Sifting through the hoards of mucous and foreign objects in the nostrils of your city’s youth, you are ready for your mid-shift feeding in the peds ED. However, before stepping away to your trough, an EMS notification comes in for a hypoxic 10 week old child. You vomit and swallow, satisfying your hunger and head to the resuscitation room to prepare.
In comes a terrorized EMS team holding an agitated, grunting baby that is essentially blue, with an O2 saturation of 63% and a harsh systolic murmur.
What cyanotic congenital heart defect (CCHD) does our young agitator have? Tetralogy of Fallot (hypercyanotic episode or “tet spell”). – Most common CCHD. – Harsh systolic murmur. – Only severe cases are ductus arteriosus-dependent (therefore, they can live to an older age). – R->L shunt through large VSD causes cyanosis; the size depends on degree of pulmonary stenosis. – Agitation increases peripheral vascular resistance (PVR) which increases R to L shunting and hypoxia-> hypoxia causes RVOT spasm and increases obstruction -> increase in R to L shunting.
After planning your career change to a hotel lobby pianist, what is your management? In sequence of escalation: ~ Neonates may need prostaglandins if they are dependent on their ductus arteriosus.
References (1) Tintinalli, Judith E., Gabor D. Kelen, and J. Stephan. Stapczynski. Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide. New York: McGraw-Hill, Medical Pub. Division, 2004. Print. (2) “Tetralogy of Fallor.” UpToDate. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Jan. 2016. (3) EM:RAP, Mizuho Files. April 2015.
Itamar
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1 Comment
Kylie Birnbaum · January 20, 2016 at 2:08 am
“You vomit and swallow, satisfying your hunger ”
I vomited a little just reading that (but I’m still hungry).
Well-played Goldstein, well-played.