Völk Stefanie, Koedel Uwe, Pfister Hans-Walter, Schwankhart Roland, Op den Winkel Mark, Mühlbauer Konstanze, Klein Matthias
Department of Neurology, Hospital of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU), Munich, Germany.
Emergency Department, Hospital of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU), Munich, Germany.
Eur Neurol. 2018;80(3-4):179-186. doi: 10.1159/000495363. Epub 2018 Dec 12.
The approach to unconscious patients in the emergency department (ED) is difficult, often depends on local resources and interests, and workup strategies often lack standardization. One reason for this is that data on causes, management, and outcome of patients who present to the ED with sudden onset unconsciousness of unknown cause is limited.
This study was performed to analyze the causes of acute impaired consciousness in patients in an interdisciplinary ED.
Here, we analyzed all patients who were admitted to the ED of a tertiary care hospital with the dominating symptom of "sudden onset unconsciousness" within 1 year (September 2014 until August 2015). Patients with a clear diagnosis at arrival that explained the altered state of consciousness or other dominating symptoms at the time of arrival were not included.
A total of 212 patients were analyzed. In 88% of the patients, a final diagnosis could be established in the ED. Most common causes for unconsciousness were cerebrovascular diseases (24%), infections (14%), epileptic seizures (12%), psychiatric diseases (8%), metabolic causes (7%), intoxications (7%), transient global amnesia (5%), and cardiovascular causes (4%). The diagnoses were predominantly established by physical examination in combination with computed tomography (23%) and by the results of laboratory testing (25%). In-hospital mortality was 11%, and 59% of all patients were discharged with a Glasgow Outcome Score of 2-4.
This analysis demonstrates a large variety of etiologies in patients with unknown unconsciousness of acute onset who are admitted to an ED. As neurological diagnoses are among the most common etiologies, neurological qualification is required in the ED, and availability of diagnostics such as cerebral imaging is indispensable and recommended as an early step in a standardized clinical approach.
急诊科(ED)对昏迷患者的处理颇具难度,通常取决于当地资源和关注点,且检查策略往往缺乏标准化。造成这种情况的一个原因是,因突发不明原因昏迷而就诊于急诊科的患者,关于其病因、管理和预后的数据有限。
本研究旨在分析一家跨学科急诊科中急性意识障碍患者的病因。
在此,我们分析了一家三级护理医院急诊科在1年(2014年9月至2015年8月)内收治的以“突发昏迷”为主要症状的所有患者。到达时已有明确诊断可解释意识改变状态或到达时其他主要症状的患者未纳入研究。
共分析了212例患者。88%的患者在急诊科可明确最终诊断。昏迷最常见的病因是脑血管疾病(24%)、感染(14%)、癫痫发作(12%)、精神疾病(8%)、代谢原因(7%)、中毒(7%)、短暂性全面性遗忘症(5%)和心血管原因(4%)。诊断主要通过体格检查结合计算机断层扫描(23%)以及实验室检查结果(25%)来确定。住院死亡率为11%,所有患者中有59%出院时格拉斯哥预后评分2 - 4分。
该分析表明,因急性不明原因昏迷而入住急诊科的患者病因多样。由于神经科诊断是最常见的病因之一,急诊科需要具备神经科资质,并且脑成像等诊断手段不可或缺,建议将其作为标准化临床方法的早期步骤。