648 resultados para COMA
Resumo:
Myxedema coma, a rare but fatal emergency, is an extreme expression of hypothyroidism. We describe a 51-year-old male patient who has discontinued hypothyroidism treatment 10 months earlier and developed lethargy, edema, and cold intolerance symptoms. He also had a previous diagnosis of neurofibromatosis. After admission, he progressed to respiratory insufficiency and coma. The prompt recognition of the condition, thyroid hormone replacement, and management of the complications (hypoventilation, cardiogenic shock associated with swinging heart, adrenal and renal insufficiency and sepsis), resulted in a favorable evolution.
Resumo:
A intoxicação pela vitamina D é uma causa bem conhecida de hipercalcémia e hiperfosfatemia. Nos casos de intoxicação crónica, quando o produto fosfocálcico é superior a 60 mg2/dl2, verifica-se a deposição de cristais de fosfato de cálcio, nos tecidos moles, com subsequente hipocalcémia. Apresenta-se o caso de uma lactente de três meses de idade, com antecedentes pessoais irrelevantes, internada na Unidade de Cuidados Intensivos Pediátricos, por tetania e coma resultante da intoxicação crónica acidental pela vitamina D, desde os dez dias de vida. Apresentava hipocalcémia (cálcio total 4,44mg/dl e cálcio ionizado 0,45 mg/dl) e hiper-fosfatémia (fósforo 17,8 mg/dl) grave, sendo o produto fosfocálcico de 79 mg2/dl2. A intoxicação pela vitamina D e hipocalcémia paradoxal foi confirmada pelo doseamento de 1,25-vitamina D.
Resumo:
A endocardite infecciosa é relativamente pouco frequente na idade pediátrica, mas a sua morbilidade e mortalidade são elevadas. Os autores descrevem um caso clínico de endocardite infecciosa aguda por Staphylococcus aureus numa criança de 5 anos de idade, sem factores de risco conhecidos, diagnosticada na sequência de complicações neurológicas (degradação súbita do estado de consciência e sinais neurológicos focais) resultantes de enfarte talâmico bilateral. A localização da lesão na TAC cranioencefálica sugere provável lesão de variante anatómica da artéria paramediana tálamosubtalâmica posterior. A propósito deste caso os autores fazem uma breve revisão desta forma de apresentação e das opções terapêuticas.
Resumo:
Os AA. apresentam 5 casos de coma mixedematoso observados no período de 1984 a 1992. Trata-se de 4 doentes do sexo feminino e 1 do sexo masculino com idades compreendidas entre os 45 e 73 anos. Em 3 doentes não havia diagnóstico prévio de hipotiroidismo. A depressão do estado de consciência, a hipotermia, a bradicardia e a ausência de bócio eram comuns aos 5 doentes. Foi identificado factor desencadeante em 3 deles. Utilizada levotiroxina e/ou liotironina por via oral, hidrocortisona e medidas de suporte, a evolução foi favorável nos 2 doentes em que tinha sido identificado factor desencadeante, que apresentavam menor depressão do S.N.C. e normalização da temperatura corporal ao 3° dia de terapêutica.
Resumo:
Relata-se caso da associação paracoccidioidomicose - infecção pelo vírus da imunodeficiência humana (HIV) em homem de 43 anos, em que se descreve, pela primeira vez, de modo detalhado, o quadro anatomopatológico da referida associação. Discutem-se a baixa freqüência desta associação, o comportamento, evolução e tratamento da paracoccidioidomicose em pacientes HIV positivos e chama-se a atenção para a importância da associação da infecção pelo HIV com as doenças tropicais mais comuns em nosso meio.
Resumo:
Humans can recognize categories of environmental sounds, including vocalizations produced by humans and animals and the sounds of man-made objects. Most neuroimaging investigations of environmental sound discrimination have studied subjects while consciously perceiving and often explicitly recognizing the stimuli. Consequently, it remains unclear to what extent auditory object processing occurs independently of task demands and consciousness. Studies in animal models have shown that environmental sound discrimination at a neural level persists even in anesthetized preparations, whereas data from anesthetized humans has thus far provided null results. Here, we studied comatose patients as a model of environmental sound discrimination capacities during unconsciousness. We included 19 comatose patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia (TH) during the first 2 days of coma, while recording nineteen-channel electroencephalography (EEG). At the level of each individual patient, we applied a decoding algorithm to quantify the differential EEG responses to human vs. animal vocalizations as well as to sounds of living vocalizations vs. man-made objects. Discrimination between vocalization types was accurate in 11 patients and discrimination between sounds from living and man-made sources in 10 patients. At the group level, the results were significant only for the comparison between vocalization types. These results lay the groundwork for disentangling truly preferential activations in response to auditory categories, and the contribution of awareness to auditory category discrimination.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVE: To assess the theoretical and practical knowledge of the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) by trained Air-rescue physicians in Switzerland. METHODS: Prospective anonymous observational study with a specially designed questionnaire. General knowledge of the GCS and its use in a clinical case were assessed. RESULTS: From 130 questionnaires send out, 103 were returned (response rate of 79.2%) and analyzed. Theoretical knowledge of the GCS was consistent for registrars, fellows, consultants and private practitioners active in physician-staffed helicopters. The clinical case was wrongly scored by 38 participants (36.9%). Wrong evaluation of the motor component occurred in 28 questionnaires (27.2%), and 19 errors were made for the verbal score (18.5%). Errors were made most frequently by registrars (47.5%, p = 0.09), followed by fellows (31.6%, p = 0.67) and private practitioners (18.4%, p = 1.00). Consultants made significantly less errors than the rest of the participating physicians (0%, p < 0.05). No statistically significant differences were shown between anesthetists, general practitioners, internal medicine trainees or others. CONCLUSION: Although the theoretical knowledge of the GCS by out-of-hospital physicians is correct, significant errors were made in scoring a clinical case. Less experienced physicians had a higher rate of errors. Further emphasis on teaching the GCS is mandatory.
Resumo:
Rapport de synthèse Introduction : Le Glasgow coma score (GCS) est un outil reconnu permettant l'évaluation des patients après avoir subi un traumatisme crânien. Il est réputé pour sa simplicité et sa reproductibilité permettant ainsi aux soignants une évaluation appropriée et continue du status neurologique des patients. Le GCS est composé de trois catégories évaluant la réponse oculaire, verbale et motrice. En Suisse, les soins préhospitaliers aux patients victimes d'un trauma crânien sévère sont effectués par des médecins, essdntiellement à bord des hélicoptères médicalisés. Avant une anesthésie générale nécessaire à ces patients, une évaluation du GCS est essentielle indiquant au personnel hospitalier la gravité des lésions cérébrales. Afin d'évaluer la connaissance du GCS par les médecins à bord des hélicoptères médicalisés en Suisse, nous avons élaboré un questionnaire, contenant dans une première partie des questions sur les connaissances générales du GCS suivi d'un cas clinique. Objectif : Evaluation des connaissances pratiques et théoriques du GCS par les médecins travaillant à bord des hélicoptères médicalisés en Suisse. Méthode : Etude observationnelle prospective et anonymisée à l'aide d'un questionnaire. Evaluation des connaissances générales du GCS et de son utilisation clinique lors de la présentation d'un cas. Résultats : 16 des 18 bases d'hélicoptères médicalisés suisses ont participé à notre étude. 130 questionnaires ont été envoyés et le taux de réponse a été de 79.2%. Les connaissances théoriques du GCS étaient comparables pour tous les médecins indépendamment de leur niveau de formation. Des erreurs dans l'appréciation du cas clinique étaient présentes chez 36.9% des participants. 27.2% ont commis des erreurs dans le score moteur et 18.5% dans le score verbal. Les erreurs ont été répertoriées le plus fréquemment chez les médecins assistants (47.5%, p=0.09), suivi par les chefs de clinique (31.6%, p=0.67) et les médecins installés en cabinet (18.4%, p=1.00). Les médecins cadres ont fait significativement moins d'erreurs que les autres participants (0%, p<0.05). Aucune différence significative n'à été observée entre les différentes spécialités (anesthésie, médecine interne, médecine général et «autres »). Conclusion Même si les connaissances théoriques du GCS sont adéquates parmi les médecins travaillant à bord des hélicoptères médicalisés, des erreurs dans son application clinique sont présentes dans plus d'un tiers des cas. Les médecins avec le moins d'expériences professionnelle font le plus d'erreurs. Au vu de l'importance de l'évaluation correcte du score de Glasgow initial, une amélioration des connaissances est indispensable.
Resumo:
Contexte: L'ensemble des phénomènes aigus suivant un arrêt cardio-respiratoire (ACR) est décrit sous le nom de maladie de post-réanimation (MPR) (post-resuscitation disease). Celle- ci est la conséquence du syndrome de reperfusion et est caractérisée par une réponse inflammatoire systémique intense, d'allure septique. La procalcitonine (PCT) est un marqueur aigu de la réponse inflammatoire systémique, qui a été beaucoup étudiée aux soins intensifs (SI) dans le contexte du sepsis, et constitue un outil diagnostic et pronostique important. Toutefois la PCT n'est pas un marqueur spécifique pour le sepsis mais peut également augmenter lors de réponse inflammatoire systémique d'origine non infectieuse. Objectifs: 1) Evaluer s'il existe une corrélation entre la valeur plasmatique de PCT et la MPR ; 2) examiner la relation entre le taux au pic de PCT et le pronostic des patients avec coma post-ACR ; 3) comparer la valeur pronostique de la PCT à celle d'un marqueur pronostic connu du coma post-anoxique tel que la neuron specific enolase (NSE). Méthodologie: Analyse d'une base de données prospective comprenant des patients admis aux SI du centre hospitalier universitaire vaudoise (CHUV) entre décembre 2009 et juillet 2011 en raison d'un ACR et traités par hypothermie thérapeutique (33 - 34 °C pendant 24h), selon notre protocole standard de prise en charge. La concentration plasmatique de PCT est mesurée à 24-72h après ACR, la valeur maximale (PCTmax) étant incluse dans l'analyse. La durée de l'arrêt circulatoire et le score de SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment) sont utilisés pour quantifier la sévérité de la MPR. Le pronostic est composé de la mortalité hospitalière, ainsi que la mortalité et la récupération neurologique à trois mois, mesurée avec le score de « Cerebral Performance Categories » (CPC), dichotomisé en bonne récupération (CPC 1 = pas de handicap ; CPC 2 = handicap modéré) et mauvaise récupération (CPC 3 = handicap sévère ; CPC 4 = état végétatif ; CPC 5 = décès). Résultats: 68 patients consécutifs (âge médian 65 ans, durée médiane totale de l'arrêt circulatoire [time to ROSC] 20.5 min) ont été étudiés. La PCTmax corrélait avec la durée de l'arrêt circulatoire (p = 0.001) ainsi qu'avec les scores de SOFA à l'admission et aux jours 1 et 2 (p<0.001 pour les trois associations). Une association significative a été observée entre la PCTmax et la survie hospitalière (médiane 3.9 [écart interquartile (EI) 1.0 - 16.8] chez les non-survivants vs. 1.4 [EI 0.6 - 6.2] ng/ml chez les survivants, p=0.032) et à trois mois (médiane 3.8 ([EI 1.0 - 15.6] vs. 1.4 [EI 0.5 - 6.0] ng/ml, p=0.034). La PCTmax était aussi plus basse chez les patients avec bonne récupération neurologique à trois mois (p=0.064). En comparaison avec la NSEmax, la PCTmax avait une valeur prédictive supérieure pour la sévérité de la maladie de post-réanimation et inférieure pour le pronostic. Conclusions: La valeur plasmatique maximale de PCT corrèle avec la sévérité de la MPR et est associé à la mortalité et à l'état neurologique à trois mois après coma post-anoxique. Ces données suggèrent que la PCT peut être un marqueur utile dans la prise en charge des patients comateux après ACR et hypothermie thérapeutique. Des études à plus large échelle sont en cours pour confirmer ces résultats.
Resumo:
Auditory evoked potentials are informative of intact cortical functions of comatose patients. The integrity of auditory functions evaluated using mismatch negativity paradigms has been associated with their chances of survival. However, because auditory discrimination is assessed at various delays after coma onset, it is still unclear whether this impairment depends on the time of the recording. We hypothesized that impairment in auditory discrimination capabilities is indicative of coma progression, rather than of the comatose state itself and that rudimentary auditory discrimination remains intact during acute stages of coma. We studied 30 post-anoxic comatose patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest and five healthy, age-matched controls. Using a mismatch negativity paradigm, we performed two electroencephalography recordings with a standard 19-channel clinical montage: the first within 24 h after coma onset and under mild therapeutic hypothermia, and the second after 1 day and under normothermic conditions. We analysed electroencephalography responses based on a multivariate decoding algorithm that automatically quantifies neural discrimination at the single patient level. Results showed high average decoding accuracy in discriminating sounds both for control subjects and comatose patients. Importantly, accurate decoding was largely independent of patients' chance of survival. However, the progression of auditory discrimination between the first and second recordings was informative of a patient's chance of survival. A deterioration of auditory discrimination was observed in all non-survivors (equivalent to 100% positive predictive value for survivors). We show, for the first time, evidence of intact auditory processing even in comatose patients who do not survive and that progression of sound discrimination over time is informative of a patient's chance of survival. Tracking auditory discrimination in comatose patients could provide new insight to the chance of awakening in a quantitative and automatic fashion during early stages of coma.
Resumo:
BACKGROUND: Age and the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score on admission are considered important predictors of outcome after traumatic brain injury. We investigated the predictive value of the GCS in a large group of patients whose computerised multimodal bedside monitoring data had been collected over the previous 10 years. METHODS: Data from 358 subjects with head injury, collected between 1992 and 2001, were analysed retrospectively. Patients were grouped according to year of admission. Glasgow Outcome Scores (GOS) were determined at six months. Spearman's correlation coefficients between GCS and GOS scores were calculated for each year. RESULTS: On average 34 (SD: 7) patients were monitored every year. We found a significant correlation between the GCS and GOS for the first five years (overall 1992-1996: r = 0.41; p<0.00001; n = 183) and consistent lack of correlations from 1997 onwards (overall 1997-2001: r = 0.091; p = 0.226; n = 175). In contrast, correlations between age and GOS were in both time periods significant and similar (r = -0.24 v r = -0.24; p<0.002). CONCLUSIONS: The admission GCS lost its predictive value for outcome in this group of patients from 1997 onwards. The predictive value of the GCS should be carefully reconsidered when building prognostic models incorporating multimodality monitoring after head injury.