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A Case of Pediatric Pain

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A Case of Pediatric Pain Edward C. Jauch, MD MS FACEP Department of Emergency Medicine Dawn Kleindorfer, MD Department of Neurology University of Cincinnati College ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Case of Pediatric Pain


1
A Case of Pediatric Pain
  • Edward C. Jauch, MD MS FACEP
  • Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Dawn Kleindorfer, MD
  • Department of Neurology
  • University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
  • and
  • Greater Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky Stroke
    Team

2
CaseHistory of Present Illness
  • 12 yo. Caucasian female who presents to the
    Emergency Department complaining of diffuse body
    pain
  • Symptoms began one week ago originally in distal
    extremities but now throughout entire body
  • Patient has missed school for the past 4 days due
    to pain with ambulation but she denies any
    weakness

3
CasePast History
  • Past medical history -
  • No significant past medical history
  • Mother notes that members of the family had a
    stomach flu, including the patient, 3 weeks ago
  • Social history -
  • Family recently moved to area, patient is having
    difficulty adjusting to new school
  • No alcohol or drug use
  • Review of systems -
  • No fever, chills, chest or abdominal pain, rashes
  • Patient states it hurts to breath

4
CasePhysical Exam
  • VS BP 98/60 HR 110 T 98.9oF SaO2 99
  • Tearful young female clinging to mom
  • HEENT, pulmonary, cardiac, abdominal, extremity,
    skin exams all unremarkable
  • Neuro exam -
  • Cranial nerves intact
  • Motor largely intact but limited by effort
  • Sensory shows extreme sensitivity to touch in all
    extremities and less so on trunk
  • Motor tone normal but reflexes absent
  • Patient refused to walk

5
CaseLaboratory Evaluation
  • Chest xray unremarkable
  • CBC and renal profile normal
  • Hepatic with mildly elevated transaminases
  • UA and urine pregnancy negative

6
CaseDisposition
  • Discharge diagnosis Viral syndrome
  • Follow-up was scheduled with the patients
    pediatrician the following week
  • The physician also discussed with the patients
    parents that her behavior may also reflect her
    difficulty with her new school

7
CaseSecond E.D. Visit
  • Patient returns 2 days later now complaining of
    profound weakness and shortness of breath
  • VS BP 130/78 HR 125 T100.6oF
  • General exam unchanged except increased shortness
    of breath
  • Neuro exam now reveals
  • CNI except bilateral VII nerve weakness
  • Flaccid lower and weak upper extremities
  • Less pain to touch but burning sensation persists
  • Deep tendon reflexes remain absent

8
What is Your Diagnosis?
9
Guillain Barre Strohl Syndrome
10
Pathophysiology
  • First described in the 1930s GBS is an form of
    acute polyradicularneuropathy
  • Primarily due to demyelination of peripheral
    nerves
  • In severe forms actual axonal damage occurs
    (associated with worse prognosis)
  • Numerous precipitants have been identified

11
Epidemiology
  • General incidence of GBS in children range from
    0.8-1.5 per 100k annually
  • Male to female ratio of 1.51
  • No difference based on
  • Ethnicity
  • Geographic local (although China with outbreaks)
  • Socioeconomic status

12
Pathophysiology
  • Precipitating causes include
  • Prodromal viral or bacterial illness
  • Campylobacter jejuni
  • Chlamydia, CMV, EBV, HIV, Mycoplasma pneumoniae,
  • Vaccinations (influenza, MMR, oral polio, Td)
  • Pregnancy
  • Malignancy (Hodgkins)
  • Surgery
  • Other (SLE, drugs)
  • Unknown

13
Clinical Findings
  • Motor
  • Ranging from mild weakness to paralysis
  • Symmetric and ascending
  • Cranial nerves (IV, VI, VII) but rarely bulbar
  • Areflexia
  • Sensory
  • Pain or dysesthesia very common
  • Visceral symptoms not infrequent

14
Common Pain Syndromes in GBS
  • Back and leg pain
  • Similar in presentation to sciatica
  • Affect large muscle groups
  • Neuropathic pain
  • Burning sensations in the extremities
  • Visceral pain
  • Bloating, cramping
  • Joint pain and myalgias
  • Affects primarily large joints

15
Laboratory Evaluation
  • Basic labs
  • Renal profile (SIADH seen in GBS)
  • CBC
  • Hepatic (elevations in transaminases common)
  • Pregnancy
  • ESR (typically lt 50 mm/hr)
  • CK (elevated in patients with significant pain)
  • UA (proteinuria in 25)
  • CSF
  • Usually with normal opening pressure
  • Classically with elevated protein (gt 400 mg/dL)
  • Lack of pleocytosis

16
Specific Laboratory Evaluations
  • Serum
  • Antibodies to GM1, Ga1C, or GA1NAc-GD1a
    gangliosides
  • Antibodies to Campylobacter jejuni
  • Antibodies to CMV
  • HIV
  • Stool cultures for C. jejuni

17
Electromyographic Testing and Neuroimaging
  • EMG
  • Demonstrates
  • Demyelination axonal loss
  • Diminished nerve conduction velocities
  • Diagnosis more specific if multiple nerves
    involved
  • MRI with gadolinium contrast
  • Enhancement of cauda equina and nerve roots
    suggest areas of inflammation

18
Differential Diagnosis
  • Acute Neuropathies
  • Critical illness neuropathy
  • Diphtheria
  • Porphyrias
  • Lyme disease
  • Toxins
  • Tick paralysis
  • NMJ Disorders
  • Botulism
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • Myopathies
  • Critical illness myopathy
  • Hypocalcemia, hypokalemia
  • Polymyositis
  • Rhabdomyolysis
  • CNS Disorders
  • Acute spinal cord syndromes
  • Transverse myelitis
  • Poliomyelitis
  • Rabies

19
Forms of Guillain-Barre Syndrome
  • Motor-sensory 75
  • Diagnosis almost exclusively clinical
  • Pure motor 20
  • Autonomic dysfunction more common
  • Miller Fisher syndrome 3
  • Weakness starts in eye muscles
  • Bulbar variant 2
  • Weakness involves muscles of deglutition and or
    tongue

(Dutch Neuromuscular Research Centre, Eur Neurol
2001)
20
Treatment
  • ABCs
  • Supportive and expectant care is key.
  • Early pulmonary function tests to identify
    patients at risk of impending respiratory failure
  • Recognition and treatment of autonomic
    instability
  • Immunomodulating therapies

21
Signs, Symptoms, and Paraclinical Findings in
Overt Neuromuscular Respiratory Failure
  • Signs and symptoms
  • Air hunger
  • Altered mentation
  • Accessory muscle use
  • Paradoxical respiration
  • Inability to count to 20 in one breath
  • Staccato speech
  • Paraclinical findings
  • Vital capacity lt 15 ml/kg
  • Negative inspiratory force lt -25 cm H20
  • Positive expiratory force lt 40 cm H20
  • Vital capacity drop of gt 55 from supine to
    sitting
  • Hypoxemia
  • Atelectasis

(Chalela, Seminars in Neurology 2001)
22
TreatmentAutonomic Dysfunction
  • Paroxysmal hypertension
  • Sudden swings make treatment more difficult
  • Short acting agents safest (nitroprusside)
  • Hypotension and orthostatic hypotension
  • Rarely requires therapy (IV fluids)
  • Cardiac arrhythmias
  • Most life threatening
  • Bradycardia treated with atropine
  • Tachyarrhythmias may include atrial fibrillation,
    atrial flutter, and ventricular tachycardia, all
    respond to standard treatment

23
TreatmentImmunomodulating Therapies
  • Plasma exchange
  • Only therapy with proven benefit
  • May require multiple exchanges
  • Cautious use in patients with autonomic
    instability
  • Immunoglobulin therapy (IV IgG)
  • Relatively easy to administer
  • Benefit unclear
  • Risk of viral (hepatitis C) transmission
  • Steroids without benefit

(Cochrane Review, 2001)
24
TreatmentPain Syndromes
  • Deep muscle ache in low back or large muscles
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
  • Neuropathic pain
  • TCAs effective, use with caution in autonomic
    dysfunction
  • Carbamazepine
  • Joint pain
  • Ice packs, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
  • Throat pain associated with intubation
  • Intermittent cuff deflation, tracheostomy

25
Details
  • Admission to a high acuity area is critical for
    adequate patient monitoring
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring
  • Close respiratory observation
  • Do not delay intubation until the patient becomes
    hypoxic!
  • Neurology should be involved early on

26
Outcome Prediction in GBS
  • Epidemiologic factors
  • Antecedent diarrhea
  • Campylobacter jejuni infection
  • Cytomegalovirus infection
  • Electrophysiologic findings
  • Absent or reduced CMAP
  • Unexcitable nerves
  • Predominantly axonal involvement
  • Clinical factors
  • Advanced age
  • Rapid symptom progression
  • Mechanical ventilation
  • Upper extremity involvement
  • Inability to walk at 8 weeks
  • Biochemical markers
  • Anti-GM1 antibodies
  • High CSF NSE or S100 levels

(Chalela, Seminars in Neurology 2001)
27
Prognosis
  • In general the prognosis of GBS is good
  • Up to 85 of patients with GBS make a full
    recovery
  • Mortality rates range from 2-12
  • 15 of patients with persistent deficits

28
Conclusions
  • Guillian-Barre Syndrome should no longer have
    significantly mortality if properly diagnosed and
    treated
  • Guillian-Barre may present with pain as the
    primary symptom in children
  • The key differential is primary spinal cord
    injury, GBS, and tick paralysis

29
CaseOutcome
  • Patient required intubation within 24 hours of
    admission
  • Plasma exchange performed 4 times over next 7
    days
  • Patient was extubated on hospital day 6
  • Returned to school 4 weeks from admission
  • Patient with minimal residual leg weakness at 6
    months follow-up

30
  • When the end of the world comes,
  • I want to be in Cincinnati
  • because it's always twenty years
  • behind the times."
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