POTD: Frostbite

Stepping outside and feeling the frosty air helped me pick the topic for today: Frost bite!

Frost bite is a cold injury when ice crystal formation intracellularly and extracellularly cause cell injury and death leading to tissue injury. 

Pathophysiology: 

At first the cold causes cell death with ice crystal formation. Then once thawing begins, there is a lot of inflammation, vasoconstriction of vessels, thrombus formation and emboli in small vessels. This causes more ischemia, cell death and leads to necrosis. 

There are different ways to classify frostbite with Cauchy et. al’s used the most. This grading is done after rewarming because it can be hard to tell the extent of injury beforehand. 

Upper and lower extremities are most commonly affected but frostbite can also occur on other exposed skin such as the nose or ears. 

 

Before arrival to the ED, do not start rewarming!

Refreezing of thawing tissue worsens the damage being done. 

First Steps when someone arrives to the ED with frostbite:

Remove wet clothes

First step is to assess for hypothermia and treat moderate to severe hypothermia first. 

Next will be to warm the affected area: 

Keep in mind this can be very painful!

Rewarm the area with water that is around 37-39 degrees celsius. Ideally the water should be circulating like in a whirlpool. 

I don’t think we have this available in the ED but you can consider if it’s a hand having your patient by the sink and keeping the water running.

Patient should be directed to slowly move the extremity

This treatment should continue until tissue is red, purple or soft (about 15-30 minutes)

Provide TDAP

Treatment:
* Of note, while Iloprost has been approved in the US it is not available for use. Further research also needs to be done to determine if it is beneficial over just using thrombolytics

  • If Grade 1 frostbite, Frozen > 24 hrs, Thawed > 72 hrs, freeze-thaw-refreeze

    • wound management is what can be offered

  • If the frost bite is grade 3 or 4 

    • If thawed < 24hrs, 

      • thrombolytics can be considered after reviewing contraindications

    • If thawed > 24 hrs, 

      • Cannot give thrombolytics

    • If thrombolytics can be given do that first, then for these grades you can give Iloprost IV infusion for 8 days

  • If Grade 2 or 3

    • Can offer patient 8 day hospital stay for Iloprost infusion

TLDR:

  • Do not rewarm if there's a chance of the injury refreezing

  • Treat moderate and severe hypothermia first

  • Able to grade the severity of injury after rewarming

  • Thrombolytics can be offered for grade 3 or 4 if thawed < 24hrs

  • Iloprost can be offered after thrombolytics, if grade 3 or 4, or even if grade 2 or 3.

  • Wound care management for everyone

  • TDAP

Iloprost is associated with lower amputation rates but further research still needs to be done. 



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POTD: Sedation meds for agitated patients

POV you’re on south and a patient in chairs wakes up and starts running around the doc box yelling and throwing their apple sauce everywhere. Security and psychiatry are no where to be found and you already attempted to verbally deescalate.

ED sedation is goal-directed, not one-size-fits-all. Medication choice should be based on the clinical goal (calm vs dissociate vs procedural), patient physiology, and airway risk. Rapid control of severe agitation is critical for the safety of the patient, staff, and surrounding patients.

Ketamine

Indications: Severe agitation, excited delirium, trauma, need to preserve airway reflexes

IV: 0.5–1 mg/kg (procedural: 1–2 mg/kg)
IM: 3–5 mg/kg
Onset: IV 1–2 min | IM 3–5 min
Pearls: Dissociation + analgesia
Watch for: Hypersalivation, vomiting, emergence reactions
Tip: Position upright when feasible to reduce aspiration risk

Midazolam

Indications: Anxiolysis, mild–moderate agitation, alcohol withdrawal
IV: 1–2 mg q2–5 min (usual max 5 mg)
IM: 5 mg
IN: 0.2 mg/kg (max 10 mg)
Onset: IV 2–3 min | IM 10–15 min | IN 5–10 min
Watch for: Respiratory depression especially with opioids or alcohol, avoid in elderly patients

Haloperidol

Indications: Psychosis-related agitation
IV/IM: 2.5–5 mg (may repeat; typical max 10 mg)
Onset: IV 5–10 min | IM 20–30 min
Pearls: Minimal respiratory depression
Watch for: QT prolongation, dystonia 

Droperidol

Indications: Acute agitation
IV/IM: 2.5–5 mg
Onset: IV 5 min | IM 5–10 min
Pearls: Rapid, reliable calming
Watch for: QT prolongation (risk low at ED doses)

Olanzapine

Indications: Agitation related to psychosis, bipolar disorder, delirium
IM: 5–10 mg (max 20 mg/day)
PO/ODT: 5–10 mg
Onset: IM 15–30 min | PO/ODT 30–60 min
Pearls: Effective calming with low EPS risk

Dexmedetomidine

Indications: Cooperative sedation, ICU-bound agitation
IV infusion: 0.2–0.7 mcg/kg/hr
Onset: 10–20 min
Pearls: Preserves respiratory drive
Watch for: Bradycardia, hypotension

Propofol

Indications: Procedural sedation (full monitoring and airway readiness required)
IV: 0.5–1 mg/kg bolus, then 10–20 mg PRN
Onset: 30–60 seconds
Pearls: Rapid on/off
Watch for: Hypotension, apnea

The classic haloperidol 5 mg + lorazepam 2 mg works- however, evidence suggests faster alternatives exist with similar or better safety profile including:

  • Droperidol 5 mg + midazolam 5 mg IM, or 

  • Ketamine when safety concerns are immediate

https://www.acepnow.com/article/which-sedatives-are-best-for-managing-severe-agitation-in-the-emergency-department/?singlepage=1

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34353650/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551685/

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VOTW: Fake aneurysm, Real Problems

83 y/o male with PMHx of HLD, former smoker, CAD s/p recent LHC complicated by dissection, pericardial effusion, respiratory failure requiring intubation, and Impella placement in right groin 2 months ago presents to the ED with worsening swelling in the right groin over the past several weeks that was pulsatile on physical exam.

Clip 1 shows a transverse view of the femoral artery and the large approximately 6cm x 4cm x 5cm pseudoaneurysm sac with "echo-smoke" which is turbulent blood flow from the femoral artery causing a "flame-like" or "swirling" pattern on ultrasound.

 

Clip 2 shows components of clotted blood and unclotted blood in the pseudoaneurysm.

 

Clip 3 shows a longitudinal view of the femoral artery with the neck connecting it to the pseudoaneurysm.

 

Clip 4 shows color doppler over the neck of the pseudoaneurysm and the "to-and-fro" or "yin-yang" flow pattern.

Vascular surgery performed an ultrasound guided thrombin injection of the right groin pseudoaneurysm and the next day patient was taken to the OR for hematoma evacuation and repair of the right femoral artery pseudoaneurysm.

POCUS pearls for pseudoaneursyms:

  • Pulsatile mass with "yin-yang" or "to-and-fro" flow pattern in the neck = pseudoaneurysm

  • Large sac (>2 cm), narrow neck; first line treatment is thrombin injection

  • Rapid expansion, infection, hypotension, or wide neck; may require emergent vascular surgery

  • Avoid compressing a large pulsatile mass without plan due to rupture risk

References

  1. Toursarkissian B. Pseudoaneurysm from iatrogenic femoral artery injury. J Am Coll Surg.

  2. Webber GW. Pseudoaneurysm: diagnosis and management. Clin Radiol.

  3. Schaub F. Thrombin injection for postcatheterization pseudoaneurysm. J Am Coll Cardiol.

  4. Mahler B. POCUS for vascular complications. Ann Emerg Med.


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