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Sickle cell crisis
From WikEM
(Redirected from Sickle cell disease)
Contents
Background
Precipitating Factors
- For vaso-occlusion:
- Stress
- Cold weather
- Dehydration
- Hypoxia
- Infection
- Acidosis
- Alcohol intoxication
- Pregnancy
- Exertional stress
- For aplastic crisis:
- Parvovirus B19 infection
- Folic acid deficiency
Clinical Features
Vaso-Occlusive Crisis[1]
See Vaso-occlusive pain crisis
Bony infarction
- More debilitating and refractory pain than past episodes
- Localized bone tenderness, elevated WBC
- Fat embolism can be complication
Dactylitis
- Tender, swollen hands/feet
- May have low-grade fever
- Occurs in <2yr old, extremely rare >5yr old
Avascular necrosis of femoral head
- Occurs in 30% of patients by age 30yr
- Patients present with afebrile, inguinal pain with weight-bearing
Respiratory Distress and Chest Pain
- Acute Chest Syndrome
- Pneumonia
- Caused by chlamydia, mycoplasma, viral, strep pneumo, staph, H. Flu
- Only need blood culture in patients ill enough to require ventilator
- Asthma
- Common in patients with SCD
- Increases likelihood of acute chest syndrome by 4-6x
- Pulmonary Hypertension
- Develops in 15-35% of children with SCD
- Chest pain, DOE, hypoxia, right-sided heart failure, syncope, PE
- Develops in 15-35% of children with SCD
Abdominal Pain
- Pain crisis
- 3rd most common site of pain crisis
- Sudden onset of poorly localized abdominal pain
- May have tenderness, guarding; should not have rigidity/rebound
- Gallbladder disease (stones) is common; may occur as early as 2-4yr old
- Acute hepatic sequestration
- Labs are variable
- US or CT shows diffuse hepatomegaly
- Bacterial gastroenteritis
- Increased risk for salmonella
- Consider treatment with ciprofloxacin and Bactrim in ill-appearing
Infection
- Across all ages, infection is leading cause of death
- Increased prevalence of meningitis, pneumonia, septic arthritis, osteomyelitis
- No spleen means more susceptible to encapsulated organisms
- Children aged 6mo to 3yr at greatest risk for sepsis
- Parvovirus B19
- Can cause several different syndromes:
- 1. Erythema infectiosum ("slapped cheeks" rash)
- 2. Gloves and socks syndrome
- Well-demarcated, painful, erythema of hands and feet
- Evolves into petechiae, purpura, vesicles, skin sloughing
- Well-demarcated, painful, erythema of hands and feet
- 3. Arthropathy - symmetric or asymmetric, knees and ankles
- 4. Aplastic crisis
- Reticulocyte count drops 5d post-exposure, followed by hemoglobin drop
- Can cause serious anemia which lasts for 2wk
- Can cause several different syndromes:
Musculoskeletal Infection
- Patients with SCD have increased rates of bone and joint infection
- Difficult to distinguish from bony infarcts
- High fever is more typical of infection
- Limited range of motion is much more typical of infection
- Left shift is unique to infection
- ESR is unreliable
- May require bone scan or MRI to definitely distinguish infection from infarct
- Difficult to distinguish from bony infarcts
Splenic Sequestration
- Major cause of mortality in <5yr old
- Labs: hemoglobin drop, no change in bili, normal to increased retic count
- 2 types: major and minor
- Major
- Rapid drop of hb (>3pt)
- Pallor, LUQ pain, splenomegaly
- Can progress within hours to altered mental status, hypotension, cardiovascular collapse
- Minor
- More insidious, smaller drop in hemoglobin
- Major
- 2 types: major and minor
Neurologic Disease
- CVA is 250x more common in children with SCD
- 10% of children suffer clinically overt stroke
- 20% found to have silent CVA on imaging
- Increased rate of cerebral aneurysm and ICH
GU
Differential Diagnosis
Sickle cell crisis
- Vaso-occlusive pain crisis
- Bony infarction
- Dactylitis
- Avascular necrosis of femoral head
- Acute chest syndrome
- Asthma
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Gallbladder disease
- Acute hepatic sequestration
- Infection
- Parvovirus B19
- Splenic sequestration
- CVA
- Cerebral aneurysm and ICH
- Priapism
- Papillary necrosis
Evaluation
Work-up
Based on clinical presentation, but may include:
- CBC (assess for significant anemia)
- Reticulocyte count (<0.5% suggests aplastic crisis - rare in adults)
- Metabolic panel, lipase (if abdominal pain)
- CXR (if cough, shortness of breath, or fever)
- ECG
- VBG
- Urinalysis
- Pregnancy test
- CT Brain (if symptoms of CVA)
Evaluation
- Generally a clinical diagnosis
- Certain syndromes require imaging/labs for confirmation (see below)
Management
- Only use supplemental oxygen for patients who are hypoxic (<92%)
- Reserve IVF bolus for patients who are hypovolemic
- Over hydration may cause atelectasis which may precipitate Acute Chest Syndrome and hyperCl acidosis which could lead to further sickling \
- Make sure to use hypotonic fluids: 1/2NS, D5-1/2NS
Anemia
- Transfusion
- Indications:
- Aplastic crisis
- Sequestration crisis
- hemoglobin <6 with inappropriately low retic count
- hemoglobin <10 with acute crisis
- Transfuse 10 mL/kg over 2hr period
- Indications:
Vaso-occlusive pain crisis
Acute Chest Syndrome
Priapism
- Hydration
- Transfusion and/or exchange transfusion
- Urology consult
- If persists for >4-6hr:
- Aspiration of corpora
- Irrigate and infuse 1:1,000,000 epinephrine solution
Neurologic Disease
- t-PA is not recommended
- Exchange transfusion urgently (within 8 hours) to decrease hemoglobinS below 30%
- Hydration
Splenic Sequestration
- Volume resuscitation
- Simple transfusion vs exchange transfusion
Disposition
- Consider admission to the hospital if:
- Acute chest syndrome is suspected
- Sepsis, osteomyelitis, or other serious infection is suspected
- Priapism, aplastic crisis, hypoxia
- WBC >30K
- Platlet <100K
- Pain is not under control after 2-3 rounds of analgesics in ED
- <1yr old
- Consider discharge if:
- Pain is under control and patient can take oral fluids and medications
- Ensure appropriate oral analgesics are available
- Provide home care instructions
- Ensure resource for follow-up
See Also
References
- ↑ Lovett P. et al. Sickle cell disease in the emergency department. Emerg Med Clin North Am. 2014 Aug;32(3):629-47