1 / 27

Morning Report

Morning Report. Danielle Behrens D.O. PGY2 August 18, 2009. Chief Complaint. Bilateral Leg pain left > right. History of Present Illness. 47 year old female presents to the ED with a chief complaint of bilateral leg pain L>R.

derica
Download Presentation

Morning Report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Morning Report Danielle Behrens D.O. PGY2 August 18, 2009

  2. Chief Complaint Bilateral Leg pain left > right

  3. History of Present Illness • 47 year old female presents to the ED with a chief complaint of bilateral leg pain L>R. • States pain began 2 months ago- LLE calf pain and great toe numbness, worse with ambulation; improved with rest. • Pt was seen at OLOL ED 1 month ago- had Duplex u/s –negative. Pt took Ibuprofen and pain improved. • Pt then developed progressive pain in b/l feet with numbness- still worse with ambulation and improved with rest- saw PCP- no studies done at that time. • Pain has been getting progressively worse over last 3 days- now not relieved by rest

  4. History of Present Illness • Pt went to ED at large inner city hospital 5 days prior- was discharged from ED- told to follow-up with PCP. Also given referral to Neurologist. • Pt again presented to ED at large inner city hospital 2 days prior with worsening pain-Was given Percocet and discharged home. • Pt states pain is persistent- worse with exposure to cold;

  5. PMHx: • Asthma • Uterine Fibroids • GERD • Seasonal Allergies • PSHx: • Tubal Ligation • Social Hx: • 15 pack year smoking history ( ½ ppd x 30 years) • Occasional ETOH • Denies IVDA/ + cocaine use 30 years ago • Works as a teacher’s assistant/bus aide

  6. Family Hx: • Non Contributory • ROS: • b/l LE pain • Paresthesias b/l feet • Cold intolerance b/l LE

  7. Physical Exam • VS:T: 99.5 HR: 114 RR: 18 BP: 138/78 O2 • Gen: AAO x 3, Uncomfortable • HEENT: NCAT, EOMI, PERRLA • CV:tachycardic RR no murmurs, rubs gallops • Lungs: CTA b/l no wheezes, rales, rhonchi • Abd: soft, NT/ND BS + 4, no pulsations • Back: No CVA tenderness • Ext………

  8. …Feet hypersensitive to touch L>R, L foot pale and cool. Toes on R foot purple color with cap refill 3-4 secs. PT pulse recorded on doppler. Photo from Oncology Nursing Society www.ons.org

  9. Now what?

  10. CT with contrast: • L common artery thrombus without complete obstruction.

  11. Tx to CUH ICU • IV aorta with runoff- • Large ovoid mobile thrombus located withinn the distal abdominal aorta, left eccentric- which extends into the left common iliac artery. • Single vessel runoff on the left with presumed distal embolization of proximal peroneal and posterior tibial arteries.

  12. Thrombectomy done by vascular surgery • Remained in ICU- • Left foot progressively more ischemic/necrotic • Underwent Left BKA

  13. 2 D echo: • Normal LV size and wall thickness. LVEF: 60-65% • Normal RV size and function • Normal LA; Normal RA; Normal Interatrail septum. • Negative Bubble study • No masses seen.

  14. Consult Heme/Onc…

  15. Results: • Factor V Leiden- negative • Prothrombin gene mutation- negative • AT III- 67 • Homocysteine: 9.6 • Protein C: 27.4 • Protein S: 58 • Fibrinogen: 492 • B2 Microglobulin I: Neg IgA, IgM & IgG

  16. Results: • Anti-Cardiolipin Ab: POSITIVE • IgA, IgM, IgG NEGATIVE • Lupus Anticoagulant: • dRVVT: **61.4 sec** (28.8-42.0) • Hex Phase: ** 59.7 ** (<8.0)

  17. Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome • Disorder of coagulation associated with arterial and venous thrombosis • Also associated with recurrent fetal loss

  18. Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome APS Criteria- revised 2006 *Must have 1 clinical criteria and 1 lab criteria for dx* 1. Vascular thrombosis 2. Pregnancy morbidity - Three or more SABs <10 wks gestation - One or more SAB >10 wks gestation - One or more premature births <34 weeks gestation assoc. with Preeclampsia/eclampsia or placental insuffuciency. 3. Presence of anticardiolipin, Lupus anticoagulant or Anti- B2 Glycoprotein antibodies

  19. Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome • Primary APS- APS without Rheumatologic Disease • Secondary APS- APS in the presence of Rheumatologic Disease • Ex: SLE with Lupus anticoagulant • ** Important- Pt can have Lupus anticoagulant without SLE**

  20. Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome • Cardiolipin- mitochondrial membrane phospholipid • B2 Glycoprotein I- phospholipid binding protein • Lupus anticoagulant- antibodies that prolong the coagulation time.

  21. Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome • Anticardiolipin antibodies are more sensitive • Lupus anticoagulant is more specific

  22. Catastrophic Antiphospholipid Ab Syndrome • Multiple thrombi in 3 or more organ systems over days to weeks • Mortality rate 50% • Death occurs from multiorgan failure • Kidneys are most affected followed by lungs, CNS, heart, skin

  23. Treatment • Aimed at : • Prophylaxis • Treatment of thrombi • Prevention of future thromboemboli • Management in pregnancy

  24. References • “The Antiphospholipid Syndrome”Jerrold S. Levine, M.D., D. Ware Branch, M.D., and Joyce Rauch, Ph.D. The New England Journal of Medicine Volume 346:752-763 March 7, 2002 Number 10 Photo from Oncology Nursing Society www.ons.org

More Related