidence • General population 40-60/million • ICU 1-20% • SICU 0.66% • SICU trauma 0.23% • SICU nontrauma 0.98% • SICU • > 14 days 6% • age > 55 1.7% • > 14 days and age > 55 11% • Blunt adrenal injury 5%
Adrenal Insufficiency - AI • Primary • Central • Relative
Primary AI • Pathological process within adrenal gland • 90% of gland destruction • Etiology • Autoimmune - 65-80% • Infectious - 35% • Hemorrhagic • Risk factors (Rao et al , Ann Intern Med, 1989) • coagulopathy • thromboembolic disease • postoperative state
Central AI • Central dysfunction • pituitary (secondary) • hypothalamus (teritary) • Etiology • long-term glucocorticoid therapy • uncommon • post-partum pituitary necrosis (Sheehan’s syndrome) • transient ACTH deficiency (alcoholics) • pituitary radiation • empty sella syndrome
Relative AI • Relative • increased degradation of glucocorticoids • drugs that activate hepatic metabolism • treatment of hypothyroidism • resistance to glucocorticoid activity • AIDS • increased demand (stress response) • numerous ICU studies
Risk Factors - AI • Age > 55 • Malnutrition • Prolonged hospital or ICU stay • Chronic alcoholism • High APACHE score • Stress in form of trauma, surgery, infection, and dehydration
Presentation of AI • Non-ICU • insidious • nonspecific (weakness, wt loss, lethargy, GI symptoms) • ICU • acute adrenal crisis • altered by co-existing disease • usually precipitated by physical stressor (trauma, surgery, infection, dehydration) • other causes AIDS, TB, or pituitary tumor
ICU Clinical Presentation • Refractory hypotension • High-output circulatory failure • CI > 4 • tachycardia • low SVR with normal wedge • Electrolytes disturbances • high K , low Na, and low glucose • Febrile (> 39C) • Mental status changes • Dehydration • GI disturbances
“Clues” to AI • History • other endocrine abnormalities • family h/o endocrine abnormalities • Eosinophilia
AI Differential Diagnosis • Sepsis • Neurogenic shock • Overdose of vasodilator • Severe anemia • AV shunt • Thyrotoxicosis • Beriberi • Pregnancy
CRH + - - Cortisol - 10 mg/d ACTH + Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis
HPA Axis Assessment - Tests • H-P Axis and Adrenal • Low-dose ACTH stimulation (1 ug) • Adrenal only • Short ACTH stimulation test (250 ug) • H -P Axis only • Insulin-induced hypoglycemia test • Metyrapone • CRH stimulation
Laboratory Assessment • Random cortisol level • draw before steroids given • draw between 6-8 am • decadron generally consider not cross-reactive • positive if < 10 in normal or < 15 in critically ill • 10-20 indeterminant • Cosyntropin testing • Corticotropin-releasing hormone test (CRH) • Plasma renin and aldosterone measurements
Cosyntropin stimulation test • Standard short • baseline cortisol level • 0.25 mg cosyntropin with level 60 minutes later • peak > 20 or rise of 7 in critically ill • Low-dose short ( more sensitive for central) • more accurate and physiologic • same as standard but only 1 ug dose • Long • differentiation of primary vs central • replaced by ACTH measurement
Diagnosis - AI in Critical illness Adrenal deficit Baseline ACTH Severe < 10 none Moderate 10-19 <30 Mild 20-30 <30 None > 30 >>30
Treatment • Hemodynamically unstable • Baseline cortisol • Treat with Hydrocortisone 100 IV bolus and q8 • +/- cosyntropin testing • Isotonic IVF with D5 • treat underlying disease or precipitating factors • Hemodynamically stable • same as above • cosyntropin testing
Treatment - Steroids • Hydrocortisone • provides glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid • physiological doses • max 300 mg/day • normal daily adrenal output • AM 25 mg /PM 12..5 mg • Dexamethasone • not cross-reactive with cortisol assays • no mineralocorticoid activity • useful while diagnostic testing being completed • Fludrocortisone (Florinef) • uncommonly required for mineralocorticoid activity
Glucocorticoid vs Mineralocorticoid • Steroid Glucocorticoid Mineralocorticoid Hydrocortisone 1 1 Prednisolone 4 0.7 Dexamethasone 40 2 Aldosterone 0.1 400 Fludrocortisone 10 400
Potential for HPA Suppression • Higher risk for suppression • higher glucocorticoid potency • short frequency of dosing • evening dosing • systemic therapy • duration > 1 week
Outcome • Untreated = 100% mortality • Treated in critically ill = 50% mortality • Cortisol level • positively correlated to severity of illness • negatively correlated to survival
Prevention • Susceptible within 1-2 years of high dose glucocorticoids treatment • Presurgical screening • elderly patients • prolonged previous hospitalizations • malnourished or alcoholic patients • risk factors for adrenal insufficiency • prednisone doses > 5 mg/d • subnormal ACTH-stimulation test • previous adrenal insufficiency
Prophylactic Steroid Therapy • Universal coverage most common • Lowest possible dose (perioperative) • Glowniak et al , Surgery, 1997 • prednisone maintenance dosing only • Salem et al, Ann Surgery, 1994 • minor surgery (hernia) = 25 -50 mg HC x 1 d • moderate (chole, TAH) = 50 -100 mg HC/d x 1-2 • major (Whipple, CABG) = 100-150 mg HC/d x 2-3 d • Decreased frequency ( qod if possible) • Am dosing (1/2 PM dosing only if needed)
Postoperative Hypotension:acute adrenal crisisquestions…? Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-ICU Shriners Hospital for Children