Tag Archive: cardiac


I was sitting at the desk writing up some notes when the triage nurse stuck the following ECG strip under my nose.

The story was that this chap was a hypertensive, obese, diabetic vasculopath with impaired renal function who had presented with a fever of 39 deg and nasty looking diabetic feet (see Clinical case 047 for example…).  He was looking unwell so she did an ECG on the off chance he might be having a silent infarction.

So here we are – sick looking, high-risk sounding patient.

No chest pain; No previous IHD documented; Previous ECGs? – he had a normal exercise stress test 2 years ago with a normal baseline ECG in the chart

OK, all you smart ED types.  Can you make the diagnosis?  What is going on here?  There might be a trick or two …..

Ok a few observant comentators noted the machine was running at 50mm/sec – and the V leads were missing. The patient was running at 126 bpm clinically and on the monitor. Unfortunately our new nurse who was not familiar with the machine pushed the wrong buttons and gave me a terrifying minute or two as I made my way to the bedside! The penny eventually dropped and I could breathe a big sigh of relief!. The true ECG showed a tachy @ 126 with a RBBB pattern and no convincing P waves. So channeling Chris Watford (Emcrit) I did a Lewis lead config – and the P-waves popped up like they should! Sweet – we were back to boring old sinus tachy in a septic patient and all was well!

1. Always look at the patient before the ECG, or at least shortly thereafter!

2. If something doesn’t add up, check the basics, repeat the test and ask, ask, ask

3. Septic patients can develop nasty arrythmias – SVT, AF, transient heart blocks (RBBB), VT etc – so beware the sepsis with tachy, find those P-waves – as all the other options are not good for their cardiac output.

4. Lewis leads (S5) actually works, it is cheap, easy and makes you look smarter!

 

Apologies to the smart ones reading this – but I have been trying to explain this concept to my students for a while – so I thought I would share.

Shock: this is defined by hypoperfusion of the tissues resulting in insufficient substrates (oxygen, sugar etc) for aerobic cellular respiration.

The good news is that evolution has supplied us with a back up plan in the event of “inadequate substrate for aerobic respiration” – namely anaerobic respiration – neat eh!  But there is a limit to this – you eventually need to get back to Aerobic metabolism, clear the toxic byproducts of anaerobic respiration and repay the oxygen debt.

Ok that is the technical bit done.  Now onto the clinical application of this science.

In order to maintain tissue perfusion (and fuel / oxygen supply) you need to have blood passing through those little terminal arterioles / capillaries at a rate fast enough to keep up with the demands of the tissue – this can vary also.

Here we meet the problem – we (clinicians) have got no good direct way of measuring the flow or demand in those little vessels.  At the bedside we can just guess as to what is going on.  Unfortunately our instincts for this “guess work” are a bit skewed and that is the point of this post – we need to develop better instincts here.  So this is how I do it.

The blood pressure is an important piece of information – very important – but it is not the only player when it comes to working out the perfusion of the important organs.

Problem is – we all cut our teeth on relatively stable, healthy patients who have good physiological reserve and are operating towards the centre of the comfort zone of perfusion.  In these patients the BP is probably a good proxy for “perfusion”.  BUT – in the patient who is sick (ie. the one where you really want to know what is going on ) the physics are not ‘normal’ – you need more info and here the instinct needs to be developed.

Ok, some boring mathematics now :-

Cardiac output (CO) =   HR   x   stroke volume (SV)                  and              BP   =   CO  x   systemic vascular resistance (SVR)  or  CO  = BP  / SVR

So therefore:     HR  x  SV    =     BP  /  SVR.    Yep, I just tried to reduce CV physiology to 4 numbers. Not always so simple – but its a start.

You can read HR and BP off of the monitor, or even do it manually!

The SV  - hard to measure clinically – you can palp the radial pulse and guess its ‘volume’, you can ask the patient if they have some chronic cardiac disease / cardiomyopathy / IHD.  Or you can pick up an ECHO probe and eyeball it, or ask an ECHO tech to give you a number (LVEF).  Knowing that the preload is good certainly helps – so look at the IVC – is it collapsing?

So that just leaves the SVR – and this is tough.  In a sick patient – you cannot interpret the BP or guess the cardiac output without having some idea about the SVR.  So how can we measure this?  Look at the patient – are they red, flushed or pale and white.  Feel the hands and radial pulse – are they cool and thready or bounding and warm?  Urine output – if this is low – there is a good chance the normotensive patient has a high SVR.  Or you can get a fancy monitor which gives you a number – SVV (stroke volume variation) or Oesophageal Doppler etc.  None of these are perfect.

So once you have guessed the patient’s SVR you are in a position to interpret the BP and make an estimate of the perfusing  cardiac output / cardiac index  (NB: the cardiac index sounds impressive, but it is just the CO divided by the patient’s body surface area.  ie. big people need more CO to perfuse their body than little people)

Confused yet?  Lets look at a few common clinical scenarios to illustrate these points.  Also to look at the uses and abuses of inotropic meds in the hypotensive patient.

If you give a decent slug of propofol to anybody over about 60 – they will probably crash their BP. Is this a bad thing? well yes, but not as bad as you might think.

The propofol causes a loss of SVR by relaxing all the peripheral vessels.  So both the BP and SVR have fallen – the CO is proabably not crashing as much as the BP would suggest.  Of course if the propofool renders the heart bradycardic and negative inotropy reduces the ability of the heart to compensate – this is not great.  But any Anaesthetic doc will tell you – if you give them a whiff od metaraminol / phenylepherine  – the BP comes up quick.  And as soon as the surgeon inflicts pain – they settle quickly.  So here is an example of ‘relative’ hypotension – sure it is low – but so is the SVR – so it isn’t so bad.

This is usually a vasoplegic state – all those inflammatory cytokines cause a decrease in SVR,  the vascular bed expands – making the patient “relatively hypovolemic”.  There is a fall in CO due to poor venous return – so the BP drops as does the perfusing pressure – and shock occurs.  In some (maybe 15%) they get myocardial depression form the toxins of sepsis and also therfore suffer from “pump failure as well as the other mechanisms of shock at play.

So – for sepsis the rule of thumb is :-  give a heap of fluids – more than you think.  Give 2 litres and ask questions later.  If they remain hypotensive / acidotic / high lactate then you might need to give inotropes.  BUT you have to “prime the pump first” – check the IVC / SVV (or CVP if you believe in it) to ensure they are fluid loaded adequately.  So which fluid?   The SAFE trial - no difference between saline and albumin, though there was a trend towards benefit in giving albumin in the septic subgroup.  To me, in a small place Hartman’s (Ringer’s) seems to make sense – it is chaep, easy and doesn’t screw with your acidosis too much?

Then, and only then give inotropes…which one?    I think the answer is noradrenaline – it is widely used for sepsis and makes sense as it has good alpha agonism – so combats the low SVR.  You could also use phenylepherine if you cannot get a CVC.  If htere is evidence of myocardial depression – then you might need to get smarter and use adrenaline or call a friend for help! Having said that Myburgh et al (Aussie ICU crew) showed no difference between norad and epi – so it is a bit theoretical.

This is not the same as the septic patient.  In my mind this is the opposite of sepsis in a way.  Consider a 30 yo. motorcyclist with crush chest and pelvic fracture.  The BP is lowish, you guess he is bleeding into his chest, pelvis, ?abdo… and his endogenous adrenaline is surging – so he has a massive SVR.  So here – a lowish BP equals a crappy CO and his perfusion of the terminal vessels is terrible.  This is not a place to use vasopressors – you will make his SVR go higher and kill the perfusion further.

The patient with hypovolemic shock needs volume +++ – see recent post on Massive transfusion in trauma.  Blood, clotting factors, keep them warm and manage acidosis.  And acidosis is the result of the anaerobic metabolism in the O2-starved tissues – muscles, livers etc.

So here what you want to do is open up the vascular bed, get the perfusion happening ASAP – you actually want to drop the SVR – the catch phrase is “sympatholytic resuscitation”.  You do this by filling them up with volume, then giving fentanyl (or your favourite alternative) to reduce the endogenous sympathetic drive and allow the red cells you are pumping in to get to the areas that need the oxygen.

Remember – target MAP is 65 initially – so if your patient has a comfy MAP of 85, yet you know they have bleed a lot – your BP is giving you a seriously false sense of goodness. The best guide here is the pH, or lactate or base deficit or the temp of the hands – these are the markers of poor perfusion – not the BP so much!

This is pretty uncommon… unless you are an Obstetric Anaesthetic doc – then you come across it everytime you do a C-section. So I will use this as an example.

When you do a spinal – the first nerves to go ofline are those little sympathetic fibres – so you lose your peripheral vascular tone and the SVR drops quick – and your patient vomits, looks very grey and sweaty.  If the spinal goes higher, you lose the sympathetic fibres to the cardiac plexus – and your patient gets bradycardic, maybe some aorto-caval compression = a problem (CO = HR x SV), a double whammy – SVR crash, then CO crash – not good at all. {pray there isn’t a big bleed mid-op!}

So how to manage this – well it depends on the level of the cord lesion / block.  Lower levels, without bradycardia – maybe just a phenylepherine infusion.  Higher blocks with slow heart – you might need some chronotropy to help – good old adrenaline is my choice (ephedrine is an option – though a bit weak)  The high-spinal is the one emergency that goes C, B, A  - not A, B, C in real time!

So that is my super-simple and pragmatic approach to SHOCK.  In my experience – the big problem with SHOCK is recognizing it.  Once you have made the diagnosis he management is easier – but just remember – the BP is just part of the story.

If you don’t think about the other players – CO, SVR etc then it is a bit like walking into a movie theatre half way through a good “who-dun-it” murder mystery.  You might never guess who the killer was!

I have recently upgraded my US skills to start looking at hearts and wondering what is going on.  If you are keen to learn I can recommend 2 great sources for ECHO online – Ultrasound Village and the new Ultrasound Podcast (the boys have just uploaded a podcast on wall motion in ACS, whatever you do - do not listen to their EFAST rap – it is just plain unpleasant).

Anyway I was feeling ‘smart’ after recent training and wandered into ED a few days ago and found a patient with chest pain being worked up for a PE who had crashed her BP and was looking a bit grey.  Somehow these things always happen soon after I do some training in x, y or z (somebody should look into this…).  So here is the case

55 yo woman, second presentation with pleuritic chest pain – was seen 3 days prior and had a batch of troponin / ECGs which were all negative – discharged from ED with the diagnosis of “not an ACS” fro outpatient follow-up.  She had continued to feel unwell and had ongoing chest pain for a few days – she represented and somebody thought of a ?PE – however her risk was low with essentially a negative PERC – other than being over 50 – hate that criterion!  The dreaded D-Dimer was agonisingly close to the reference range, but positive.

She had received a  dose of LMWH and been booked for a CTPA when she can over all pale and felt especially unwell.  He BP droppped to 90/60 and she required a fluid bolus.

This is about when I wandered in with my US probe and thought – I just might be able to see some RV balooning or D-shaped LV to help with the diagnosis and maybe risk-stratify her as High risk in the PE spectrum – maybe she needed some thrombolysis?

So what did I see with my trusty cardiac probe?  Well I am not smart enough – or have the foresight to store my images / clips but what I saw changed the game instantly.  If you want to see – check out this clip from US Village - this is almost exactly what I saw (thanks USVillage).

She had a probable viral pericarditis / myocarditis with maybe some minor tamponade effect. The scan showed a moderate effusion inferiorly with “snaking” of the right-side wall – the RA and RV collapsing in turn in diastole and systole. The LV was OK, and definitely no RV dilation as expected ina BIG PE – one big enought o crash your BP.

So – I reckon this is a great case to demonstrate the use of emergency ECHO – if used in the proper context it can help change your decisions around diagnosis and planning.

Oh, and the CTPA was negative – showed a moderate effusion.  So I was right, or at least not wrong – these are not always the same thing in my world….

 

This is hopefully the first post in a series of posts looking at the concept of “undiagnosing” patients.  This might sound a bit daft, but it is something that we all do on a frequent basis – sometimes on our own patients, sometimes on others.  Usually the original diagnosis is in error – not because of dodgy practice – but because we practice an inexact science, new information becomes available, and sometimes a fresh set of eyes can see the same data in a different light.

Undiagnosis can be very satisfying and challenging.  Sometimes it requires a really thorough history and workup, sometimes just a rational look at the situation, sometimes you have to think a bit laterally and get creative.

I reckon I stop more oral antibiotics than I start in my ED practice, usually for simple URTIs – these are simple acts of “unprescribing” and unlabelling patients with benign problems who get exposed to unnecessary medical intervention and the potential associated side-effects.

My inspiration for this series has come from Dr Aaron Johnson.  Aaron is a Canadian ED Physician who has ben a regular commentor on this blog.  He now practices in the suburbs, but was a remote area GP / aeromedical doc on the Arctic Baffin Island.  So a lot of similar challenges to what we see in Broome – but a slightly higher ice: pina colada ratio.  Aaron also has a new blog that he runs for his trainees – check it out at Emergsource.com.  It is just getting started, but from what I have seen – if you like Broome Docs – you will love Dr J’s blog.

If you have a case of Undiagnosis that you would like to share – send it through on the email  broomedocs@gmail.com.

A 10 year old brought into the hospital ED after his second seizure. He had fallen to the floor and done some twitching and been unconscious for a minute or two, his parents had called EHS and he came to hospital by ambulance.

A week previously he was in the department with the same thing and had a normal CT head and been referred for an EEG and a neurology appointment. In the emerg I saw him in a non-cardiac-monitored bed that had been outfitted with seizure pads. He was now feeling fine and the parents were wondering if they could take him home and follow up with neurology as planned.

On detailed history of both events the boy had had a preceding feeling of anxiety and some mild chest pain. Both events were witnessed by the parents and they described him turning an ashen colour and falling to the floor, having possibly 30 seconds of shaking followed by 30 seconds of laying still. In both events the recovery was brisk with completely normal interaction and conversation within minutes of awakening.

The patient was on no medications, used no drugs and there was no notable family history. The patient had no other medical history whatsoever, and specifically no history of head injury, seizure, pre syncope, or exhertional symptoms of any sort. Physical examination was totally normal. I was concerned about this story on many levels; I was not happy that the supposed aura involved chest pain of any description, and I was not happy with the pre-collapse colour change. Most of all I was concerned with the seeming absence of a post ictal phase after such a seemingly serious event.

I transferred this patient to a cardiac bed and arranged investigations. His ECG showed an extremely long QTc of almost 600ms. His extended electrolyte panel was normal, his troponin was elevated at 0.25 and his lactate was 3.5. I felt he had likely had Torssades des Pointes with cardiovascular collapse as a result of congenital long QT syndrome.

He was a very hard sell to the cardiologists who felt he should receive a complete workup for seizure before they became involved. In the end and with much persuasion they saw him and put him on B-blockade medical therapy. This failed and he had another event and an implantable pacer defibrillator was placed with good result.

This was a great case for many reasons. It was in fact not a difficult diagnosis but was a good example of how sticky a diagnosis can be once attached. The cardiologists were initially convinced that this MUST be seizure, mainly on the basis of the fact that a seizure diagnosis had already been attached to the child. It was also a bit eye raising in my department when I wanted to do a cardiac work-up on the patient, and he had had a seizure, been placed in the stretcher we usually put seizure patients into and the bed had been outfitted with seizure pads. It’s made me much more cognizant of potential error associated with the problem of diagnostic momentum (and of course most importantly the patient was saved from early cardiac death).

Details altered a bit for HIPPA compliance. Dr. J

If you would like to hear more about this diagnostic challenge – Rob Orman has a good podcast on Paediatric Syncope at ERCast.  This paper by Fischer et al, 2010 is a good review of the topic

53 yo man with a history of hypertensive cardiomyopathy presents to ED at midnight with severe dyspnoea.  No chest pain, no oedema, no fever, cough or signs of infection. On examination he has bilateral creps up to his scapulae, invisible JVP due to big neck / beard.  ECG shows an old LBBB, same as previous.  Obs – pulse 100 sinus tachy, BP 200/120, RR is 30, Spo2 = 90% RA – he looks sick, sweaty and scared.  So what is the diagnosis?  Well most of us would have no problem saying this chap has acute pulmonary oedema.  But is it all that  clear, and how should one treat APO?  I have done a bit of research and come up with my own personal APO approach.

In my mind “APO” is usually one of 4 different clinical entities…

  1. SCAPE (Sympathetic Crashing Acute Pulmonary (O)Edema).  Scott Weingart has a great podcast on this group at Emcrit.  You diagnose this by looking at the BP – does this look like a patient who is running his own endogenous Adrenaline infusion?  The case above fits into this group nicely.  Often there is no history of CCF, no oedema, no clear ‘trigger’, normal LV function.  This process is largely neuro-hormonal in aetiology and comes on pretty quickly – over hours.
  2. Acute-on-chronic (Acute decompensated HF).  This group have a history of CCF, chronic poor LV function and likely are already on treatment (which hey have often missed!).  They have low BP, poor urine output and borderline renal perfusion / function, they might have worsening peripheral oedema, and they tend to come on a bit slower – over days.
  3. The “Acute Cause” APO group.  These are the folks who have a clear new cause for their APO – common causes: ACS / STEMI, rapid AF / arrhythmia, PE , acute valve rupture, high output state – sepsis, anaemia… These people might have a reversible cause or at least something you can try and fix / get to definitive care.
  4. Iatrogenic APO – uniquely occurs on surgical wards!!  The old duck who has had a few too many litres of saline for her chronic low BP,  This one is easier to pick, and might be a subset of group 2.

Probably not as good as we think. There are a lot of confounders – classically it can be tough to differentiaite APO from COPD clinically – large studies have shown this. So I just admit my shortfallings and get a CXR, it either looks like APO, or you find another cause for the SOB (pneumonia etc).  Get a few ECGs, troponins and make sure you have thought about the other “reversible” causes.  Oh and BNP – it is only helpful if negative – if the BNP is low – it is probably not APO!

 The Oxford Handbook of Medicine lists the treatment of APO using the LMNOP mnemonic.  So lets look at the evidence for these interventions.

No good evidence. Never been shown to improve short or longer term outcomes. Based on the flawed assumption that the patient is “fluid overloaded” which is usually not true – especially for the SCAPE patient. I almost never use Lasix in the acute setting, unless there is clear overload, and the patient is on it long term.

Morphine is bad! The ADHERE registry of APO patients showed that morphine was independently associated with increased mortality. Sure it might make the patient feel better – and that is fine if your goal is palliation, but not if you want to fix them! I don’t ever use morphine in APO. There are better options for sedation if you need that.

Nitrates are good. especially in the SCAPe with BP up high. The problem with GTN infusions is that we have all been trained to use homeopathic doses. If you really want to get the patient better quick, use GTN in a proper dose – 400mcg/min to start (see Emcrit for references). I put 50 mg of GTN in 100 ml, and start it at 48 ml/hr for a few minutes and tirate back by 6 -12 ml/hr until I have a MAP around 80. If you do this well, the true SCAPE will be better in an hour.  An art line is great – makes titration so much easier.

Oxygen is good – but we can do better. All the recent studies show that NIV is superior to oxygen. So if your patient can tolerate it – go with CPAP, if not, then O2 is good.

 

Along with GTN, CPAP is the thing that will get your patient better quickly and mean you don’t even have to consider an ETT. I start with 10 cm and titrate to RR and effort.  Beware the low BP / floppy heart / super dry patient – they might crash with the combo of GTM and CPAP. If so – they are probably a type 2 patient – tough scenario. Oh, and the studies show no difference between CPAP and BiPAP – so I only use BiPAP if I think there is a ventilation / COPD component or hypercapnea.

Well ACE inhibitors are probably useful, they get at the neuro-hormonal axis that can be the cause of the SCAPE syndrome.

Magnesium – often low in CCF /AHF and can lead to arrythmia – so I like to load with Mag

Good Palliation: APO is sometimes the end of the line for a patient with severe heart disease.  It is analogous to the COPD presenting in extremis in some cases.  So before you embark on invasive manouvres you might want to have “the talk” with the patient and the family if it is clear that the underlying disease process is not remediable.

I aplogise for saying “studies show” but there is a lot of good data out there and a few great reviews – too many to go into in a quick blog.  If you are keen to see them go to Crashing Patient and see the links.

The summary is: get them on the NIV ASAP, and hit em with a proper dose of GTN – they will get better quicker and you will intubate less people!