POTD: IV Contrast Allergy

 A prior allergic-like reaction to IV iodinated contrast is the most substantial risk factor for a recurrent reaction.

  • Up to 35% of patients will experience a recurrence if no premedication prophylaxis is given

  • Patients with a prior mild reaction have a very low risk < 1% chance of developing a moderate or severe reaction

 It is currently controversial weather premedicating before a contrast study prevents a recurrent allergic reaction.

  • A randomized control study showed that premedication decreased the rate of allergic-like reactions in patients exposed to older high osmolar iodinated contrast. This is not directly related to the current contrast medium that is used.

  • Another study was performed that looked at low-osmolar iodinated contrast which we currently use and the study showed decrease in overall rate of allergic type reactions of mild reactions but no there was no statistically significant difference for moderate or severe reactions.

Recommendations:

o   For patients with prior mild reactions (limited hives/itching, limited cutaneous edema, itchy/scratchy throat, nasal congestion, sneezing/conjunctivitis, rhinorrhea) either no premedication prophylaxis or premedication consisting only of an antihistamine prior to planned imaging study.

  • Rationale for this:

    • Mild allergic reactions typically do not require medical treatment

    • Patients with mild reactions have a low risk of developing moderate or severe future reactions

    • Effectiveness of steroid prophylaxis for preventing this type of reaction is uncertain

One study actually showed that for patients with prior mild reactions they had less severe reactions when only antihistamine was administered rather than steroid + antihistamine. 

In patients with history of prior moderate or severe prior allergic-type reaction or patients with whom the severity of a prior allergic-type contrast reaction is unknown should receive oral premedication with a corticosteroid and an antihistamine beginning 12 hours prior to expected contrast administration. For patients in need of emergent imaging there are accelerated premedication protocols.

 

 

General Guidelines at MMC:

Mild Reaction: no pre-medication

Moderate Reaction: pre-medicate and/or use a different contrast agent

Severe: Do not give contrast unless there has been an attending level discussion with both the primary team and radiology attending that the benfit outweighs the risks and documentation for the reason of administration of contrast is done.

Our Policies at MMC

Adult Routine Premedication:

o   50mg Prednisone PO 13, 7, and 1 hour before administration of contrast

o   50mg diphenhydramine  IV/PO within 1 hour of the injection

Adult Faster Premedication (no evidence of efficacy at less than 4 hours)

o   200mg hydrocortisone IV every 4 hours prior to administration of IV contrast

o   50mg diphenhydramine  IV/PO within 1 hour of the injection

Pediatric Routine Premedication (

o   Prednisone 0.7mg/kg (not to exceed 50mg) PO or IV 13, 7, and.1 hour prior to administration of contrast

o   Diphenhydramine 1mg/kg IV/PO (not to exceed 50mg) within 1 hour of the injection

Pediatric Faster Premedication

o   Hydrocortisone 2mg/kg (not to exceed 200mg) IV every 4 hours prior to administration of contrast

o   Diphenhydramine 1mg/kg IV/PO (not to exceed 50mg) within 1 hour of the injection

 The minimum amount of time needed for steroids to be effective based on previous studies is administration of steroid at least 4 hours prior to administration of contrast.

 If you are every unsure the best thing to do is page our radiology colleagues and have a discussion with them. Many institutions have different protocols for premedicating patients for contrast studies so make sure to get familiar with whatever protocol the hospital has. Below is some common standard protocols used at other institutions.

Below are some other common combinations done at other institutions

Prior Mild Contrast Reaction - Premedication Protocol

Adult or Pediatric Patients > 50kg

  • No premedication OR

  • Premedication with antihistamine

    • Cetirizine (Zyrtec) 10mg by mouth 1 hour prior to imaging

Pediatric Patients < 50kg

  • No premedication OR

  • Premedication with antihistamine

    • Certerizine (Zyrtec)

      • Children 6 years and above: 10mg by mouth 1 hour prior to study

      • Children 2-5 years: 5mg by mouth 1 hour prior to imaging study

      • Children < 2 years do not use certirizine

Prior Moderate, Severe, or Unknown Severity Contrast Reaction - Premedication Protocol

Adult or Pediatric Patients > 50kg

  • Premedication with corticosteroid and antihistamine

  • Methylprednisolone (Solu-Medrol) 32mg by mouth 12 hours and 2 hours prior to imaging AND

  • Certirizine 10mg by mouth 1 hour prior to study

Pediatric Patients < 50kg

  • Premedication with corticosteroid and antihistamine

  • Methylprednisolone 1mg/kg (up to 32mg)_by mouth 12 hours and 2 hours prior to imaging  AND

  • Certirizine

    • Children 6 years and above: 10mg by mouth 1 hour prior to study

    • Children 2-5 years: 5mg by mouth 1 hour prior to imaging study

    • Children < 2 years do not use certirizine

IV Alternatives for Patients Who CANNOT Take Oral Medications

Adult or Pediatric Patients > 50kg

  • Corticosteroid

    • Hydrocortisone 200mg IV 12 hours and 2 hours prior to imaging.

  • Antihistamine

    •   Diphenhydramine 50mg IV 1 hour prior to study

Pediatric Patients < 50kg

  • Methylprednisolone 1mg/kg (up to 32mg) IV 12 hours and 2 hours prior to imaging

  • Diphenhydramine 1mg/kg (up to 50mg) IV 1 hour prior to study

Accelerated Premedication Protocol

Adult or Pediatric Patients > 50kg

  • Premedication with corticosteroid and antihistamine

    • Hydrocortisone 200mg IV 5 given 5 hours and 1 hour prior to imaging AND

    • Benadryl 50mg IV given 1 hour prior to imaging study

Pediatric Patients < 50kg

  • Premedication with corticosteroid and antihistamine

    • Methylprenisolone 1mg/kg (up to 32mg) IV 5 hours and 1 hour prior to imaging study AND

    • Diphenhydramine 1mg/kg (up to 50mg) IV 1 hour prior to imaging study

 References:

o   https://radiology.ucsf.edu/patient-care/patient-safety/contrast/iodinated#accordion-allergies-and-premedication

https://www.professionalradiology.com/media/documents/ACR%20Premedication%20for%20Contrast%20Allergies%20.pdf

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Trauma POTD: Blunt Cardiac Injury

Definition: Refers to any blunt trauma to the heart. Ranges from mild to severe.

Includes the following:

o   Comotio Cordis: a sudden death due to an ill-timed force during a period of electrical vulnerability

o   Cardiac Rupture: traumatic rupture of the myocardium due to compression of a full chamber during early systole or raid deceleration forces shearing the atria from the vena cava or pulmonary veins

o   Cardiac Contusions: edema and necrosis of cardiac myocytes due to blunt traumatic injury

o   Dysrhythmias after trauma

o   Ventricular wall rupture

o   Coronary artery dissection/thrombosis: less common

o   Septal tear: traumatic ASD or VSD less common

o   Valvular Injury: laceration of aortic cusps can cause aortic insufficiency. Compression of heart during systole can lead to tearing of mitral valves and/or papillary muscle rupture

o   Pericardial rupture and cardiac herniation

 

Epidemiology:

o   Incidence ranges from 9 to 71% mostly because of lack of clear definition and diagnostic criteria

o   Most commonly the right ventricle or right atrium are involved

o   Most severe BCI result in wall rupture in any of the chambers and these patients typically die in the field

o   Pediatric patients have increased thoracic cavity compliance and there may be no signs of trauma on exam which makes it even important that we consider this in our trauma patients

 

Causes:

o   Significant amount of force is normally required for a BCI to occur

o   Suspect BCI in any patient with significant thoracic trauma or direct precordial impact including all of the following

o   MVA (most common)

o   Pedestrians struck

o   Crush injuries

o   Blast injuries

o   Deceleration injuries

o   Commonly occurs in patients with sternal fracture or rib fractures

 

Presentation:

o   Symptoms: most commonly patients complain of chest pain

o   Signs:

  • Dysrhythmias (most commonly sinus tachycardia or atrial fibrillation)

  •  Chest wall deformities or ecchymosis

  • Pulse deficits

  • Hypotension

  • New murmur

  • New onset HF (rales, muffled heart sounds or JVD on exam)

  • Pericardial effusion or tamponade on FAST

Work up:

o   First and foremost follow ATLS guidelines

o   Hypotension in trauma patients should be initially approached as due to hemorrhage rather than a purely cardiac cause

o   Persistent tachycardia after volume resuscitation, adequate pain control, and exclusion of intrathoracic or intrabdominal hemorrhage should raise suspicion of possible BCI

o   Obtain an EKG and look for the following (important to trend EKG)

o   Dysrhytmias

o   New conduction delays (bundle branch blocks)

o   ST segment elevations or depressions

o   Look for signs of sternal fracture or rib fracture on CXR

o   ECHO

o   TTE look for overall cardiac contractility (EF), wall motion abnormalities, turbulent blood flow, intraventricular or intraatrial thrombi

o   TEE is most sensitive in detecting cardiac injuries that may require intervention

o   Cardiac Biomarkers

o   Significance of troponin remains unclear. Presence of single elevated troponin does little to help further management and increases the likelihood of admission and cardiology consult

o   CK-MB is not a recommended biomarker in BCI

 

EAST (Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma) Guidelines:

o   Level 1 Evidence

o   Obtain EKG on all patients with suspected BCI

o   Level 2 Evidence

o   If the EKG reveals a new abnormality admit the patient for telemetry monitoring

o   BCI can be ruled out in patients with a normal EKG and negative troponin (although appropriate timing of troponin remains unclear)

o   Obtain an optimal TTE or TEE on patients who are hemodynamically unstable or with persistent new arrythmias

o   Sternal fracture alone does not predict BCI

 

References:

o   https://rebelem.com/blunt-cardiac-injury-bci/

o   https://www.nuemblog.com/blog/blunt-cardiac-injury

Bruised and broken hearts: diagnosis and management of blunt cardiac injury — NUEM Blog

o   https://rebelem.com/rebel-core-cast-10-0-blunt-cardiac-injury/

o   https://emcrit.org/emcrit/blunt-cardiac-injuries/


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Embracing Fear in Emergency Medicine

This POTD is from a talk Dr. Chung gave at a grand rounds last year at Kings County.

 Common Fears Physicians Face:

o   Hurting Someone

o   Killing Someone

o   Not knowing what to do

o   Doing the wrong thing

o   Being Sued

o   Losing Credibility

o   Getting stuck

o   Hating my Job

o   Not Being Liked

o   Having no Friends

 

Fear is complicated (psychologists look at fear in multiple ways):

o   Basic Emotion

  • In conjunction with happiness and sadness

o   Social Construct

  • The way we experience fear, the things we are afraid of and our response to fear are socially driven depending on the countries we grew up in

o   Survival Response

o   Adaptive response

o   Personality

 

Types of Fear:

o   Physical Fear

o   Identity Fear

  •   How we conceptualize ourselves

  • How we identify ourselves

o   Social Fear

Fear is normal we all feel and experience fear. Fear comes from 3 different things:

o   Having a fixed vs growth mindset

  • Fixed: We are born with all the skills and abilities we will have for our entire life

  • Growth: Potential for growth is unlimited. We are not born with any skills and/or abilities, we acquire them through life.

    • Failure is perceived as an opportunity to learn from and change

o   Hidden Curriculum

  • Formal Curriculum: conference, assigned homework

  • Informal Curriculum: on shift learning

  • Hidden Curriculum: Things that are not said but implied

o   Imposter syndrome

  • You feel you are not qualified to be in the position you are in

 Instead of Dealing with Our Fears we try to put on “Armory”:

o   Perfectionism

o   Numbing

o   Being Right

o   Crush or be crushed

o   Cynicism/Sarcasm

 By putting on this “Armory” we prevent ourselves from feeling joy, feeling fulfilled and realizing the good we are doing. This ultimately can lead to burn out and satisfaction with your job.

 We need to Embrace our Fears. It takes a lot of courage and bravery to acknowledge when you don’t know something. Bravery allows you to gain the strength to face your fears. People that can realize and acknowledge their fears are able to be more successful. It’s important to remember to approach your seniors, attendings, and mentors when you feel fear. They may have similar stories to share and have ideas to overcome these fears so you can be more successful.

 How to be more comfortable with fear:

o   Be prepared (prepare yourself to experience fear throughout your career)

o   Be human (its ok to have emotions weather you feel sad, joy, need to cry this is all normal)

o   Be vulnerable (share your stories with others)

o   Be empathic (support your coworkers and find the support systems that help you)

Embracing your fear can help you prevent yourself from burning out and having a life-long career that you will love and enjoy.

References:

o   http://blog.clinicalmonster.com/2020/03/16/dr-arlene-chung-grand-rounds-embracing-fear-in-emergency-medicine/

 

 

 

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