Crush syndrome

Revision as of 18:22, 27 September 2012 by Prashanthsaddala (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Crush syndrome
ICD-10 T79.5
ICD-9 958.5
DiseasesDB 13135
MeSH D003444

WikiDoc Resources for Crush syndrome

Articles

Most recent articles on Crush syndrome

Most cited articles on Crush syndrome

Review articles on Crush syndrome

Articles on Crush syndrome in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Crush syndrome

Images of Crush syndrome

Photos of Crush syndrome

Podcasts & MP3s on Crush syndrome

Videos on Crush syndrome

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Crush syndrome

Bandolier on Crush syndrome

TRIP on Crush syndrome

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Crush syndrome at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Crush syndrome

Clinical Trials on Crush syndrome at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Crush syndrome

NICE Guidance on Crush syndrome

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Crush syndrome

CDC on Crush syndrome

Books

Books on Crush syndrome

News

Crush syndrome in the news

Be alerted to news on Crush syndrome

News trends on Crush syndrome

Commentary

Blogs on Crush syndrome

Definitions

Definitions of Crush syndrome

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Crush syndrome

Discussion groups on Crush syndrome

Patient Handouts on Crush syndrome

Directions to Hospitals Treating Crush syndrome

Risk calculators and risk factors for Crush syndrome

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Crush syndrome

Causes & Risk Factors for Crush syndrome

Diagnostic studies for Crush syndrome

Treatment of Crush syndrome

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Crush syndrome

International

Crush syndrome en Espanol

Crush syndrome en Francais

Business

Crush syndrome in the Marketplace

Patents on Crush syndrome

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Crush syndrome

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Synonyms and keywords: Bywaters' syndrome

Overview

Crush syndrome (also traumatic rhabdomyolysis is a medical condition characterized by major shock and renal failure after a crushing injury to skeletal muscle. Crush injury is compression of extremities or other parts of the body that causes muscle swelling and/or neurological disturbances in the affected areas of the body, while crush syndrome is localized crush injury with systemic manifestations. [1] Cases occur commonly in catastrophes such as earthquakes, to victims that have been trapped under fallen masonry.

Typically affected areas of the body include lower extremities (74%), upper extremities (10%), and trunk (9%). They typically are caused by building collapse from explosives, or earthquake and other natural disasters, or construction accidents. They also can be caused by cave-ins. Explosion-caused crush injury is quaternary blast injury.

Victims of crushing damage present some of the greatest challenges in field medicine, and may be among the few situations where a physician is needed in the field. The most drastic response to crushing under massive objects may be field amputation. Even if it is possible to extricate the patient without amputation, appropriate physiological preparation is mandatory: where permissive hypotension is the standard for prehospital care, fluid loading is the requirement in crush syndrome.

Historical Perspective

The syndrome was discovered by British physician Eric Bywaters in patients during the 1941 London Blitz.[2][3] Seigo Minami, a Japanese physician, first reported the crush syndrome in 1923.[4][5][6] He studied the pathology of three soldiers who died in World War I from insufficiency of the kidney.

Pathophysiology

It is a reperfusion injury that appears after the release of the crushing pressure. The mechanism is believed to be the release into the bloodstream of muscle breakdown products—notably myoglobin, potassium and phosphorus—that are the products of rhabdomyolysis (the breakdown of skeletal muscle damaged by ischemic conditions).

The specific action on the kidneys is not understood completely, but may be due partly to nephrotoxic metabolites of myoglobin.

Seigo Minamistudied the pathology of three soldiers who died in World War I from insufficiency of the kidney. The renal changes were due to methohemoglobin infarction, resulting from the destruction of muscles, which is also seen in persons who are buried alive. The progressive acute renal failure is because of acute tubular necrosis.

The most devastating systemic effects can occur when the crushing pressure is suddenly released, without proper preparation of the patient, causing reperfusion syndrome. Without proper preparation, the patient, with pain control, may be cheerful before extrication, but die shortly thereafter. This sudden decompensation is called the "smiling death." [7]

These systemic effects are caused by a traumatic rhabdomyolysis. As muscle cells die, they absorb sodium, water and calcium; the rhabdomyolysis releases potassium, myoglobin, phosphate, thromboplastin, creatine and creatine kinase.

Compartment syndrome can be secondary to crush syndrome. Monitor for the classic 5 P’s: pain, pallor, parasthesias, pain with passive movement, and pulselessness.

Treatment

Due to the risk of crush syndrome, current recommendation to lay first-aiders (in the UK) is to not release victims of crush injury who have been trapped for more than 15 minutes. Treatment consists of not releasing the tourniquet and fluid overloading the patient with added Dextran 4000 iu and slow release of pressure. If pressure is released during first aid then fluid is restricted and an input-output chart for the patient is maintained, and proteins are decreased in the diet.

The Australian Resuscitation Council recommended in March 2001 that first-aiders in Australia, where safe to do so, release the crushing pressure as soon as possible, avoid using a tourniquet and continually monitor the vital signs of the patient.[8] St John Ambulance Australia First Responders are trained in the same manner.

Field management

As mentioned, permissive hypotension is unwise. Especially if the crushing weight is on the patient more than 4 hours, but often if it persists more than one hour, careful fluid overload is wise, as well as the administration of intravenous sodium bicarbonate. The San Francisco emergency services protocol calls for a basic adult dose of a 2 L bolus of normal saline followed by 500 ml/hr, limited for "pediatric patients and patients with history of cardiac or renal dysfunction." [9]

If the patient cannot be fluid loaded, this may be an indication for a tourniquet to be applied.

Initial hospital management

The clinician must protect the patient against hypotension, renal failure, acidosis, hyperkalemia and hypokalemia. Admission to a intensive care unit, preferably one experienced in trauma medicine, may be appropriate; even well-seeming patients need observation. Treat open wounds as surgically appropriate, with debridement, antibiotics and tetanus toxoid; apply ice to injured areas.

Intravenous hydration of up to 1.5 L/hour should continue to prevent hypotension. A urinary output of at least 300 ml/hour should be maintained with IV fluids and mannitol, and hemodialysis considered if this amount of diuresis is not achieved. Use intravenous sodium bicarbonate to keep the urine pH at 6.5 or greater, to prevent myoglobin and uric acid deposition in kidneys.

To prevent hyperkalemia/hypocalcemia, consider the following adult doses:[1]

Even so, cardiac arrythmias may develop; electrocardiographic monitoring is advised, and specific treatment begun promptly.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Blast Injuries: Crush Injuries & Crush Syndrome, Centers for Disease Control
  2. Template:WhoNamedIt
  3. Bywaters, E. G.; Beall, D. (1941). "Crush injuries with impairment of renal function". Br Med J. 1 (4185): 427–432. PMC 2161734. PMID 20783577.
  4. Minami, Seigo (1923). "Über Nierenveränderungen nach Verschüttung". Virchows Arch. Patho. Anat. 245 (1). doi:10.1007/BF01992107.
  5. Medical discoveries - Who and when- Schmidt JF. Springfield: CC Thomas, 1959. p.115.
  6. Morton's medical bibliography -An annotated check-list of texts illustrating History of medicine (Garrison-Morton). Aldershot: Solar Press; 1911. p.654.
  7. Nancy Caroline (2007), Nancy Caroline's Emergency Care in the Streets: Trauma Medical, 2 (6th ed.), p. 19-13, ISBN 9780763742393
  8. "Emergency Management of a Crushed Victim" (PDF). Australian Resuscitation Council. March 2001. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  9. Crush Syndrome (PDF), San Francisco Emergency Medical Services Agency, 1 July 2002, Protocol: #P-101

External links

Template:Certain early complications of trauma

de:Crush-Niere eu:Zapaltze sindrome orokor id:Sindrom Bywaters it:Sindrome da schiacciamento he:תסמונת מעיכה lt:Audinių sutraiškymo sindromas simple:Crush Syndrome sl:Zmečkaninski sindrom sr:Краш синдром sh:Kraš sindrom uk:Травматичний токсикоз