+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Spinal cases in the ED - apil

Spinal cases in the ED - apil

Date post: 19-Mar-2022
Category:
Upload: others
View: 2 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
40
Spinal cases in the ED Julia Harris Consultant Emergency Medicine Associate Dean Patient Safety
Transcript

Spinal cases in the ED

Julia Harris Consultant Emergency Medicine Associate Dean Patient Safety

Plan

• My medico-legal practice • Emergency care • Emergency Medical staff • Decision making in ED • Cases • trauma • back pain • neck pain • “odd neurology”??

• Role of EM in investigation

My ML practice 2016-2018Total reports 94 Spinal reports 34

CES 17

“Acute spinal syndrome” Spinal epidural abcess 5

non traumatic cord compression 2

epidural haematoma 3

intramedullary tumour 1

Traumatic fracture 6

Clinical breakdown

Female Male Features

CES 12 5 women mostly mid 30s, men mostly late 50/60s

“Acute Spinal Syndrome”

3 8 IVDU, warfarin, non-non-english speaking, diabetic, on steroids

Trauma 1 5

Themes in ML cases

• Clinical prevalence • Patient centred • Clinical understanding • Barriers to investigations

Clinical prevalence

• Acute spinal syndromes are not common • CES probably commonest so focus on this,

even when neurology doesn’t fit • In the early stages other diagnoses are more

common • thoracic pain/chest pain • fever and back pain

• Cognitive effort to understand the neurology • Penny drops when neurology irrefutable

Patient Centred themes

• Non-english language • Educational status - ?descriptive ability • Vulnerable/marginalised people • Lack of red flag advice • Delays in re-attendance - somehow made

to feel stupid/dismissed by medical staff

Clinician understanding

• “not incontinent/in retention/paralysed so not CES”

• Complex neurology “does not make sense” so not spinal. Patient not believed.

• Lack of adequate micturition history • Use of post-void bladder scan as a proxy for

“not CES” • Only considering CES and imaging lumbar

spine, despite symptoms higher

Barriers to investigations

• OOH access to MRI scans • Spinal teams “requiring an MRI scan

prior to referral” - perception and reality

• Delays to transfer for MRI or spinal review - ambulance response/priority

Emergency Care

Clinical Decision makers• Medical

• F1 - no independent discharge

• “SHO” - F2, core trainees, GP trainees

• Nursing

• ENP - work to protocols

• AHP

• Physiotherapy, OT

• Vulnerable patients support - e.g. frail elderly, drugs and alcohol

Senior Clinical Decision Makers

• Significant workforce gap

• Medical

• Middle grades - trainees and SAS/Clinical Fellow

• Consultants

• Nursing

• ANP/ACP

• Specialty teams

Other support for Junior Doctors in ED

• Specialty teams – on or off site, tertiary referral

• Vulnerable groups – MH/ children/ frail elderly/DV/drugs/

homeless • Hospital at night – smaller hospitals with no or limited

SCDM support within the ED team

Training• Selection

• not everyone wants to do EM??!@

• Induction

• Guidelines and SOP - local and national

• Shop floor supervision

• Educational supervision

• Formal teaching

• Educational curriculum dependent on training pathway

Standards of care• Basic clinical assessment review of vital signs and ambulance/carer/witness

information

• Supervision

• Range of clinical experience and competence

• appropriate referral to a specialty team is an acceptable outcome in some cases

• Referral decision

• referral “viva” vs policies for admission

• Safe discharge and safety netting

• advice sheets, discharge summaries, specialist/hot clinics

Risks and mitigation• “Gatekeeper” access to some investigations - CT, MRI, ECHO

• SCDM “sign off” for high risk investigations and clinical presentations (Senior review)

• ECGs, bedside USS

• chest pain, children under 3 years, headache, abdominal pain

• Notes and investigations review

• “Left before treatment”

High risk times• Handover patients

• End of shift

• Night shifts (weekends)

• fatigue increases error

• less supervision capacity

• End of rotation

• familiarity, breach of protocols

• Just before holidays

• tired, protocol breach

Junior doctors struggle with..• Neurology especially spinal cord

• Multiple injury

• “unexplained” symptoms

• recurrent attenders, chronic pain

• mental health

• rude/aggressive patients

• “difficult’ - drugs, domestic violence, police custody, emotionally unstable personality, homeless, language barrier

• young children

Clinical case 1

• 20 year old man • Motorcross accident • 20-30 mph, thrown • head face and hand

into metal pole • ℅ burning pain to

arms • no neurological signs • Trauma CT scan

Case 2

• 20 year old woman • 3 days after fell and his back of neck

whilst drunk • neck pain, tingling weak hands • on anticoagulant following DVT • neurology - slightly numb hands, weak

grip R>L • Plain x ray and CT scan normal

Case 3

• 28 year old homeless man • Previous IVDU • Severe neck pain “sleeping rough” • No recent trauma • normal temperature (paracetamol by

ambulance crew - in severe pain but “no opiates”!)

• swearing and non-complaint with examination

Case 3

• locally tender in neck • reduced range of

movement in neck • moving arms

“normally” • Bloods slightly high

WCC, no CRP • x ray cervical spine • discharged “home”

Spinal epidural abscess

• average 3-4 attendance too healthcare before diagnosis made

• Classic triad of spinal pain, fever and neurological deficit only 10-15% cases

• only 3/10,000 hospitalised patients • Other diagnoses much more common • Need an MRI for diagnosis

Case 4

• 35 year old woman • Unwell for some months - non specific • Steroids for asthma • diagnosis chronic fatigue • complaint right leg dragging 3/7 • examination - global right leg weakness • some back pain • no sphincter disturbance

Case 4

• Referred spinal team in view of back pain and neurology

• “not CES” so discharged to GP • detailed neurology - sensory changes to

umbilical area • Differential • spinal tumour • epidural bleed • multiple sclerosis

Spinal MS

Spinal tumour

Emergency Treatment in the ED

• Spinal protection - collar or not? • Skin protection • history, examination and investigations • multiple injuries - examination of the

unconscious/unstable patient • needle in a haystack! • CT vs MRI • High spinal injury and ventilation • Autonomic dysreflexia and ED

Why things go wrong

• unselected case mix

• inexperienced junior staff

• time-critical interventions

• insufficient SCDM capacity

• some pejorative decision making

How things go wrong• incomplete basic assessment - cutting corners, workload

related, inexperienced personal judgement, not wishing to perform “that PR exam”

• Pressure to discharge - unsafe clinical decisions made by someone who has not seen the patient, “knowledge” hierarchy

• Dismissing symptoms that cannot easily be explained

• Not listening to parents, carers, nursing staff

• Burnout - loss of empathy, not sleeping

SOPs to help• Cardiac arrest, stroke, major trauma, sepsis teams

• Senior review of high risk conditions

• CDU/Observation wards

• SOPs for specialty reviews (30-60 minutes) and in person

• Checklists - transfers, discharge esp vulnerable patients

• Safety netting policies and advice sheets

The role of EM in investigations

• Recognise the “acute spinal syndrome” • SCDM may have access to MRI • Radiology resistance - ?fear of junior

radiologist of the normal MRI scan OOH • Often refer for “permission” to MRI • Refer to spinal service • on or off site • scan before or after transfer?

Timescales in EM

• Time to be seen • Time for results • Time for specialty

response • Competing pressures -

new sicker patients arriving

• multiple demands for CT scan - priorities?

• ambulance requests - time critical transfers

Summary

• Serious spinal pathology in EM is rare • Early presentations are subtle • Symptoms may be more likely to be alternate

diagnosis • Access to MRI “protected”, esp OOH, weekends • Referral with a clear differential diagnosis is

acceptable • It all takes time and the prevalence means no

pathway exists for these conditions

Thank you


Recommended