The Neuropsychiatric Mental Status and Neurological Examinations following Traumatic Brain Injury

2007 ◽  
pp. 157-206
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jane Rhyu ◽  
Jeffrey Wei ◽  
Christine Hema Darwin

Abstract Background: Parathyroid storm, also known as parathyroid crisis, is a rare and under-recognized endocrine emergency due to severe hypercalcemia in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. It is characterized by significantly elevated parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels even up to 20 times above the normal limit along with calcium levels >15 mg/dl, leading to multiorgan dysfunction, notably altered mental status and acute kidney injury. Risk of mortality is high without urgent parathyroidectomy. We describe a case of a patient with acute traumatic brain injury and parathyroid storm with PTH >1700 pg/ml (11-51) and Ca 15.4 mg/dl (8.6-10.4) in whom resection of a parathyroid adenoma reversed the comatose state. Clinical Case: Our patient is a 68 year-old male with no significant past medical history who sustained a fall off a 12-foot ladder complicated by right intracranial bleed s/p hemicraniectomy and multiple fractures, including left clavicle fracture with possible subclavian artery injury, left rib fractures, and right hip fracture s/p ORIF. The patient had a brief, partial improvement of mental status, followed by comatose state in the setting of rapidly rising calcium levels and acute kidney injury. In the setting of blood transfusions, the patient had an initial Ca of 8.8 mg/dl (8.6-10.4) on admission. The calcium levels rose over a week to 15.4 mg/dl with albumin of 2.4 g/dl (3.9-5.0), PTH levels from 953 pg/ml to >1700 pg/ml (11-51) after tracheostomy, and creatinine from 0.69 mg/dl to peak of 2.0 mg/dl (0.60-1.30). In spite of IV hydration, calcitonin, cinacalcet up to 90mg twice daily, pamidronate 60mg IV, and several sessions of hemodialysis, the patient’s calcium did not normalize, and the patient remained comatose. Other labs showed phosphorus nadir of 1.4 mg/dl (2.3-4.4), 25-OH VitD 13 ng/ml (20-50), 1,25-OH VitD 9.8 pg/ml (19.9-79.3), VitA 0.6 mg/L (0.3-0.9), PTHrP <2.0 pmol/L (0.0-2.3), normal SPEP/UPEP, and peak CK of 569 U/L (63-474). Sestamibi scan showed intense tracer uptake within a nodule near the suprasternal notch, and parathyroid 4D-CT showed a left 17mm pretracheal lesion with cystic degeneration along the superior margin of the manubrium. The patient subsequently underwent parathyroidectomy of an ectopic cystic mass with normalization of calcium and PTH levels. Pathology revealed a 0.8 gram, 1.5 x 1.0 x 0.3 cm enlarged, hypercellular parathyroid. The patient woke up from his comatose state immediately after surgery with progressive improvement in mental status back to baseline, other than left-sided weakness. Conclusion: Our case highlights the importance of surgical management as an effective cure for parathyroid crisis and underscores the associated critical and significant rise in calcium and PTH levels, which was resistant to medical treatment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. e192-e196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivek Dubey ◽  
Eric Nau ◽  
Marc Sycip

Circulation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 140 (Suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce J Barnhart ◽  
Daniel W Spaite ◽  
Eric Helfenbein ◽  
Dawn Jorgenson ◽  
Saeed Babaeizadeh ◽  
...  

Background: The EMS traumatic brain injury (TBI) guidelines encourage limiting prehospital intubation (ETI) to patients with profoundly depressed level of consciousness (LOC) and who cannot protect their airway or adequately ventilate without ETI. Thus, EMS providers may manage many TBI patients without intubating even when they have significant alterations in LOC. Monitoring End-Tidal CO2 by placing sensors in the nares (NC-CO2) of non-intubated patients may give providers valuable information about ventilatory status and trends. Study Objective: To evaluate the association between LOC and NC-CO2 in non-intubated TBI patients. Methods: Non-intubated cases from 6 EMS agencies reporting continuous monitor data (Philips MRx™) in the EPIC Study (NIH 1R01NS071049) were evaluated (4/13-3/17). Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) was available from the EMS record in call cases. Comparisons in patient-level mean, median, lowest and highest NC-CO2 levels were made across GCS categories using clinically meaningful thresholds: <15, <12, <9, and 3. Statistics: Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Results: Included were 106 cases [median age: 47 (range: 9-91), 66% male]. The Table shows the NC-CO2 patterns and comparisons across the GCS categories. In no case was there a significant difference in NC-CO2 between the better vs. worse mental status cohort. Conclusion: We believe this is the first evaluation of the association between NC-CO2 and mental status in TBI. Patients that had significant (and even profound) decreases in LOC, but whom paramedics chose not to intubate, had remarkably similar NC-CO2 patterns compared to those with normal or near-normal mental status. This may support the overall approach of limiting ETI to those with airway/ventilatory compromise or impending hypoxia as there was no evidence of increasing NC-CO2, indicative of hypercapnia, in the non-intubated patients even when they had very depressed LOC.


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