Sunday, December 12, 2010

Blood pressure decrease: Excerpt from Alarming Signs and Symptoms: Lippincott Manual of Nursing Practice Series

Low blood pressure or hypotension refers to inadequate intravascular pressure to maintain the oxygen requirements of the body’s tissues. Although commonly linked to shock, this sign may also result from a cardiovascular, respiratory, neurologic, or metabolic disorder. Hypoperfusion states especially affect the kidneys, brain, and heart, and may lead to renal failure, change in the patient’s level of consciousness (LOC), or myocardial ischemia. Low blood pressure may be drug-induced or may accompany diagnostic tests — most commonly those using contrast media.

Hypotension may be due to stress or change of position — specifically, rising abruptly from a supine or sitting position to a standing position (orthostatic hypotension).

Normal blood pressure varies considerably; what qualifies as low blood pressure for one person may be normal for another. Consequently, every blood pressure reading must be compared against the patient’s baseline and clinical status. Typically, a reading below 90/60 mm Hg, or a drop of 30 mm Hg from the baseline, is considered low blood pressure.

Low blood pressure can reflect an expanded intravascular space (as in severe infections, allergic reactions, or adrenal insufficiency), reduced intravascular volume (as in dehydration and hemorrhage), or decreased cardiac output (as in impaired cardiac muscle contractility). Because the body’s pressure-regulating mechanisms are complex and interrelated, a combination of these factors usually contributes to low blood pressure.

Act Now: If the patient’s systolic pressure is less than 80 mm Hg, or 30 mm Hg below his baseline, suspect shock immediately. Quickly evaluate the patient for a decreased LOC. Check his apical pulse for tachycardia and respirations for tachypnea. Also, inspect him for cool, clammy skin. Elevate the patient’s legs above the level of his heart, or place him in Trendelenburg’s position if the bed can be adjusted. Then start an I.V. line using a large-bore needle to replace fluids and blood or to administer drugs. Prepare to administer oxygen with mechanical ventilation, if necessary. Monitor the patient’s intake and output and insert an indwelling urinary catheter to accurately measure urine output. The patient may also need a central venous line or a pulmonary artery catheter to facilitate monitoring of fluid status. Prepare the patient for cardiac monitoring to evaluate cardiac rhythm. Be ready to insert a nasogastric tube to prevent aspiration in the comatose patient. Throughout emergency interventions, keep the patient’s spinal column immobile until spinal cord trauma is ruled out.
History

Obtain the patient’s history from the patient or his family, paying particular attention to associated symptoms, such as weakness, fatigue, dizziness, fainting, blurred vision, nausea or vomiting, blood in stool, unsteady gait, palpitations, chest or abdominal pain, difficulty breathing, or generalized pain. Determine if symptoms appear when the patient changes positions suddenly.
Physical examination

Obtain blood pressure measurements with the patient lying down, sitting, and then standing, and compare readings. A drop in systolic or diastolic pressure of 10 mm Hg or more and an increase in heart rate of more than 15 beats/minute between position changes suggest orthostatic hypotension. (See Ensuring accurate blood pressure measurement.)

Obtain the patient’s other vital signs. Inspect the skin for pallor, sweating, and clamminess. Palpate peripheral pulses. Note paradoxical pulse — an accentuated fall in systolic pressure during inspiration — which suggests pericardial tamponade. Then auscultate for abnormal heart sounds (gallops, murmurs), rate (bradycardia, tachycardia), or rhythm. Auscultate the lungs for abnormal breath sounds (diminished sounds, crackles, wheezing), rate (bradypnea, tachypnea), or rhythm (agonal or Cheyne-Stokes respirations). Look for signs of hemorrhage, including visible bleeding and palpable masses, bruising, tenderness, or a positive stool occult blood test. Assess the patient for abdominal rigidity and rebound tenderness; auscultate for abnormal bowel sounds. Also, carefully asses

Pediatric pointers

Normal blood pressure in children is lower than that of adults. (See Normal pediatric blood pressure.)
Because accidents occur frequently in children, suspect trauma or shock first as a possible cause of low blood pressure. Remember that even though low blood pressure typically doesn’t accompany head injury in adults (because intracranial hemorrhage is insufficient to cause hypovolemia), it does accompany head injury in infants and young children; their expandable cranial vaults allow significant blood loss into the cranial space, resulting in hypovolemia.
Another common cause of low blood pressure in children is dehydration, which results from failure to thrive or from persistent diarrhea and vomiting for as little as 24 hours.

Geriatric pointers

In elderly patients, low blood pressure commonly results from the use of multiple drugs that potentiate this adverse effect. Orthostatic hypotension due to autonomic dysfunction is another common cause of low blood pressure.

Medical causes

Acute adrenal insufficiency

Orthostatic hypotension is characteristic with acute adrenal insufficiency, accompanied by fatigue, weakness, nausea, vomiting, abdominal discomfort, weight loss, fever, and tachycardia. The patient may also have hyperpigmentation of fingers, nails, nipples, scars, and body folds; pale, cool, clammy skin; restlessness; decreased urine output; tachypnea; and coma.

Alcohol toxicity

Low blood pressure occurs infrequently; more commonly, alcohol toxicity produces distinct alcohol breath odor, tachycardia, bradypnea, hypothermia, decreased LOC, seizures, staggering gait, nausea, vomiting, diuresis, and slow, stertorous breathing.

Anaphylactic shock

Following exposure to an allergen, such as penicillin or insect venom, a dramatic fall in blood pressure and narrowed pulse pressure signal anaphylactic shock, a severe allergic reaction. Initially, it causes anxiety, restlessness, a feeling of doom, intense itching (especially of the hands and feet), and pounding headache. Later, it may also produce weakness, sweating, nasal congestion, coughing, difficulty breathing, nausea, abdominal cramps, involuntary defecation, seizures, flushing, change or loss of voice due to laryngeal edema, urinary incontinence, and tachycardia.

Anthrax (inhalation)

Anthrax is an acute infectious disease that’s caused by the gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Although the disease most commonly occurs in wild and domestic grazing animals, such as cattle, sheep, and goats, the spores can live in the soil for many years. The disease can occur in humans exposed to infected animals, tissue from infected animals, or biological warfare. Most natural cases occur in agricultural regions worldwide. Anthrax may occur in cutaneous, inhalation, or GI form. Inhalation anthrax is caused by inhaling aerosolized spores. Initial signs and symptoms are flulike and include fever, chills, weakness, cough, and chest pain. The disease generally occurs in two stages with a period of recovery after the initial signs and symptoms. The second stage develops abruptly with rapid deterioration marked by fever, dyspnea, stridor, and hypotension generally leading to death within 24 hours. Radiologic findings include mediastinitis and symmetric mediastinal widening.

Cardiac arrhythmias

With an arrhythmia, blood pressure may fluctuate between normal and low readings. Dizziness, chest pain, difficulty breathing, light-headedness, weakness, fatigue, and palpitations may also occur. Auscultation typically reveals an irregular rhythm and a pulse rate greater than 100 beats/minute or less than 60 beats/minute.

Cardiac contusion

With cardiac contusion, low blood pressure occurs along with tachycardia and, at times, anginal pain and dyspnea.

Cardiac tamponade

An accentuated fall in systolic pressure (more than 10 mm Hg) during inspiration, known as paradoxical pulse, is characteristic in patients with cardiac tamponade. This disorder also causes restlessness, cyanosis, tachycardia, jugular vein distention, muffled heart sounds, dyspnea, and Kussmaul’s sign (increased venous distention with inspiration).

Cardiogenic shock

A fall in systolic pressure to less than 80 mm Hg or to 30 mm Hg less than the patient’s baseline, because of decreased cardiac contractility, is characteristic in patients with cardiogenic shock. Accompanying low blood pressure are tachycardia, narrowed pulse pressure, diminished Korotkoff sounds, peripheral cyanosis, and pale, cool, clammy skin. Cardiogenic shock also causes restlessness and anxiety, which may progress to disorientation and confusion. Associated signs and symptoms include angina, dyspnea, jugular vein distention, oliguria, ventricular gallop, tachypnea, and weak, rapid pulse.

Cholera

Cholera is an acute infection caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae that may be mild with uncomplicated diarrhea or severe and life threatening. Cholera is spread by ingestion of contaminated water or food, especially shellfish. Signs include abrupt watery diarrhea and vomiting. Severe water and electrolyte loss leads to thirst, weakness, muscle cramps, decreased skin turgor, oliguria, tachycardia, and hypotension. Without treatment, death can occur within hours.

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA)

Hypovolemia triggered by osmotic diuresis in hyperglycemia is responsible for the low blood pressure associated with DKA, which is usually present in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus. It also commonly produces polydipsia, polyuria, polyphagia, dehydration, weight loss, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, fruity breath odor, Kussmaul’s respirations, tachycardia, seizures, confusion, and stupor that may progress to coma.

Heart failure

With heart failure, blood pressure may fluctuate between normal and low readings. However, a precipitous drop in blood pressure may signal cardiogenic shock. Other signs and symptoms of heart failure include exertional dyspnea, dyspnea of abrupt or gradual onset, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea or difficulty breathing in the supine position (orthopnea), fatigue, weight gain, pallor or cyanosis, sweating, and anxiety. Auscultation reveals ventricular gallop, tachycardia, bilateral crackles, and tachypnea. Dependent edema, jugular vein distention, increased capillary refill time, and hepatomegaly may also occur.

Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic nonketotic syndrome (HHNS)

HHNS, which is common in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus, decreases blood pressure — at times dramatically, if the patient loses significant fluid from diuresis due to severe hyperglycemia and hyperosmolarity. It also produces dry mouth, poor skin turgor, tachycardia, confusion progressing to coma and, occasionally, generalized tonic-clonic seizure.

Hypovolemic shock

A fall in systolic pressure to less than 80 mm Hg or 30 mm Hg less than the patient’s baseline, secondary to acute blood loss or dehydration, is characteristic in patients with hypovolemic shock. Accompanying it are diminished Korotkoff sounds, narrowed pulse pressure, and rapid, weak, and irregular pulse. Peripheral vasoconstriction causes cyanosis of the extremities and pale, cool, clammy skin. Other signs and symptoms include oliguria, confusion, disorientation, restlessness, and anxiety.

Hypoxemia

Initially, blood pressure may be normal or slightly elevated, but as hypoxemia becomes more pronounced, blood pressure drops. The patient may also display tachycardia, tachypnea, dyspnea, and confusion, and may progress from stupor to coma.

Myocardial infarction (MI)

With MI — a life-threatening disorder — blood pressure may be low or high. However, a precipitous drop in blood pressure may signal cardiogenic shock. Associated signs and symptoms include chest pain that may radiate to the jaw, shoulder, arm, back, or epigastrium; dyspnea; anxiety; nausea or vomiting; sweating; and cool, pale, or cyanotic skin. Auscultation may reveal an atrial gallop, a murmur and, occasionally, an irregular pulse.

Neurogenic shock

. The result of sympathetic denervation due to cervical injury or anesthesia, neurogenic shock produces low blood pressure and bradycardia. However, the patient’s skin remains warm and dry because of cutaneous vasodilation and sweat gland denervation. Depending on the cause of shock, there may also be motor weakness of the limbs or diaphragm.

Pulmonary embolism

Pulmonary embolism causes sudden, sharp chest pain and dyspnea accompanied by cough and, occasionally, low-grade fever. Low blood pressure occurs with narrowed pulse pressure and diminished Korotkoff sounds. Associated signs include tachycardia, tachypnea, paradoxical pulse, jugular vein distention, and hemoptysis.

Septic shock

Initially, septic shock produces fever and chills. Low blood pressure, tachycardia, and tachypnea may also develop early, but the patient’s skin remains warm. Later, low blood pressure becomes increasingly severe — less than 80 mm Hg, or 30 mm Hg less than the patient’s baseline — and is accompanied by narrowed pulse pressure. Other late signs and symptoms include pale skin, cyanotic extremities, apprehension, thirst, oliguria, and coma.

Vasovagal syncope

Vasovagal syncope is a transient attack of loss or near-loss of consciousness that’s characterized by low blood pressure, pallor, cold sweats, nausea, palpitations or slowed heart rate, and weakness following stressful, painful, or claustrophobic experiences.

Other causes

Diagnostic tests

These include the gastric acid stimulation test using histamine and X-ray studies using contrast media. The latter may trigger an allergic reaction, which causes low blood pressure.

Drugs

Calcium channel blockers, diuretics, vasodilators, alpha- and beta-adrenergic blockers, general anesthetics, opioid analgesics, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, anxiolytics (such as benzodiazepines), tranquilizers, and most I.V. antiarrhythmics can cause low blood pressure.

Nursing considerations

Check the patient’s vital signs frequently to determine if low blood pressure is constant or intermittent. If blood pressure is extremely low, an arterial catheter may be inserted to allow close monitoring of pressures. Alternatively, a Doppler flowmeter may be used.
Place the patient on bed rest. Keep the side rails of the bed up. If the patient is ambulatory, assist him as necessary. To avoid falls, don’t leave a dizzy patient unattended when he’s sitting or walking.
Prepare the patient for laboratory tests, which may include bedside glucose check, urinalysis, routine blood studies, an electrocardiogram, and chest, cervical, and abdominal X-rays.

Patient teaching

If the patient has orthostatic hypotension, instruct him to stand up slowly. Advise the patient with vasovagal syncope to avoid situations that trigger the episodes. Evaluate the patient’s need for a cane or walker. Explain all procedures and tests.
Read more at http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/b/blood/book-diseases-13a.htm?ktrack=kcplink

managing elevated blood pressure

managing elevated blood pressure

elevated blood pressure

elevated blood pressure

Blood pressure increase [Hypertension]

Elevated blood pressure — an intermittent or sustained increase in blood pressure exceeding 140/90 mm Hg — strikes more men than women and twice as many Blacks as Whites. By itself, this common sign is easily ignored by the patient; after all, he can't see or feel it. However, its causes can be life threatening.
GENDER CUE:Hypertension has been reported to be two to three times more common in women taking hormonal contraceptives than those not taking them. Women age 35 and older who smoke cigarettes should be strongly encouraged to stop; if they continue to smoke, they should be discouraged from using hormonal contraceptives.
Elevated blood pressure may develop suddenly or gradually. A sudden, severe rise in pressure (exceeding 180/110 mm Hg) may indicate life-threatening hypertensive crisis. However, even a less dramatic rise may be equally significant if it heralds a dissecting aortic aneurysm, increased intracranial pressure, myocardial infarction, eclampsia, or thyrotoxicosis.
Usually associated with essential hypertension, elevated blood pressure may also result from a renal or endocrine disorder; a treatment that affects fluid status, such as dialysis; or a drug's adverse effect. Ingestion of large amounts of certain foods, such as black licorice and cheddar cheese, may temporarily elevate blood pressure. (See Pathophysiology of elevated blood pressure.)
Sometimes, elevated blood pressure may simply reflect inaccurate blood pressure measurement. (See Ensuring accurate blood pressure measurement, page 83.) However, careful measurement alone doesn't ensure a clinically useful reading. To be useful, each blood pressure reading must be compared with the patient's baseline. Also, serial readings may be necessary to establish elevated blood pressure. 

History and physical examination

If you detect sharply elevated blood pressure, quickly rule out possible life-threatening causes. (See Managing elevated blood pressure.)

After ruling out life-threatening causes, complete a more leisurely history and physical examination. Determine if the patient has a history of cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, or renal disease. Ask about a family history of high blood pressure — a likely finding with essential hypertension, pheochromocytoma, or polycystic kidney disease. Then ask about its onset. Did high blood pressure appear abruptly? Ask the patient's age. The sudden onset of high blood pressure in middle-aged or elderly patients suggests renovascular stenosis. Although essential hypertension may begin in childhood, it typically isn't diagnosed until near age 35. Pheochromocytoma and primary aldosteronism usually occur between ages 40 and 60. If you suspect either, check for orthostatic hypotension. Take the patient's blood pressure with him lying down, sitting, and then standing. Normally, systolic pressure falls and diastolic pressure rises on standing. With orthostatic hypotension, both pressures fall.

Note headache, palpitations, blurred vision, and sweating. Ask about wine-colored urine and decreased urine output; these signs suggest glomerulonephritis, which can cause elevated blood pressure.

Obtain a drug history, including past and present prescriptions, herbal preparations, and over-the-counter drugs (especially decongestants). If the patient is already taking an antihypertensive, determine how well he complies with the regimen. Ask about his perception of elevated blood pressure. How serious does he believe it is? Does he expect drug therapy to help? Explore psychosocial or environmental factors that may impact blood pressure control.

Follow up the history with a thorough physical examination. Using a funduscope, check for intraocular hemorrhage, exudate, and papilledema, which characterize severe hypertension. Perform a thorough cardiovascular assessment. Check for carotid bruits and jugular vein distention. Assess skin color, temperature, and turgor. Palpate peripheral pulses. Auscultate for abnormal heart sounds (gallops, louder second sound, murmurs), rate (bradycardia, tachycardia), or rhythm. Then auscultate for abnormal breath sounds (crackles, wheezing), rate (bradypnea, tachypnea), or rhythm.

Palpate the abdomen for tenderness, masses, or liver enlargement. Auscultate for abdominal bruits. Renal artery stenosis produces bruits over the upper abdomen or in the costovertebral angles. Easily palpable, enlarged kidneys and a large, tender liver suggest polycystic kidney disease. Obtain a urine sample to check for microscopic hematuria.  



Medical causes

Anemia. Accompanying elevated systolic pressure in anemia are pulsations in the capillary beds, bounding pulse, tachycardia, systolic ejection murmur, pale mucous membranes and, in patients with sickle cell anemia, ventricular gallop and crackles.
Aortic aneurysm (dissecting). Initially, this life-threatening disorder causes a sudden rise in systolic pressure (which may be the precipitating event), but no change in diastolic pressure. However, this increase is brief. The body's ability to compensate fails, resulting in hypotension.
Other signs and symptoms vary, depending on the type of aortic aneurysm. An abdominal aneurysm may cause persistent abdominal and back pain, weakness, sweating, tachycardia, dyspnea, a pulsating abdominal mass, restlessness, confusion, and cool, clammy skin. A thoracic aneurysm may cause a ripping or tearing sensation in the chest, which may radiate to the neck, shoulders, lower back, or abdomen; pallor; syncope; blindness; loss of consciousness; sweating; dyspnea; tachycardia; cyanosis; leg weakness; murmur; and absent radial and femoral pulses.
Atherosclerosis. With atherosclerosis, systolic pressure rises while diastolic pressure commonly remains normal or slightly elevated. The patient may show no other signs, or he may have a weak pulse, flushed skin, tachycardia, angina, and claudication.
Cushing's syndrome. Twice as common in females as in males, Cushing's syndrome causes elevated blood pressure and widened pulse pressure as well as truncal obesity, moon face, and other cushingoid signs. It's usually caused by corticosteroid use.
Hypertension. Essential hypertension develops insidiously and is characterized by a gradual increase in blood pressure from decade to decade. Except for this high blood pressure, the patient may be asymptomatic or (rarely) may complain of suboccipital headache, light-headedness, tinnitus, and fatigue.
With malignant hypertension, diastolic pressure abruptly rises above 120 mm Hg, and systolic pressure may exceed 200 mm Hg. Typically, the patient has pulmonary edema marked by jugular vein distention, dyspnea, tachypnea, tachycardia, and coughing of pink, frothy sputum. Other characteristic signs and symptoms include severe headache, confusion, blurred vision, tinnitus, epistaxis, muscle twitching, chest pain, nausea, and vomiting.
Increased intracranial pressure (ICP). Increased ICP causes an increased respiratory rate initially, followed by increased systolic pressure and widened pulse pressure. Increased ICP affects the heart rate last, causing bradycardia (Cushing's reflex). Associated signs and symptoms include headache, projectile vomiting, a decreased level of consciousness, and fixed or dilated pupils.
Myocardial infarction (MI). MI is a life-threatening disorder that may cause high or low blood pressure. Common findings include crushing chest pain that may radiate to the jaw, shoulder, arm, or epigastrium. Other findings include dyspnea, anxiety, nausea, vomiting, weakness, diaphoresis, atrial gallop, and murmurs.
Pheochromocytoma. Paroxysmal or sustained elevated blood pressure characterizes pheochromocytoma and may be accompanied by orthostatic hypotension. Associated signs and symptoms include anxiety, diaphoresis, palpitations, tremors, pallor, nausea, weight loss, and headache.
Polycystic kidney disease. Elevated blood pressure is typically preceded by flank pain. Other signs and symptoms include enlarged kidneys; an enlarged, tender liver; and intermittent gross hematuria.
Preeclampsia and eclampsia. Potentially life-threatening to the mother and fetus, preeclampsia and eclampsia characteristically increase blood pressure. They're defined as a reading of 140/90 mm Hg or more in the first trimester, a reading of 130/80 mm Hg or more in the second or third trimester, an increase of 30 mm Hg above the patient's baseline systolic pressure, or an increase of 15 mm Hg above the patient's baseline diastolic pressure. Accompanying elevated blood pressure are generalized edema, sudden weight gain of 3 lb (1.4 kg) or more per week during the second or third trimester, severe frontal headache, blurred or double vision, decreased urine output, proteinuria, midabdominal pain, neuromuscular irritability, nausea, and possibly seizures (eclampsia).
Renovascular stenosis. Renovascular stenosis produces abruptly elevated systolic and diastolic pressures. Other characteristic signs and symptoms include bruits over the upper abdomen or in the costovertebral angles, hematuria, and acute flank pain.
Thyrotoxicosis. Accompanying the elevated systolic pressure associated with thyrotoxicosis, a potentially life-threatening disorder, are widened pulse pressure, tachycardia, bounding pulse, pulsations in the capillary nail beds, palpitations, weight loss, exophthalmos, an enlarged thyroid gland, weakness, diarrhea, a fever over 100° F (37.8° C), and warm, moist skin. The patient may appear nervous and emotionally unstable, displaying occasional outbursts or even psychotic behavior. Heat intolerance, exertional dyspnea and, in females, decreased or absent menses may also occur.

Other causes

Drugs. Central nervous system stimulants (such as amphetamines), sympathomimetics, corticosteroids, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, hormonal contraceptives, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, and over-the-counter cold remedies can increase blood pressure, as can cocaine abuse.
HERB ALERT:Ginseng and licorice may cause high blood pressure or an irregular heartbeat. St. John's wort can also raise blood pressure, especially when taken with substances that antagonize hypericin, such as amphetamines, cold and hay fever medications, nasal decongestants, pickled foods, beer, coffee, wine, and chocolate.
Treatments. Kidney dialysis and transplantation cause transient elevated blood pressure.

Special considerations

If routine screening detects elevated blood pressure, stress to the patient the need for follow-up diagnostic tests. Then prepare him for routine blood tests and urinalysis. Depending on the suspected cause of the increased blood pressure, radiographic studies, especially of the kidneys, may be necessary.
If the patient has essential hypertension, explain the importance of long-term control of elevated blood pressure and the purpose, dosage, schedule, route, and adverse effects of prescribed antihypertensives. Reassure him that there are other drugs he can take if the one he's taking isn't effective or causes intolerable adverse reactions. Instruct him not to discontinue medications without contacting the physician. Encourage him to report adverse reactions; the drug dosage or schedule may simply need adjustment.
Be aware that the patient may experience elevated blood pressure only when in the physician's office (known as white-coat hypertension). In such cases, 24-hour blood pressure monitoring is indicated to confirm elevated readings in other settings. In addition, other risk factors for coronary artery disease, such as smoking and elevated cholesterol levels, need to be addressed.

Pediatric pointers

Normally, blood pressure in children is lower than it is in adults, an essential point to recognize when assessing a patient for elevated blood pressure. (See Normal pediatric blood pressure, page 87.)
Elevated blood pressure in children may result from lead or mercury poisoning, essential hypertension, renovascular stenosis, chronic pyelonephritis, coarctation of the aorta, patent ductus arteriosus, glomerulonephritis, adrenogenital syndrome, or neuroblastoma. Treatment typically begins with drug therapy. Surgery may then follow in patients with patent ductus arteriosus, coarctation of the aorta, neuroblastoma, and some cases of renovascular stenosis. Diuretics and antibiotics are used to treat glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis; hormonal therapy, to treat adrenogenital syndrome.

Geriatric pointers

Atherosclerosis commonly produces isolated systolic hypertension in elderly patients. Treatment is warranted to prevent long-term complications.

Fatigue :- Fatigue is a general term for an abnormal condition

Fatigue is a general term for an abnormal condition in which a person feels a sensation of tiredness, weariness, exhaustion, weakness, or low energy. Fatigue is a symptom of a wide variety of mild to serious diseases, disorders and conditions. Fatigue can result from infection, inflammation, trauma, malignancy, chronic diseases, autoimmune diseases, mental illnesses and other abnormal processes.Fatigue can occur in any age group or population, but it is particularly common in the elderly and in people with chronic diseases. Depending on the cause, the sensation of fatigue can be short-term and disappear quickly, such as when it occurs due to exercise or a single night of insomnia. Fatigue can also can be chronic and ongoing over a longer period of time, such as when it is due to depression or heart failure.

Fatigue can be the result of a wide variety of other conditions, diseases or disorders. These include anemia, hypotension, COPD, diabetes, chronic fatigue syndrome and Addison's disease. Causes also include influenza, dehydration, jet lag, depression, malnutrition, bacterial diseases, hypothyroidism, myasthenia gravis, viral infections, chronic pain, fever and pregnancy.

There are many symptoms that can accompany fatigue, depending on the disease, disorder or condition that is at the root of it. These include fever, weight loss, loss of appetite and dizziness. Fatigue, especially chronic fatigue, can seriously impact the ability to function effectively in everyday life. Underlying diseases, disorders or conditions of fatigue can also cause complications. For more details about symptoms and complications, see symptoms of fatigue.

Diagnosing fatigue and its root cause begins with taking a thorough personal and family medical history, including symptoms, and completing a physical examination, including a neurological examination. This may also include a mental health exam.

Making a diagnosis also includes performing a variety of other tests to help to diagnose the underlying disease, condition or disorder causing the fatigue.

Depending on the suspected cause, tests can include blood tests. A complete blood count (CBC) can help to determine if anemia or an infectious process, such as bacterial infection is present. A chemistry panel is a blood test that can test for dehydration or electrolyte imbalance, which can cause fatigue.

A blood glucose can check for diabetes. An urinanalysis can also help to diagnose dehydration and a variety of urinary tract conditions, which can cause fatigue. Liver function tests can evaluate liver health and a TSH and other thyroid tests can help to determine if hypothyroidism is the cause of fatigue.

Other tests may also be performed depending on the suspected cause. These include imaging tests, such as X-ray, CT scan, nuclear scans and MRI.

A diagnosis of fatigue and its cause can easily be delayed or missed because fatigue may be mild or not last for long periods of time. For information on misdiagnosis, refer to misdiagnosis of fatigue.

Treatment of fatigue involves diagnosing and treating the underlying disease, disorder or condition that is causing it. Some conditions can be easily and successfully treated and cured, while others may require more intensive treatment and may not have an optimal prognosis.

Diarrhea – Chronic, No Blood or Weight Loss

Pediatric Signs and Symptoms

Chronic diarrhea (nonbloody, without weight loss) is defined as increased total daily stool output (greater than 10 g/kg/day), associated with increased stool water content; diarrhea is classified as chronic when it lasts longer than 2 weeks. Per liter, normal stool of infants and children contains approximately 20–50 mEq of sodium, 50–70 mEq of potassium, 20–50 mEq of chloride. Diarrhea may be osmotic or secretory. 

Differential Diagnosis

    * Osmotic: Presence of nonabsorbable solute, pH <5, volume <200 mL/day, normal electrolytes, stops with fasting
    * Secretory: Mostly due to toxins, pH >6, volume >200 mL/day, no response to fasting, stool Na >70 mEq/L, negative reducing substances
    * Toddler's diarrhea: Chronic nonspecific diarrhea, onset 3 months to 3 years of age, average 4–6 stools daily, due to excessive juice intake or low-fat diet
    * Excessive intake of nonabsorbable solutes (lactulose, sorbitol, magnesium hydroxide)
    * Congenital lactose deficiency: Very rare in infancy, but may occur in extremely premature infants; adult-onset type of hypolactasia may be seen in older children (over age 5), autosomal recessive, 15% white adults, 85% of black adults, 90% of Asian adults
    * Secondary lactase deficiency: Follows a viral gastroenteritis, most commonly rotavirus, may persist for months
    * Fructose intolerance
    * Sucrase-isomaltase deficiency: Autosomal recessive, found in 0.2% of North Americans, symptoms commence on starting sucrose or glucose polymer-containing foods
    * Glucose-galactose malabsorption: Rare, autosomal recessive disorder
          o Infections
            –Giardiasis (most common infectious cause of chronic diarrhea in toddlers)
            –Cryptosporidium
            –Microsporidium
          o Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
            –Abnormality of intestinal motility and pain perception with no organic basis
            –Abdominal pain associated with intermittent diarrhea or constipation
    * Bacterial overgrowth: Enteric bacteria colonizes the upper small intestine
    * Trehelase deficiency (trehelose is the sugar found in mushrooms)
    * Zinc deficiency
      –Acrodermatitis enteropathica is typical rash
    * Low-fat diet

Workup and Diagnosis


  • History
    –Weight loss
    –Daycare setting, ill contacts
    –Diet history: Type and amount of fluids daily (intake of >150 mL/kg/day with normal weight and height suggests toddler's diarrhea)
    –Frequency of stool and consistency
    –Associated symptoms: Abdominal pain, bloating, flatulence, rash, fever, or vomiting
    –Onset of symptoms and relation to ingestion of milk, sucrose, or glucose
    –Worsening with stress (typical for IBS)
    –Exposure to lakes, well water (suggestive of parasite)
    –Travel history
    –Excessive “sugar free” gum chewing (sorbitol)
    • Stool examination
      –Gross examination (blood, mucus, undigested food)
      –Color is not helpful
      –Occult blood test (not detected in IBS)
      –pH: Stool pH <5 indicates osmotic diarrhea from reducing sugars (sucrose and trehelose are nonreducing)
      –Stool cultures, O&P, Clostridium difficile toxin
  • More studies only if all of above failed to reveal cause
    • Hydrogen breath test
      –Detects carbohydrate malabsorption (lactose, sucrose, fructose, glucose) and bacterial overgrowth
  • Stool electrolytes if secretory diarrhea is suspected

Treatment


  • Treatment is directed at cause
  • Chronic nonspecific diarrhea
    –Restriction of fluid intake to <90 mL/kg/day
    –Reduction of fruit juices (<8 ounces/day)
    –Elimination of sorbitol-containing juices
  • Carbohydrate malabsorption
    –Trial elimination or reduction of offending sugar
    –Lactase (Lactaid) for lactose intolerance
    –Sucrase (Sucraid) for sucrase-isomaltase deficiency
    • Small intestine bacterial overgrowth
      –Antibiotic therapy with metronidazole alone or in combination with ampicillin or Bactrim
      –Surgery for partial small bowel obstruction
  • Low-fat diet: Increase fat intake to approximately 40% of total daily calorie intake
  • Irritable bowel syndrome
    –Anticholinergic therapy or antidepressants
  • Acrodermatitis enteropathica: Zinc supplements


Saturday, December 11, 2010

Causes and Treatment of Blood Cancer Artical | Causes

Blood is a part of the body. Blood has different components sch as red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets and plasma. The red blood cells (RBC), platelets also called monocytes because it is belong to the "myeloid" group and other white blood cells belong to the "lymphoid" group. Lymphoid cells are affected. Disease progresses quickly. This is most common among children. Blood cancer or Leukemia is actually a group of diseases, each of which impede with the normal functioning of blood cells and progressively weaken the system. Leukemia is classified as either Acute or Chronic. Blood and urine samples may also be tested for various substances, called tumor markers, which may indicate cancer.

Causes

A weakened immune system - this may be a result of drugs that suppress the immune system (such as those used for organ transplants), high doses of radiation (such as in radiotherapy for another cancer), or diseases that affect the immune system (such as HIV).

Contact with a chemical called benzene, one of the chemicals in petrol and a solvent used in the rubber and plastics industry.

Genetic disorders like Fanconi anemia, Schwachman-Diamond syndrome and Down syndrome.

Treatment


In radio immunotherapy, an immunotoxin--a hybrid molecule formed by coupling an antibody molecule to a toxin--is injected into the patient. The antibody locks onto a signature protein the cancerous cells express and delivers the toxic dose to the cancer cells. Because the treatment is precision-guided, adverse effects to the rest of the body are minimized. Preliminary results with the new drug are extremely promising--completely eradicating the human cancer cells grafted to mice.

Your doctor may prescribe medications, sometimes called "growth factors," that encourage your body to produce more blood cells. Medications are also used to prevent low blood cell counts in people who have a high probability of experiencing complications of cancer treatment. Medications have benefits and risks, so talk to your doctor about the possible side effects of drugs used to boost blood cell counts.

Most people feel confused and overwhelmed when they are told they have leukaemia. It's a very distressing time both for them and their families. An important part of cancer treatment is learning how to talk about how you are feeling, and getting support with the physical and emotional symptoms you are experiencing.

For more advanced cancer, you can receive extra support, known as palliative care. Doctors and nurses based in hospitals, hospices and pain clinics specialize in providing the support you need, and can also visit you at home.

Many everyday activities put you at risk of cuts and scrapes. A low platelet count makes even minor abrasions serious. A low white blood cell count can turn a small cut into a starting point for a serious infection. Use an electric shaver rather than a razor to avoid nicks. Ask someone else to cut up food in the kitchen. Be gentle when brushing your teeth and blowing your nose.

Biological therapy uses special immune system cells and proteins to stimulate the body's immune system to kill cancer cells. Biological agents such as interferons, interleukins, monoclonal antibodies, tumor necrosis factors and colony-stimulating factors are natural substances found in the body that help alter the way the immune system reacts to cancer. Researchers are now able to create reproductions of some of these biological agents in laboratories, imitating the natural immune agents. These agents are used to augment the anti-tumor immune response of the patient.

Symptoms of Blood cancer | The list of signs and symptoms

The list of signs and symptoms mentioned in various sources for Blood cancer includes the 22 symptoms listed below:

    * Fatigue
    * Malaise
    * Breathlessness
    * Weakness
    * Excessive or easy bruising
    * Bleeding gums or frequent nose bleeds
    * Recurrent infections or fever
    * Sweating at night
    * Weight loss
    * Anorexia
    * Lymph node (gland) enlargement
    * Lumps or abdominal distension due to enlarged abdominal organs
    * Abdominal pain
    * Bone pain
    * Back pain
    * Bone fractures from minimal trauma
    * Confusion
    * Delirium
    * Headaches
    * Visual disturbance
    * Fluid retention
    * Decreased urination