The patient is a one day old infant transferred for respiratory distress and hypotension. The most likely diagnoses are sepsis versus coarctation of the aorta. Interventions should focus on stabilizing the airway with intubation, hand bagging and increasing respiratory support. Pressors like dopamine or epinephrine may be needed to improve perfusion given the hypotension. Ongoing assessment of the diagnosis is required as other congenital heart defects could cause similar presentations.
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The patient is a one day old infant transferred for respiratory distress and hypotension. The most likely diagnoses are sepsis versus coarctation of the aorta. Interventions should focus on stabilizing the airway with intubation, hand bagging and increasing respiratory support. Pressors like dopamine or epinephrine may be needed to improve perfusion given the hypotension. Ongoing assessment of the diagnosis is required as other congenital heart defects could cause similar presentations.
The patient is a one day old infant transferred for respiratory distress and hypotension. The most likely diagnoses are sepsis versus coarctation of the aorta. Interventions should focus on stabilizing the airway with intubation, hand bagging and increasing respiratory support. Pressors like dopamine or epinephrine may be needed to improve perfusion given the hypotension. Ongoing assessment of the diagnosis is required as other congenital heart defects could cause similar presentations.
Copyright:
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The patient is a one day old infant transferred for respiratory distress and hypotension. The most likely diagnoses are sepsis versus coarctation of the aorta. Interventions should focus on stabilizing the airway with intubation, hand bagging and increasing respiratory support. Pressors like dopamine or epinephrine may be needed to improve perfusion given the hypotension. Ongoing assessment of the diagnosis is required as other congenital heart defects could cause similar presentations.
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Case Study #1: History
• We are called to the NICU for a one day old.
• Pertinent History: Full term, + prenatal care, g2 p3 mother, + fever at delivery, uneventful delivery. Baby at 12 hours of life had worsening resp. distress, lethargy and decreasing O2 sats to 60%. Patient has been intubated and a UAC is in place. Maintenance fluids have been started, Amp/Gent have been given. • The patient has upper right extremity pulse oximetry reading of 60%, upper left extremity of 40%. Overall perfusion is very poor. Blood pressure taken on left arm is 55/35 (mean 48). Resp. rate is 45-55, heart rate 120 with a normal tracing. Case Study #1: Physical Exam • The patients exam as reported over the phone is significant for: • Obtundation with mild movement, resp. failure, femoral pulses, pupils 3mm bilat. Reactive, fontanel wnl, abd. Wnl, loud systolic murmur at LSB. Case Study #1: Data • CXR reveals large heart. No pulm. consolidation,effusion, diaphragmatic hernia. • Electrolytes WNL • WBC 12.5, Hct 45. Nl. Differential. • ABG 6.8/35/45/-25 Case Study #1:BEFORE you leave • What are the most likely diagnosis?
Thinking of the potential diagnosis allows
instructions to be given to the referring hospital that may make a difference in the childs condition while the team is en route. Always think through the diagnosis. Your conclusion may be different than the referring hospitals and therapies may also differ. Discuss your concerns with the attending in the PICU or NICU. Case Study #1: Diff. Dx. • Sepsis. Always a consideration in the sick newborn. It can be a concomitant diagnosis. • The mother had a fever during delivery. GBS status and other prenatal labs are unknown. • Broad spectrum antibiotics (Amp/Cefotaxime) should be started. Case Study #1: Diff. Dx. • Congenital Heart Disease • The presence of a murmur, hypoxia, resp. distress is suspicious for CHD. • No Echo is available. • Differential hypoxia suggest Aortic Coarctation or other ductal dependent malformations. Differential Diagnosis. • Pulmonary Hypertension • Hypoxia, resp failure, acidosis, hypotension. • If there is a large PDA and small foramen ovale (ie small amount of mixing) there could also be a pre and post ductal gradient. Case Study#1: Diff. Dx. • Respiratory etiologies: Pneumonia, pulmonary malformation, airway malformation, AVM (pulmonary, cerebral, intrabdominal). • Inborn error of metabolism Case Study #1: Before leaving • The most likely diagnosis are sepsis vs. co- arctation. • Recommend start PGE-1. Do not accept it if told they will wait until the team arrives. All hospitals have PGE-1 and can start the drip. If a patient is not intubated impart that apnea and hypotension are common effects of PGE-1 so they can prepare for them. • Infant is severely acidotic. Recommend NaBicarbonate bolus and drip if needed Case Study #1: Arrival • Upon arrival the patient is on the ventilator pre-ductal pulse ox is 65%, post ductal pulse ox is 45-50%. Patient’s heart rate is 60bpm, on mechanical vent 25/4 rate of 30, 100% FiO2. BP in right arm is 55/35. Perfusion is very poor baby is cyanotic. • Your first move? Case Study #1: Arrival • BEGIN CPR. Patients heart rate is 60. • .01 of 1/10000 Epi per UAC line. • Take patient OFF vent and hand bag. The vent setting may be inadequate. Assess if tube is in correct place and functioning (SEE Xray personally. NEVER take report unless there is no alternative. Be polite but insistent (I usually say “its just my habit”). Arrival • Patient responds to Epi. HR 124 with normal tracing. • Perfusion remains poor. • Your exam reveals infant moves with stimulation, extremely poor perfusion, lung sounds clear equal, equal nl femoral pulses, loud systolic murmur. • You notice the pulse oximetry readings show equal readings in the 65-70’s at times and a pre and post ductal readings other times. Interventions Identify the problem list and attack it in order of ABC’s WHILE considering the diagnosis and other potential diagnosis. Think through the other differential possibilities when making interventions to evaluate if your intervention would be contraindicated with an alternative dx. For example sepsis requires large amounts of fluid while the same amount of fluid would worsen a congenital heart malformation with failure. Interventions • Co-arctation remains the leading diagnosis however a variety of congenital heart defects can give the same clinical picture. The key is that they may also be ductal dependant – Pulmonary Atresia, tricuspid atresia, Tet. Of Fallot, interrupted aortic arch, transposition of the great vessels (with or without intact septum) PGE-1 • Before starting be prepared for the two major side effects – Apnea- prophylactic intubation if needed. – Hypotension -usually transient • Have referring hospital start. At times there may be resistance secondary to unfamiliarity. Reassure, educate but get the drip started rather than wait until the team arrives. Interventions • Patient’s saturations remain in the 60’s with bagging. • What are you options? Nitrous Oxide • Nitrous Oxide. The patient may have a degree of pulmonary hypertension (or indeed ONLY pulmonary hypertension). • Adverse effects if patient is co-arctation or sepsis are low. • Benefits could potentially be high. Maximize Ventilatory Efforts • Mode of ventilation. This patient may need high frequency ventilation with Nitrous oxide. • Do NOT get stuck fiddling with the ventilator with a sick patient. Hand bag and assess pressure, inspiratory times and compliance. • Switch to ventilator when hand bagging has given best results and assess. Some patients require hand bagging for the entire transport. • LISTEN and incorporate the RT’s assessment and recommendations. Interventions • ABC’s • You assess the tube, suction, breath sounds are equal with good chest rise. • You are trying Nitrous oxide and hand bagging with little effect. 02 sats remain in the 60-65 range. End tidal C02 is 30. • Anything more? Moving on. • You are maximizing your resp. intervention. • Do not get stuck on one system. Maximize your interventions and move on. The goal is to stabilize the patient and commence transport. The airway is patent you are ventilating well. The oxygenation may be secondary to a cardiac defect or pulmonary hypertension that will not be fixed on transport. • Other interventions may help the resp. status. • Onto the Circulation. Interventions • Blood pressure is 50’s/30’s and stable. Perfusion is poor and there is a possibility of a Co-arctation. Of note there are femoral pulses, the oxygen saturation is matching pre and post ductal at times. • Ensure access. Place UV line. • Possible etiologies? Keep Thinking! • The PDA could be so large that femoral pulses are palpated even with a coarctation. • OR the diagnosis is incorrect and the poor perfusion is making the oxygen saturation unreliable and misleading. • Other possibilities? Differential Diagnosis • Sepsis- make sure broad spectrum abx are given • Sepsis with pulmonary hypertension • Pulmonary Hypertension alone • Other congenital heart defect Circulation • Ensure the patient has adequate perfusing volume. Is the patient third spacing with paralysis? Any urine output? • Large amounts of fluid are contraindicated in CHF however if the patient has inadequate perfusing volume or if sepsis is suspected a fluid bolus (10-20 cc/kg) may be indicated. Interventions • Dopamine, Dobutamine, Epinephrine, Nor- Epinephrine are all options. Which one? When? • Generally if a patient has poor perfusion, is hypotensive after ensuring there is adequate perfusing volume pressors are indicated. Pressors • Effects depend upon the pressor and the receptor. • Alpha receptors – Alpha 1 postsynaptic: vasoconstriction, mydriasis, contraction of urethral sphincter – Alpha-2 PRE synaptic. Decrease in noradrenaline release • Beta-1 (ONE heart). + ionotropic effect, increased rate, increased conduction (esp. at high doses). • Beta-2 (TWO lungs): vasoDILATION, bronchodilation, (20% of heart B receptors are type 2 so cardiac effects less) Dobutamine • Causes increased contractility (Beta-1 effect) BUT also can have Beta-2 effects with vasodilation. • Good for cardiogenic shock but not used as a first line for septic shock. • Contraindicated in Atrial Fib/Flutter, or Idiopathic Subaortic Stenosis (increased contractility causes increased outflow obstruction) Dopamine • Variable effects which are dose dependent. • Recent studies indicating “renal dosing” may be well intentioned but without real effect. • Between 5-10 mcg/kg/min beta-1 effects lead to increased cardiac output. Increased rate cause some concern for increased oxygen consumption. • Contraindicated in tachyarrythmias, ventricular fibrillation, pheochromocytoma Milrinone • Phosphodiesterase inhibitor • Initial Bolus 50 mcg/kg slowly over 1-2 minutes. • Maintenance 0.375-0.75 mcg/kg/min • Ionotrope with little chronotropic activity. Usually used for “cardiac kids”. Has pronounced vasodilatory effect. • Watch potassium especially in patients on Digitalis. Know the K+ and correct it BEFORE starting. Inamrinone (amrinone, Inocor) • Phosphodiesterase inhibitor. + ionotrope but also + chronotrope • Initial Bolus 0.75mg/kg slowly over 1-2 minutes. • Maintenance 5-10 mcg/kg/min • Contraindicated any outlet tract obstruction (worse with increased contractility) Epinephrine/Nor-Epinephrine • Getting to the kitchen sink. • Use once adequate perfusing volume is assured and other methods are not working. • Concern of severe peripheral vasoconstriction, increased cardiac requirements are usually overrode by severity of case. Circulation • Little urine output is noted. One 10cc/kg bolus given. • If patient paralyzed and third spacing Albumin is a good choice for volume. • Dopamine is started at 5 mcg/kg/min and patients blood pressure remains stable, perfusion improves. Sedation/Paralysis • Do not rush to sedate and paralyze. Removing sympathetic tone and potential third spacing can cause severe blood pressure, cardiac output issues. • Indications – Fighting the vent – All over the bed – Very “touchy” with desaturation – Possible pulmonary hypertension • Contraindications – limp patient with hypotension. – Comfortable patient who may need neurological assessments. Sedatives/Paralytics • Versed • Fentanyl • Ketamine- yes for asthma, NO for glaucoma, head trauma or seizure. • Succinylcholine for induction. Not in chronic CP, burns or crush injuries • Vecuronium for maintenance • DO NOT forget to re-dose and try to re-dose before you get back to the ICU so there is not an “awakening” on sign over. Re-Assess • After maximizing oxygenation, ventilation, circulation step back and reassess. • Think out loud. Go over interventions with the team elicit suggestions AND implement them. If you do not think an intervention is warranted explain why. It makes the plan clear to the team as a whole. Should I stay or Should I go? • Case by case but a few general guidelines. • If there is a clear life saving therapy (surgery, nitrous oxide) that can be offered by transporting the patient severely ill patients can be transported AFTER a clear and informed consent is signed by the legal guardians. Use clear language. Do not couch the truth. Stay or go? • If the patient is actively coding from a etiology that will not be improved upon by transport (sepsis, inborn error of metabolism) then the patient is too ill to transport. • If you believe the patient too unstable call the ICU attending and discuss the case before leaving. Transport • The mother was consented. • On transport the patients oxygen saturation improved to 98% both pre and postductal. • Perfusion improved. • Thoughts? Transport • The patient may indeed NOT have congenital heart disease. • Sepsis, Sepsis/Pulmonary hypertension or Pulmonary Hypertension alone may be at work. • Abx are on board, Nitrous is still on, perfusing volume is adequate. • Make sure to discuss the evolution of the patient with the accepting team.
MISC - Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in in Children (An Unfortunate COVID 19 Aftermath in Children) - DR Akshay P Jadhav MD Pediatrics Fellow PED ICU Fellow Ped Emergency