Emergency Medicine

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Breathless Patient


64 General Medical Emergencies



  • commence heparinization with LMW heparin such as
    enoxaparin 1 mg/kg s.c. or unfractionated UF heparin 5000
    units i.v. as a bolus, followed by an infusion.
    (vi) Admit all patients who required active treatment to a monitored
    CCU bed.
    6 Bradycardia
    This may be sinus, junctional (nodal) or due to atrioventricular block.
    (i) Give a bolus of atropine 0.5–0.6 mg i.v.
    (ii) Repeat the atropine for sinus or junctional bradycardia if it
    persists, to a maximum of 3 mg i.v. total.
    (iii) Consider the insertion of a temporary transvenous pacemaker
    wire by an expert, if the bradycardia persists with symptomatic
    second- or third-degree (complete) AV block, or the patient is
    unstable, or
    (a) use an external (transcutaneous) pacemaker until X-ray
    guidance and expert help are available
    (b) small doses of a sedative such as midazolam 0.05 mg/kg and
    or morphine 0.05 mg/kg are needed as external pacing is
    uncomfortable.
    (iv) Avoid excessive atropine or using an isoprenaline infusion
    immediately following an acute myocardial infarction, as these
    may provoke VF.


BREATHLESS PATIENT


DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS


Consider the following, some of which were covered in the preceding section on
chest pain:
● Acute asthma
● Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP)
● Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
● Pneumothorax
● Pulmonary embolus (see p. 51)
● Pulmonary oedema
● Acute upper airway obstruction – see page 13
● Metabolic causes, such as acidosis in diabetic ketosis or salicylate poisoning
● Respiratory muscle weakness from myasthenia gravis or Guillain–Barré
syndrome
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