The Zombies are coming!! Just kidding… well, kind of – they may already be here… Â Dr. Sam Wood is a brilliant EM/IM/CC trained physician who came all the down to Baltimore from Maine Medical Center to try to break down the expansive differential for the unresponsive ICU patient. Â During her talk, Dr. Wood makes a pretty solid case that a number of patients who experience prolonged delirium in the ICU are the direct results of the medications and sedative agents we are using on a daily basis. Â If you want to learn more about how to approach these diagnostic dilemmas, as well as how to NOT turn your patient into a zombie, you have to listen to this lecture.
Wood – Encephalopathy & the Unresponsive ICU Patient.mp3
Pearls
- Stop withholding glucose prior to thiamine administration in the altered patient. There is minimal evidence that giving glucose before thiamine will precipitate a Wernicke’s encephalopathy.
- Sedation with benzodiazepines is highly associated with ICU delirium for DAYS after cessation of treatment. Midazolam and diazepam infusions are the frequent causes of prolonged delirium.
- Consider an EEG in the comatose patient who is not waking up. Literature estimates that approximately 8-10% are actually having non-convulsive status epilepticus!
- Bonus Pearl: Zombies exist –Even in the PubMed literature!!
Suggested Reading
- Weiss N, Regard L, Vidal C, et al. Causes of coma and their evolution in the medical intensive care unit. J Neurol. 2012 Jul; 259(7):1474-7.
- Schabelman E, Kuo D. Glucose before thiamine for Wernicke encephalopathy: a literature review. J Emerg Med. 2012 Apr;42(4):488-94.