ATRIAL FIBRILLATION!  Rhythm Control and Cardioversion

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This POTD is inspired by a septic man in Resus today who required cardioversion.  If you're curious, he looked fantastic after his heart stopped going 240 beats per minute and settled in to the 90s. From NPR:  “This patient was wearing a Fitbit fitness tracker that had a heart rate monitor and connected wirelessly to his smartphone. With his permission, the doctors checked the data on the phone and figured out that the episode of arrhythmia had begun only about two hours before he showed up at the ER.

"We were able to hook him up to the pads, put him to sleep, give him a little shock, and let him wake up and go home," Sacchetti says.”

ATRIAL FIBRILLATION!  Rhythm Control and Cardioversion

  • Atria are beating chaotically:  “irregularly irregular”
  • Can do rate control, rhythm control, or possibly cardioversion in the ED
  • Nonpharmacologic Rhythm Control:
  • Ablation by EPS
    • radio frequency
    • cryoballoon
    • laser surgery
  • Reversible causes have already been addressed (e.g. HTN, hyperthyroidism, alcoholism, heart failure, sleep apnea)

Cardioversion

  • When to use:  New onset a fib within 48 hrs or patient is unstable
  • Contraindications:  Can’t confirm it’s been less than 48 hours.  In these cases, pt to be anti-coagulated for 3 weeks prior to outpatient cardioversion.
  • How to do it:  First sedate patient (e.g. with etomidate) and then shock at 100J—>200K—300J—360J

AF without Structural Heart Disease

  • Okay in HTN without LVH
    • Flecainaide or propafenone as first line
  • Be wary in the elderly due to CAD (and likely structural disease)
  • Others used include Amiodarone, Sotalol, Dronedarone.
    • In SAFE-T and AFFIRM Trials, Amiodarone >> flecainaide, propafenone, or sotalol

AF with Structural Heart Disease

  • Amiodarone, Sotalol, and Dofetilide usually first line
  • CAD:  Sotalol>> dronedarone, dofetilide, and amiodarone. Flecainide and propafenone are contraindicated in this population.
  • LVH:  Sotalol, flecainaide, propafenone may cause arrhythmia.  Dronedarone or Amiodarone are options

A little bit about Amiodarone

  • Low dose of 100 to 200mg po daily but can use higher doses
    • Low incidence of torsades
    • Made need less rate control as has beta blocker and CCB activity.
    • Unfortunate toxicity
      • Check LFTs, TFTs (has iodine), and Lung function
      • Blue Man Syndrome (Argyria)
  • Most effective
  • Most likely to have long term complications
  • May interfere with warfarin, thus increasing risk of stroke
  • Class III Drug
  • Prolong QT
  • Slows Heart Rate and AV node conduction (like CCB, Beta blockers)
  • Prolongs refractoriness (is that a word?  It is now) via K+ and Na+ blockade
  • Slows intracardiac conduction via Na+ blockade
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Dental Trauma: Ellis Classification

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Ellis Classification of Dental Fractures
Ellis I
Includes crown fractures that extend only through the enamel.
Teeth are usually nontender, and without visible color change, but have rough edges.
Ellis II
Fractures that involve the enamel and dentin layers.
Teeth are typically sensitive to cold, hot, touch and/or air exposure. A yellow layer of dentin may be visible on examination
Ellis III
Involve the enamel, dentin, and pulp layers.
Teeth are extremely sensitive, and have a visible area of pink, red, or even blood at the center of the tooth. 
The pulp of the tooth is very prone to infection. Infection of the pulp is termed pulpitis and can lead to potential tooth loss. The dentin of the tooth is very porous and is an ineffective seal over the pulp. In Ellis II and III fractures in which the dentin or pulp is exposed, the clinician caring for the tooth fracture in the acute setting must create a seal over these injured teeth to protect the pulp from intraoral flora and potential infection.
Other dental injuries that may or may not be associated with a dental fracture include the following:
  • Dental avulsion - Complete extraction of the tooth (crown and root)
  • Dental subluxation - The loosening of a tooth following trauma
  • Dental intrusion - The forcing of an erupted tooth below the gingiva
In these situations, the goal is to return the tooth to its correct anatomical position as quickly and securely as possible, without causing further trauma to the tooth, gingiva, or alveolar bone. 
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Did you get your Tetanus Shot?

Name that Sign!  Hint: It’s not a Glasgow Smile
Answer:  Risus Sardonicus.  Caused by spasms of the facial muscles.  Also seen in Wilson’s Diseases and Strychnine poisoning.
TETANUS
  • Caused by Clostridium Tetani, which is present in soil, animal feces
  • Typical presentation of “Stepped on a rusty name” and didn’t get their tdap.
    • Also in IVDU, abdominal surgeries
  • Per CDC, leads to death in 1 in 10 cases, usually in the elderly.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Initial signs are trismus or “lock jaw”- spasms of muscles of mastication
  • If not treated, progresses to sustained muscles of the back:  Opisthotonus
  • By second week, tachycardia, labile HTN, sweating, hyperpyrexia, increased urinary excretion of catecholamines
PATHOPHYSOLOGY
  • Ubiquitous spores in soil and animal feces
  • Introduced into skin as spore-forming, non-invasive state
  • Germinates into toni-producing, vegetative form if oxygen tension is reduced
    • e.g. crushed, devitalized tissue
  • Toxins=Tetanolysin and Tetanospasmin
  • Tetanospasmin does not cross BBB but CAN enter via retrograde intraneuronal transport
  • Acts on motor endplates of skeletal muscle, spinal cord, CNS, and sympathetics
  • Inhibits glycine and GABA
    • In short get sympathetic overactivity and high circulating catecholamines
TREATMENT
  • Admit to ICU
  • Needs intubation if respiratory compromised
    • Succinylcholine for intubation, Vecuronium for longer blockade
  • Minimize environmental stimuli to avoid convulsive spasms
  • Tetanus Immunoglobulin 3K-6K units IM helps locally but not if it is in the CNS
    • Nevertheless, reduces mortality
  • Can give parenteral metronidazole
  • Do NOT give PCN because central acting GABA antagonist which may potentiate tetanospasmin
  • Mag sulfate to help inhibit release of catecholamines/reduce autonomic instability/spasms
  • Midazolam for muscle spasm
SUMMARY
  • Clinical dx- look for autonomic instability, muscle spasms
  • Tx w/ ICU, intubation, Midazolam, Mag sulfate, Flagyl but NO PCN
REFERENCES
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