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Approach to Coma
A TOPIC ALWAYS NEEDS TO BE
AROUSED
DEFINING COMA
"unarousable unresponsiveness"
• Defined coma as a state of unresponsiveness in
which the patient lies with his eyes closed and
cannot be aroused to respond appropriately to
stimuli even with vigorous Stimulation
• The patient may grimace in response to painful
stimuli and limbs may demonstrate stereotyped
withdrawal responses, but the patient does not
make localized responses or discrete defensive
movements
COMA IS PROLONGED UNCONSCIOUSNESS
Consciousness
• Perception -Awareness of self and
environment ( Sensory System)
• Reaction – Meaningful responsiveness (Motor
system)
• Wakefulness – (Sleep wave cycle)
Stages of (un)Consciousness
• The terms stupor, lethargy, and
obtundation refer to states between
alertness and coma
• An alteration in arousal represents an
acute, life threatening emergency,
requiring prompt intervention for
preservation of life and brain function
Coma Pathophysiology
• Coma implies dysfunction of:
– Ascending Reticular Activating System or
– Both hemi-cortices
• Anatomically, this means
– central brainstem structures (bilaterally) from
caudal medulla to rostral midbrain
– both hemispheres
Coma - Aetiology
Metabolic:-
– Ischemic hypoxic
– Hypoglycaemic
– Organ failure
– Electrolyte disturbance
– Toxic
Structural:-
– Supratentorial bilateral
– Unilateral large lesion
with transtentorial
herniation
– Infratentorial
ASSESSMENT OF COMA
Assessment of coma
• Coma is an acute, life threatening situation. Evaluation must be swift,
comprehensive, and undertaken while urgent steps are taken to
minimize further neurological damage
• Emergency management should include:
• Resuscitation with support of cardiovascular and
respiratory system
• Correction of immediate metabolic upset, notably
control of blood glucose and thiamine if indicated;
control of seizures and body temperature; any
specific treatments—for example, naloxone for
opiate overdose
• History—through friend, family or emergency medical personnel
• General physical examination
• Neurological assessment—to define the nature of coma
• where is the lesion responsible for coma?
• what is its nature?
• what is it doing?
• Neurological diagnosis is based on history,
thoughtful examination, and the appropriate
choice of investigations
• This is essential, as there is little point in
performing a cranial computed tomographic
(CT) scan in a patient in hypoglycaemic coma
where urgent correction of the metabolic
disorder is paramount and any delay—for
example, waiting for a scan—is unacceptable
• The approach to clinical evaluation is used to categorise coma into:
• Coma without focal signs or meningism. This is the
most common form of coma and results from
anoxic-ischaemic, metabolic, toxic, and drug
induced insults, infections, and post ictal states
• Coma without focal signs with meningism. This
results from subarachnoid haemorrhage,
meningitis, and meningoencephalitis
• Coma with focal signs. This results from
intracranial haemorrhage, infarction, tumour or
abscess
Keep in mind
• Multifocal structural pathology, such as venous sinus
thrombosis, bilateral subdural haematomas, vasculitis or
meningitis, can present with coma without focal signs or
meningism and so mimic toxic or metabolic pathologies
• Conversely, any toxic/metabolic cause for coma may be
associated with focal findings—for example, hypoglycaemic or
hepatic encephalopathy
• Also focal signs may be the consequence of pre-existing
structural disease; in the septicaemic patient with a previous
lacunar infarct, for example, the focal neurology may be
mistakenly accepted as signs of the current illness
EXAMINATION
Circulation
• Kocher-Cushing response -
– rise in BP->bradycardia due to rise in ICP ->
compression of floor of the iv ventricle fall in BP
and tachycardia usually terminal event due to
medullary failure
Breathing
• Forebrain
– Post hyperventilation
apnea
– Cheyne stoke respiration
• Hypothalamus midbrain
– Central neurogenic
hyperventilation
• Basis pontis
– Pseudobulbar paralysis
of voluntary center
• Lower pontine
tegmentum
– Apneustic breathing
– Cluster breathing
– Short cycle periodic
breathing
– Ataxic breathing
• Medulla
– Ataxic breathing
– Slow regular respiration
– Gasping
NEUROLOGIC EXAMINATION
Level of consciousness
• Arousability is assessed by noise (eg, shouting in
the ear) and somatosensory stimulation
• Pressing on the supraorbital nerve (medial aspect
of the supraorbital ridge) or the angle of the jaw, or
squeezing the trapezius, may have a higher yield
than the more commonly used sternal rub and
nailed pressure
• Important responses include vocalization, eye
opening, and limb movement
Cranial Nerve Exam
• Systematic assessment of brainstem function
via reflexes
• Cranial Nerve Exam
– Pupillary light response (CN 2-3)
– Oculocephalic/calorics (CN 3,4,6,8)
– Corneal reflex (CN 5,7)
– Gag reflex (CN 9,10)
Pupils: Key points
• Size dependent on sympathetic and parasympathetic
input
• Anatomically near the RAS
• Resistant to metabolic influences
• Small and reactive with metabolic causes
• Unilateral dilation indicates uncal herniation
Pupil
Atropine
Opiate
Organophosphorus
Pupil
• Diencephalic (metabolic) Small reactive
• Midbrain tectal Midsize,fixed
• Midbrain nuclear Irregular pear shaped
• 3rd nerve Fixed widely dilated
• Pontine Pinpoint reactive
• Opiate Pinpoint
• Organophosphorus Small
• Atropine Wide dilated
• Lesions above the thalamus and below the
pons preserve pupillary reactions
Eye movements: Exam
• Position at rest
– Straight ahead
– Dysconjugate
– Conjugate deviation
• Oculocephalic reflex
– Positive “Doll’s eyes”
– Negative “Doll’s eyes”
• Oculovestibular reflex
– Cold calorics
• Resting position
– Midline
• Deviation suggests
frontal/pontine damage
– Conjugate
• Dysconjugance suggests
CN abn.
– Moving
• Roving, dipping, bobbing
Eye movement
• Metabolic
– Roving eye movement,
– Oculocephalic,
– Vestibuloocular
• Supratentorial
– Contralateral conjugate palsy
• Thalamus
– Upper turn down
Eye movements in Coma
• Midbrain
– Ipsilateral 3rd
• Pontine
– Ipsilateral 6th
– Ipsilateral gaze palsy
– One and half syndrome
– Bilateral gaze palsy
– Ocular bobbing
– Mlf syndrome
Oculocephalic and caloric response
This reflex is usually suppressed (and
therefore not tested) in conscious
patients
If nystagmus occurs, the patient is
awake and not truly in coma; this can
be a useful confirmatory test for
psychogenic unresponsiveness
Corneal reflex
The reflex can be suppressed acutely contralateral to a large, acute
cerebral lesion, and also with intrinsic brainstem lesions. Loss of the
corneal reflex is also an index of the depth of metabolic or toxic coma;
bilaterally brisk corneal reflexes suggest the patient is only mildly
narcotized. Absent corneal reflexes 24 hours after cardiac arrest is
usually, but not invariably, an indication of poor prognosis (assuming
the patient has not been sedated). Corneal reflexes may also be
reduced or absent at baseline in elderly or diabetic patients
Motor examination
• Muscle tone, spontaneous and elicited movements
and reflexes
• Asymmetries of these often indicate a hemiplegia
of the non-moving side, implying a lesion affecting
the opposite cerebral hemisphere or upper
brainstem
• Purposeful movements include crossing the
midline, approaching the stimulus, pushing the
examiner's hand away or actively withdrawing from
the stimulus
• Decorticate posturing consists of upper-extremity
adduction and flexion at the elbows, wrists, and
fingers, together with lower-extremity extension,
which includes extension and adduction at the hip,
extension at the knee, and plantar flexion and
inversion at the ankle . This occurs with
dysfunction at the cerebral cortical level or below
and may reflect a "release" of other spinal
pathways
• Decerebrate posturing consists of upper-extremity
extension, adduction, and pronation together with
lower-extremity extension and traditionally implies
dysfunction below the red nucleus, allowing the
vestibulospinal tract to predominate
Motor response to pain.
(A) Left hemisphere lesion. The
two figures illustrate localisation of
pain with the left hand and flexion
(left hand figure) or extension (right
hand figure) on the right
(B) Subcortical: unilateral left sided
lesion exerting a variable contralateral
effect. The figures illustrate flexion to
pain with the left hand with either
extension (right hand figure) or flexion
with the right and hyperextension in
both lower limbs
(C) Midbrain upper pontine: a
bilateral upper and lower limb
extension response
(D) Lower pontine/medullary: a bilateral
extensor upper limb posture with either
flaccidity or minimal diminished flexor
response in lower limbs
ECG changes in coma
(SAH, ICH, INFARCT)
– Tall T, prolonged QT
– Q wave with st depression
– SVT, AF, AFL
– Sinus bradycardia,arrest, nodal rhythm
– A-V block or dissociation
– PVc's, VFL, VF
Case 1
• 24Yrs laborer presented to the hospital with H/O
fall down from height. Admitted the patient in
ER. On the time of admission in ER patient was
unconscious and agitated, GCS 3/15.
– BP= 120/70 mmHg
– PR=110 bpm
– RR= 20 mts
– Temp=37.4 ⁰C
– SPO²= 98%
CT done
Diagnosis
Sub Arachnoid Hemorrhage
Case 2
62 years old male admitted to ED of KAUH on 13
May, 2009. Confusion since today morning,
disorientation, lethargy, abdominal pain,
constipation.
Past medical history: DM ( on OHG agent),
CLD(LC, Hematemesis), HCV, HBV, Portal
hypertension, post splenectomy, esophagitis.
Family history: No family history of similar
condition.
Examination:
o General condition: Disorientation &
Confusion
o Skin: No jaundice, no skin rash
o CVS: S1 + S2 + 0
o CNS: Normal reflexes, flapping tremors
o Chest: Bilateral basal crepitation
o Abdomen: Distended, soft, lax,
hepatomegally, mild ascitits
Vital signs:
RR: 22 BP: 135/78
Pulse: 75 bpm Temp: 36.22Âş C
Lab:
Na: 144 mmol/L K: 4.1 mmol/L
Bilirubin: 7 umlo/L Cr: 100 umol/L
Glucose: 12.1 mmol/L CK: 2468 IU/L
Albumin: 22 g/L ALT: 69 U/L
AST: 110 U/L GGT: 92 U/L
Troponin-I 1.6 ug/l
MRI
Diagnosis
Hepatic encephalopathy
Case 3
• 64/F, no significant past medical history.
• Elective L/S BTL 0900. During the surgery, D5 at
125 cc/ hr.
• Pt in ICU. “Too sedated to go home.” Got IV
meperidine. No PO intake, IV D5 continued.
• 2:45 AM next day, pt. C/O headache, verbal order
for Tylenol #3.
• At 9:00 AM, nurse tells surgeon of a sodium of
127 mEq/L. No new orders, IV fluids were
continued. At 1:30 pm, pt. lethargic and pain
medications, pain meds held.
• At 3:30 pm, she had seizures and respiratory
failure. Neurology call given for seizures. The
patient intubated and ventilated. Repeat of
Serum sodium 122 mEq/L.
Diagnosis
Hyponatremia
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coma-141120124411-conversion-gate02.pdf

  • 1. Approach to Coma A TOPIC ALWAYS NEEDS TO BE AROUSED
  • 2. DEFINING COMA "unarousable unresponsiveness" • Defined coma as a state of unresponsiveness in which the patient lies with his eyes closed and cannot be aroused to respond appropriately to stimuli even with vigorous Stimulation • The patient may grimace in response to painful stimuli and limbs may demonstrate stereotyped withdrawal responses, but the patient does not make localized responses or discrete defensive movements
  • 3. COMA IS PROLONGED UNCONSCIOUSNESS
  • 4. Consciousness • Perception -Awareness of self and environment ( Sensory System) • Reaction – Meaningful responsiveness (Motor system) • Wakefulness – (Sleep wave cycle)
  • 5. Stages of (un)Consciousness • The terms stupor, lethargy, and obtundation refer to states between alertness and coma • An alteration in arousal represents an acute, life threatening emergency, requiring prompt intervention for preservation of life and brain function
  • 6. Coma Pathophysiology • Coma implies dysfunction of: – Ascending Reticular Activating System or – Both hemi-cortices • Anatomically, this means – central brainstem structures (bilaterally) from caudal medulla to rostral midbrain – both hemispheres
  • 7. Coma - Aetiology Metabolic:- – Ischemic hypoxic – Hypoglycaemic – Organ failure – Electrolyte disturbance – Toxic Structural:- – Supratentorial bilateral – Unilateral large lesion with transtentorial herniation – Infratentorial
  • 9. Assessment of coma • Coma is an acute, life threatening situation. Evaluation must be swift, comprehensive, and undertaken while urgent steps are taken to minimize further neurological damage • Emergency management should include: • Resuscitation with support of cardiovascular and respiratory system • Correction of immediate metabolic upset, notably control of blood glucose and thiamine if indicated; control of seizures and body temperature; any specific treatments—for example, naloxone for opiate overdose
  • 10. • History—through friend, family or emergency medical personnel • General physical examination • Neurological assessment—to define the nature of coma • where is the lesion responsible for coma? • what is its nature? • what is it doing?
  • 11. • Neurological diagnosis is based on history, thoughtful examination, and the appropriate choice of investigations • This is essential, as there is little point in performing a cranial computed tomographic (CT) scan in a patient in hypoglycaemic coma where urgent correction of the metabolic disorder is paramount and any delay—for example, waiting for a scan—is unacceptable
  • 12. • The approach to clinical evaluation is used to categorise coma into: • Coma without focal signs or meningism. This is the most common form of coma and results from anoxic-ischaemic, metabolic, toxic, and drug induced insults, infections, and post ictal states • Coma without focal signs with meningism. This results from subarachnoid haemorrhage, meningitis, and meningoencephalitis • Coma with focal signs. This results from intracranial haemorrhage, infarction, tumour or abscess
  • 13. Keep in mind • Multifocal structural pathology, such as venous sinus thrombosis, bilateral subdural haematomas, vasculitis or meningitis, can present with coma without focal signs or meningism and so mimic toxic or metabolic pathologies • Conversely, any toxic/metabolic cause for coma may be associated with focal findings—for example, hypoglycaemic or hepatic encephalopathy • Also focal signs may be the consequence of pre-existing structural disease; in the septicaemic patient with a previous lacunar infarct, for example, the focal neurology may be mistakenly accepted as signs of the current illness
  • 15. Circulation • Kocher-Cushing response - – rise in BP->bradycardia due to rise in ICP -> compression of floor of the iv ventricle fall in BP and tachycardia usually terminal event due to medullary failure
  • 16. Breathing • Forebrain – Post hyperventilation apnea – Cheyne stoke respiration • Hypothalamus midbrain – Central neurogenic hyperventilation • Basis pontis – Pseudobulbar paralysis of voluntary center • Lower pontine tegmentum – Apneustic breathing – Cluster breathing – Short cycle periodic breathing – Ataxic breathing • Medulla – Ataxic breathing – Slow regular respiration – Gasping
  • 18. Level of consciousness • Arousability is assessed by noise (eg, shouting in the ear) and somatosensory stimulation • Pressing on the supraorbital nerve (medial aspect of the supraorbital ridge) or the angle of the jaw, or squeezing the trapezius, may have a higher yield than the more commonly used sternal rub and nailed pressure • Important responses include vocalization, eye opening, and limb movement
  • 19.
  • 20. Cranial Nerve Exam • Systematic assessment of brainstem function via reflexes • Cranial Nerve Exam – Pupillary light response (CN 2-3) – Oculocephalic/calorics (CN 3,4,6,8) – Corneal reflex (CN 5,7) – Gag reflex (CN 9,10)
  • 21. Pupils: Key points • Size dependent on sympathetic and parasympathetic input • Anatomically near the RAS • Resistant to metabolic influences • Small and reactive with metabolic causes • Unilateral dilation indicates uncal herniation
  • 23. Pupil • Diencephalic (metabolic) Small reactive • Midbrain tectal Midsize,fixed • Midbrain nuclear Irregular pear shaped • 3rd nerve Fixed widely dilated • Pontine Pinpoint reactive • Opiate Pinpoint • Organophosphorus Small • Atropine Wide dilated
  • 24. • Lesions above the thalamus and below the pons preserve pupillary reactions
  • 25. Eye movements: Exam • Position at rest – Straight ahead – Dysconjugate – Conjugate deviation • Oculocephalic reflex – Positive “Doll’s eyes” – Negative “Doll’s eyes” • Oculovestibular reflex – Cold calorics • Resting position – Midline • Deviation suggests frontal/pontine damage – Conjugate • Dysconjugance suggests CN abn. – Moving • Roving, dipping, bobbing
  • 26. Eye movement • Metabolic – Roving eye movement, – Oculocephalic, – Vestibuloocular • Supratentorial – Contralateral conjugate palsy • Thalamus – Upper turn down
  • 27. Eye movements in Coma • Midbrain – Ipsilateral 3rd • Pontine – Ipsilateral 6th – Ipsilateral gaze palsy – One and half syndrome – Bilateral gaze palsy – Ocular bobbing – Mlf syndrome
  • 28. Oculocephalic and caloric response This reflex is usually suppressed (and therefore not tested) in conscious patients If nystagmus occurs, the patient is awake and not truly in coma; this can be a useful confirmatory test for psychogenic unresponsiveness
  • 29. Corneal reflex The reflex can be suppressed acutely contralateral to a large, acute cerebral lesion, and also with intrinsic brainstem lesions. Loss of the corneal reflex is also an index of the depth of metabolic or toxic coma; bilaterally brisk corneal reflexes suggest the patient is only mildly narcotized. Absent corneal reflexes 24 hours after cardiac arrest is usually, but not invariably, an indication of poor prognosis (assuming the patient has not been sedated). Corneal reflexes may also be reduced or absent at baseline in elderly or diabetic patients
  • 30. Motor examination • Muscle tone, spontaneous and elicited movements and reflexes • Asymmetries of these often indicate a hemiplegia of the non-moving side, implying a lesion affecting the opposite cerebral hemisphere or upper brainstem • Purposeful movements include crossing the midline, approaching the stimulus, pushing the examiner's hand away or actively withdrawing from the stimulus
  • 31. • Decorticate posturing consists of upper-extremity adduction and flexion at the elbows, wrists, and fingers, together with lower-extremity extension, which includes extension and adduction at the hip, extension at the knee, and plantar flexion and inversion at the ankle . This occurs with dysfunction at the cerebral cortical level or below and may reflect a "release" of other spinal pathways • Decerebrate posturing consists of upper-extremity extension, adduction, and pronation together with lower-extremity extension and traditionally implies dysfunction below the red nucleus, allowing the vestibulospinal tract to predominate
  • 32. Motor response to pain. (A) Left hemisphere lesion. The two figures illustrate localisation of pain with the left hand and flexion (left hand figure) or extension (right hand figure) on the right (B) Subcortical: unilateral left sided lesion exerting a variable contralateral effect. The figures illustrate flexion to pain with the left hand with either extension (right hand figure) or flexion with the right and hyperextension in both lower limbs (C) Midbrain upper pontine: a bilateral upper and lower limb extension response (D) Lower pontine/medullary: a bilateral extensor upper limb posture with either flaccidity or minimal diminished flexor response in lower limbs
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  • 36. ECG changes in coma (SAH, ICH, INFARCT) – Tall T, prolonged QT – Q wave with st depression – SVT, AF, AFL – Sinus bradycardia,arrest, nodal rhythm – A-V block or dissociation – PVc's, VFL, VF
  • 37.
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  • 39. Case 1 • 24Yrs laborer presented to the hospital with H/O fall down from height. Admitted the patient in ER. On the time of admission in ER patient was unconscious and agitated, GCS 3/15. – BP= 120/70 mmHg – PR=110 bpm – RR= 20 mts – Temp=37.4 ⁰C – SPO²= 98%
  • 42. Case 2 62 years old male admitted to ED of KAUH on 13 May, 2009. Confusion since today morning, disorientation, lethargy, abdominal pain, constipation. Past medical history: DM ( on OHG agent), CLD(LC, Hematemesis), HCV, HBV, Portal hypertension, post splenectomy, esophagitis. Family history: No family history of similar condition.
  • 43. Examination: o General condition: Disorientation & Confusion o Skin: No jaundice, no skin rash o CVS: S1 + S2 + 0 o CNS: Normal reflexes, flapping tremors o Chest: Bilateral basal crepitation o Abdomen: Distended, soft, lax, hepatomegally, mild ascitits
  • 44. Vital signs: RR: 22 BP: 135/78 Pulse: 75 bpm Temp: 36.22Âş C Lab: Na: 144 mmol/L K: 4.1 mmol/L Bilirubin: 7 umlo/L Cr: 100 umol/L Glucose: 12.1 mmol/L CK: 2468 IU/L Albumin: 22 g/L ALT: 69 U/L AST: 110 U/L GGT: 92 U/L Troponin-I 1.6 ug/l
  • 45. MRI
  • 47. Case 3 • 64/F, no significant past medical history. • Elective L/S BTL 0900. During the surgery, D5 at 125 cc/ hr. • Pt in ICU. “Too sedated to go home.” Got IV meperidine. No PO intake, IV D5 continued. • 2:45 AM next day, pt. C/O headache, verbal order for Tylenol #3. • At 9:00 AM, nurse tells surgeon of a sodium of 127 mEq/L. No new orders, IV fluids were continued. At 1:30 pm, pt. lethargic and pain medications, pain meds held.
  • 48. • At 3:30 pm, she had seizures and respiratory failure. Neurology call given for seizures. The patient intubated and ventilated. Repeat of Serum sodium 122 mEq/L.
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