Management of coma and altered sensorium 19.4.01

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Transcript of Management of coma and altered sensorium 19.4.01

Page 1: Management of coma and altered sensorium 19.4.01
Page 2: Management of coma and altered sensorium 19.4.01

Why coma management?

• Common medical emergency 3-5%

• Large proportion of comatose patient recover

• Untreated coma may lead to further brain damage

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Check vital signs

• Respiration

• Pulse, BP,

• temperature.

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Emergency treatment

• Maintain ventilation oxygenation

• Maintain circulation

• Control seizure

• Reduce icp

• Maintain temperature

• Control hypoglycemia

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Maintain ventilation

• Insert oral airway

• Clean oropharyngeal secretion

• Insert cuffed endotracheal tube if apnea, hypoventilation or liable to aspirate

• Mechanical ventilation if apnea or raised intracranial pressure

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Draw Blood for

• Start venous line

• Complete blood count, MP, B.sugar

• Blood urea, s. creatinine, s.electrolyte

• Blood gases, ALT, AST

• Give 25% 100ml glucose with 100mg of thiamine

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Maintain circulation

• If hypotenstion ( <90mmHg systolic)– Replace fluid:

• Saline if hyperglycemia or suspected stroke, diabetes

• Dextrose saline or isolyte if undiagnosed

– Vasopressor if low systolic pressure inspite of fluid

• Hypertension: Betablocker, Nitroglycerine or Nitropruside

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Control Seizure

• Inj Lorazepam 4mg or Midazolam 5mg IV slowly

• Inj Diazepam 10-20mg iv slowly

• Inj Phenytoin 15-20mg/Kg 50mg/min IV

• Inj Phenobarb 15-20mg/Kg 50mg/min IV

• Inj Sodium valproate 200-400mg IV

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Reduce intracranial pressure

• Inj Mannitol 20% 1gm/kg IV fast

• Hyperventilatin to bring pCO2 25-30mmHg

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Maintain Temperature

• Hperthermia: tapid sponging, largectil,

• Hypothermia: heating blanket

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Is it Coma ?

• Posture: loss of erect posture

• Eye closed: sleep like state

• Lack of responsive ness

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Psychogenic coma

• Holds eye tight, resist opening

• Fixed stare, quick blink

• Normal pupil

• Normal oculocephalic

• Normal oculovestibular

• Normal posture, breathing, bp,pulse

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Spectrum of Coma

• Psychogenic unresponsiveness

• Acute confusional state

• Locked in syndrome

• Akinetic mutism

• Persistent vegetative state

• Brain death

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What causes coma?

Metabolic:-– Ischemic hypoxic

– Hypoglycaemic

– Organ failure

– Electrolyte disturbance

– Toxic

Structural:-– Supratentorial bilateral

– Unilateral large lesion with transtentorial herniation

– Infratentorial

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Metabolic encephalopathy

• Confusional state -> coma

• No focal neurological sign

• No neck stiffness

• Normal brainstem reflexes

• Coarse tremor 8-10hz

• Multifocal myoclonus

• Asterixis• Generalized/periodic myoclonus

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Supratentorial Lesions

• Epidural or Subdural Hematoma

• Large Ischemic Infarction

• Tumour

• Intraparenchymal haemorrhage

• Trauma

• Abscess

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Infratentorial Lesions

• Basilar artery thrombosis

• Pontine or Cerebellar Hematoma

• Ischemic Cerebellar Infarction

• Tumour

• Abscess

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History

• Circumstances and temporal profile• Of the onset of coma• Details of preceding neurological• Symptoms headache, weakness seizure• Any fall• Use of drug and alcohol• Previous medical illness liver,kidney• Previous psychiatric illness

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Other symptoms of coma

• Yawning– Poor localizing value

– Posterior fossa expanding

lesion

– Medial temporal, third

ventricular

• Hiccup– Medullary lesion in the region

of Third ventricle

• Vomiting– Lateral reticular formation of

the medulla– Projectile ( usually nausea)– Medulloblastoma

ependymoma– Raised icp -> compression of

medulla– Basal meningitis– Ivh -> irritating fourth

ventricle– Lateral medullary infarct

(vestibular

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Examination

• General physical examination

• Evidence of external injury

• Colour of skin and mucosa

• Odour of breath

• Evidence of systemic illness

• Heart lung

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Neurological examination

• Funduscopy

• Pupil size and response to light

• Ocular movements

• Posture and limb movement

• Reflexes

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Circulation

Kocher-Cushing response - rise in BP-

>bradycardia due to rise in ICP ->

compression of floor of the iv ventricle fall

in BP and tachycardia usually terminal

event due to medullary failure

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Breathing

• Forebrain– Post hyperventilation apnea– Cheyne stoke respiration

• Hypothalamus midbrain– Central neurogenic hyperventilation

• Basis pontis– Pseudobulbar paralysis of voluntary center

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Breathing in coma

• Lower pontine tegmentum– Apneustic breathing

– Cluster breathing

– Short cycle periodic breathing

– Ataxic breathing

• Medulla– Ataxic breathing

– Slow regular respiration

– Gasping

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Pupil

• Diencephalic (metabolic) Small reactive• Midbrain tectal Midsize,fixed• Midbrain nuclear Irregular pear shaped• 3rd nerve Fixed widely dilated• Pontine Pinpoint reactive• Opiate Pinpoint• Organophosphorus Small• Atropine Wide dilated

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Eye movement

• Metabolic – Roving eye movement,– Oculocephalic,– Vestibuloocular

• Supratentorial – Contralateral conjugate palsy

• Thalamus– Upper turn down

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Eye movements in Coma

• Midbrain– Ipsilateral 3rd

• Pontine– Ipsilateral 6th

– Ipsilateral gaze palsy

– One and half syndrome

– Bilateral gaze palsy

– Ocular bobbing

– Mlf syndrome

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Posture

• Cerebral hemisphere – Decorticate posture

• Diencephalon supratentorial – Diagonal posture

• Upper brain stem – Decerebrate posture

• Pontine– Abnormal ext arm

– Weak flexion leg

• Medullary– Flaccidity

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ECG changes in coma

(SAH, ICH, INFARCT)– Tall T, prolonged QT– Q wave with st depression– SVT, AF, AFL– Sinus bradycardia,arrest, nodal rhythm– A-V block or dissociation– PVc's, VFL, VF

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Further investigation

• CSF examination: neck stiffness without localizing sign

• CT scan/ MRI: Focal neurological sign or before LP

• X-ray chest: Aspiration, chest infection, heart size

• Ultrasound abdomen: Liver, kideny, bladder

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Agitated

1. Reassurance

2. Narcotics– Small doses administered

– Intravenously

3. Sedation• Should follow analgesia

• Sedation in presence of pain causes agitation,

• Titrate intravenously so that agitation is blunted,

• Do not induce excessive drowsiness

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Agitated patient

5. General management• Face a window for day/night orientation

• Clock, calendar

• Have friend or family member stay with patient

• Light the room if illusions, paranoia occur at night

• Provide eyeglasses, hearing aids

• Have staff identify themselves to patient

• Explain all procedures

• Provide radio, reading, TV

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Coma Subsequent management

• Eye, mouth, skin

• Fluid electrolyte, feeding

• Respiration, circulation

• Urine, bowel

• Stimulation

• Infection

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