Common Pediatric Psychiatric Presentations to the Emergency Room. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Common Pediatric Psychiatric Presentations to the Emergency Room.

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Title: Common Pediatric Psychiatric Presentations to the Emergency Room.


1
Common Pediatric Psychiatric Presentations to the
Emergency Room.
  • Zaid B. Malik, MD
  • Asst. Professor
  • Director CL
  • Asst. Residency Program Director.

2
  • Child psychiatric emergencies presenting in the
    hospital setting are most often characterized by
    intense symptoms, perceived danger, and a sense
    of urgency complicated by the perception of
    imminent catastrophic outcome and frequent
    conflict among the parties involved.

3
  • Despite this acuity, child psychiatric
    emergencies are usually the outcome of complex,
    ongoing processes rather than sudden, discrete
    events. (this is true most of the times)
  • Occasionally, a previously well functioning child
    with some underlying vulnerabilities may abruptly
    decompensate and display psychiatric symptoms in
    the presence of some critical or traumatic event
    or organic process.

4
  • The goal of child psychiatric emergency
    services evaluation is then to clarify the nature
    and the cause of the imbalance that has arisen
    and to identify the resources needed (safe
    environment, psychoeducation, psychopharmacotherap
    y, outpatient therapist, family support services)
    to restore equilibrium.

5
  • The primary goals of the child psychiatric
    emergency evaluation are, as expeditiously as
    possible

6
  • To obtain each informant's account of the reason
    for referral
  • To develop a working alliance, if possible, with
    the patient and other involved parties around the
    assessment and disposition planning

7
  • To obtain a focused developmental history of the
    child's current difficulties and prior
    functioning against the backdrop of the child's
    family, current living situation, and any
    involved clinicians or agencies, with particular
    attention to the possible precipitants of the
    current crisis

8
  • To perform a mental status examination, with
    particular attention to evidence of suicidal or
    homicidal ideation, hallucinations, delusions, or
    thought disorder evidence of confusion,
    disorientation, or other signs of delirium and
    intense anxiety

9
  • To develop a differential diagnosis, including a
    formulation of what changing factors have
    precipitated the need for emergency evaluation at
    the present time

10
  • To arrive at a judgment regarding the degree of
    probable risk to the patient's safety or that of
    others
  • To identify interventions that will help to
    contain and ameliorate the patient's difficulties

11
  • To plan and implement a disposition
  • To collaborate effectively with other clinicians
    and care providers involved in the case, both
    within and beyond the hospital setting

12
The clinician must be alert to and explicitly
note the presence of the following
  • Disorientation, confusion, and fluctuating levels
    of consciousness
  • Incoherence of thought or speech
  • Evidence of hallucinations or delusions
  • Impaired memory
  • Slurred speech, ataxia, or apraxia

13
Assessment of safety additionally requires
explicit attention to the following
  • The presence of suicidal or homicidal ideation
  • Aggressive threats or ideation
  • Impulsivity
  • Proneness to regression or agitation during the
    interview
  • Poor judgment and insight and limited
    intelligence
  • Mood lability

14
Case 1
  • CJ was a 5 year old who had just started KG. He
    had no experience with preschool and had never
    been away from home in a group situation. He
    presented to an outpatient psychiatry clinic
    after hitting his teacher and biting the
    principal. No history of previous evaluation or
    treatment of developmental, behavioral, or
    emotional disorder. He was healthy and active.
    His mother had moderately severe anxiety disorder
    and stayed mostly at home. He lived with his
    father, mother and older brothers. On MSE he was
    a small, compliant child with poor eye contact.
    He responded to questions with monosyllables that
    were hard to hear.

15
Case 2
  • ST was a very bright 12 yr old twin. He
    presented to a residential treatment unit with a
    history of severe aggression and rages at home
    and school when he did not get his way. His
    ability to tolerate frustration varied
    considerably at times he was able to accept
    limits and consequences at other times he would
    become explosive, hyperactive, and destructive.
    His family was not able to go into public spaces
    for fear that he would become angry. He had been
    treated for ADHD and ODD since early childhood.
    He was healthy, without chronic illness and
    although a twin his pregnancy and perinatal
    history was unremarkable. On MSE, he was a well
    developed 12 yr old with poor eye contact. He
    was sulky and irritable with angry affect.
    Family history was positive for bipolar disorder.
    His parents were divorced due to his fathers
    mood instability. He was being reared in a
    single mother household. His mother was
    genuinely frightened of his rages.

16
Case 3
  • HJ was a developmentally delayed 7 year old with
    an IQ of 60 and a diagnosis of autism. When
    frustrated he had a history of aggression with
    peers, caregivers and himself (head banging and
    biting his forearm until it bled). He was rigid
    with poor tolerance of over stimulating
    environments and transitions. He lived with his
    mother and father in an intact home and attended
    a behavioral classroom in a public school.

17
Case 4
  • LC was a 10 yr old boy in a single mother
    household presenting at the insistence of the
    school. His academic and behavioral problems at
    school started in KG. Behaviors included
    fighting, talking back, vandalism, lying,
    truancy, and stealing from other students. He
    was diagnosed with ADHD in KG and had been
    treated with psycho stimulants off and on since
    then. He did not know his father. Throughout
    his childhood his mothers boyfriends moved in
    and out of the house. He had little supervision
    or monitoring. Discipline at times was
    excessively harsh. The family had had
    involvement in the Department of Children and
    Family Services before following a substantiated
    case of physical abuse. Family history was
    positive for substance abuse, depression, and
    poor anger management.

18
Differential Diagnosis of Aggression
  • Symptoms of Aggression are common in a wide range
    of psychiatric conditions.
  • Conduct Disorder
  • Oppositional Defiant Disorder
  • Mood Disorder
  • ADHD
  • Anxiety Disorder
  • Psychotic disorders (especially those including
    paranoia)
  • Developmental Disorders
  • Anxiety

19
Treatment Options
  • Medications
  • Antipsychotics
  • Mood stabilizers
  • Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors
  • Stimulants

20
Case 5
  • A. 16 yr girl, considered generally well
    adjusted, without psychiatric history presents to
    the ED at 11p. She is drowsy and nauseated. Her
    mother says that her daughter has been seeing a
    boy for the past 2 years. He broke up with her
    last week. Since then she has been sad and
    tearful, uninterested in her usual activities.
    Tonight, after seeing her ex-BF at a restaurant
    with another girl. She came home and took a
    bottle of aspirin. An hour later she came to her
    mother and told her what she had done. Family
    history is negative for psychiatric illness and
    completed suicide. On MSE she is sleepy and
    feeling sick. She denies longstanding depressive
    symptoms and says that she does not want to die
    now. She says that she never wanted to die but
    wanted people to understand how sad she is. She
    also said that she hoped her BF would come back
    to her.

21
Case 6
  • MH A seventeen year old boy, who recently
    graduated from HS, is found barely conscious in
    his bedroom by his mother when she goes in to
    wake him up. She takes him to the ED where a tox
    screen reveals that he has taken an overdose of
    Depakote. The Depakote was his mothers. On the
    floor he is extremely quiet and uncommunicative.
    He says that he wants to go home. There is no
    previous psychiatric history but his mother says
    that he has been acting different for the past
    year. He has been staying in his room with less
    and less interest in doing things with friends.
    She is not aware of any traumatic events. There
    is a family history of schizophrenia. This
    patient has no past psychiatric history. On
    interview he is quiet with a blunt affect. He
    denies any problems, cannot explain his overdose,
    but feels that he has to get out of the hospital
    b/c the people there are getting on his nerves.
    He denies AH but is suspicious and guarded when
    questioned about them. He does talk about his
    graduation ceremony and says that when he walked
    across the stage the other students laughed at
    him. When asked about that his mother says that
    that did not occur and he has always been
    well-liked at school.

22
Leading Causes of Death in 15-19
Year-Olds
  • Accidents
  • Homicide
  • Suicide
  • Cancer/Leukemia
  • Heart Disease
  • Congenital Anomalies (NCHS 2001)

23
12-Month Prevalence of Suicidal Ideation and
BehaviorU.S. High School Students- Youth Risk
Behavior Surveillance CDC 2000
  • Ideation 17-19 2.7 million
  • Ideation w/ plan 11-14 1.9 million
  • Attempt 5-8 1.0
    million
  • Attempt requiring 1-3 296,000
  • medical attention
  • Suicide (age 15-19) .008 1,600

24
Ratio of Teen Attempts to Teen Suicides
  • Deaths Attempts
    Ratio
  • Males 14 5,700 1400
  • Females 3 10,900 13,900
  • YRBS CDC 2000 all numbers/100,000

25
Suicide Methods
  • United States 1999, 15-19 Year-olds
  • Firearms
  • Hanging/Suffocation
  • Ingestions
  • CO poisoning
  • Jumping

26
  • In 1998 suicide rates were highest among white
    males of all ages, followed by non-white males,
    white females, and non-white females.

27
Biological factors
  • Low Serotonin levels
  • Genetic Predisposition

28
Types of Stress Events Preceding
A Suicide
  • Disciplinary Crises 48
  • Relationship Problem 36
  • Humiliation 16

29
Most Common Teen Suicide
Diagnoses
  • ANY
    MALE FEMALE
  • Mood Disorder 50 69
  • Antisocial Disorder 43 24
  • Substance Abuse 38 17
  • Anxiety Disorder 19 48
  • Shaffer et al 1996, Brent et al 1999

30
Imminent Risk in Suicide Attempters
  • Agitation
  • Intense Anxiety
  • Recent Discontinuation of Medications

31
High-Risk Attempters
  • Male
  • Abnormal mental state
  • Previous attempt
  • Family history of suicidality
  • History of aggressive outbursts and substance and
    alcohol abuse
  • Method other than ingestion

32
Clinical Risk Factors
  • 1/3 of Teenage suicide victims have made a
    previous attempt
  • ½ have persistent thoughts of hopelessness
  • Aggressive/impulsive behavior is increased in
    both sexes
  • ½ of teenagers who commit suicide have had
    contact with a PCP or MHP

33
Clinical risk factors (continued)
  • Alcohol and cocaine abuse are present in 2/3 of
    18-19 year old males but uncommon in younger
    males and females
  • Schizophrenia and bipolar illness each represent
    fewer than 10 of suicides but are relatively
    infrequent conditions
  • Increased Frequency of suicide attempts and
    completions in relatives of suicide victims
  • Decreased family support

34
Emergency Room Management of the Suicidal
Adolescent
  • Medical Care
  • To Admit or not to admit
  • Sedation
  • ?? Contract for Safety

35
Hospitalizing a Teen Attempter
  • Sufficient
  • Medical Necessity
  • Abnormal Mental State
  • Persistent Wish to Die
  • Highly Lethal or Unusual Method

36
Hospitalization (continued)
  • Adds weight but not Sufficient
  • Prior Attempt(s)
  • Male gender
  • Family history of suicide
  • Inadequate care and supervision at home
  • Over age sixteen

37
Contract for Safety
  • Thought to improve compliance
  • Thought to reduce likelihood of further suicidal
    behavior
  • A probe to assess patients willingness to assist
    in treatment efforts
  • No evidence for any of the above.

38
Etiology
  • Suicidal Behavior is complex. The factors
    involved are outlined in accordance with five
    axis.
  • Primary psychiatric disorders
  • Developmental and personality disorders
  • Biological factors
  • Stress
  • Social functioning

39
It is important to assess and document the
following in the child or adolescent
  • The degree of premeditation and planning versus
    impulsiveness (22)
  • Ego syntonicity or dystonicity
  • Consistency with the patient's past behaviors or
    style (including chronic bullying)

40
  • Extraordinary or uncontrolled rage and use of
    weapons
  • The validity of perceived self-defense
  • Evidence of grossly impaired judgment or
    consciousness

41
  • Bizarre or delusional behavior or thought content
  • Risk of self-injury during the violent episode
  • The extent to which the child can remember the
    details of the episode (including his actions and
    their consequence), accept responsibility, or
    express remorse

42
Conclusion
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