agk’s Library of Common Simple Emergencies
The patient is unresponsive and brought to the emergency department on a stretcher. There is usually a history of recent emotional upset – an unexpected death in the family, or breakup of a close relationship. The patient may be lying still on the stretcher or demonstrating bizarre posturing or even seizure-like activity. The patient’s general color and vital signs are normal, without any evidence of airway obstruction. Commonly, the patient will be fluttering his eyelids or will resist having his eyes opened. A striking finding is that the patient may hold his breath when the examiner breaks an ammonia capsule over the patient’s mouth and nose (real coma victims usually move the head or do nothing). A classic finding is that when the patient’s apparently flaccid arm is released over his face, it does not fall on the face, but drops off to the side. The patient may show remarkably little response to painful stimuli, but there should be no true focal neurologic findings and the remainder of the physical exam should be normal.
True hysterical coma is substantially an unconscious act that the patient cannot control. Antagonizing the patient often prolongs the condition, while ignoring him seems to take the spotlight off his peculiar behavior, allowing him to recover. Some psychomotor or complex partial seizures are difficult to diagnose with their dazed confusion or fuge-like activity, and might be labeled hysterical. If the diagnosis is not obviously hysteria, the patient might need an EEG during sleep and deserves a referral to a neurologist.
----------------------------------------------------- from Buttaravoli & Stair: COMMON SIMPLE EMERGENCIES © Longwood Information LLC 4822 Quebec St NW Washington DC 20016-3229 1.202.237.0971 fax 1.202.244.8393 electra@clark.net -----------------------------------------------------
agk’s Library of Common Simple Emergencies is hosted on sdf