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Disaster Medicine: Crush Syndrome Brad Greenberg, MD Center for Disaster Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine University of New Mexico Goals and Objectives • Understand historical underpinnings • Define Crush Syndrome • Describe the epidemiology • Describe the natural course • Describe treatment • Understand the implications for resource allocation History • World War One: – Meyer-Betz Syndrome – Noted in extricated soldiers – Triad of: • muscle pain • weakness • brown urine Bywaters’ Syndrome • Battle of Britain, May 1941 • Multiple subjects • Trapped for 3-4 hours • Then developed: – Shock – Swollen Extremities – Dark Urine • Survived Renal Failure Died of Uremia Battle of Britain • Retrospective Descriptive Study – Successful extrication – Death with: • • • • Oliguria Pigmented Casts Limb Edema Associated Shock • Hypothesis that muscle breakdown was the cause All in the Name of Science • Animal Model: Rabbit – Identified myoglobin as culprit molecule • Postulated Therapies: – Alkalinization of Urine – Among other things… Science and Technology Dictionary (McGraw Hill) • crush syndrome (′krəsh ′sin′drōm) (medicine) A severe, often fatal condition that follows a severe crushing injury, particularly involving large muscle masses, characterized by fluid and blood loss, shock, hematuria, and renal failure. Also known as compression syndrome. Functional Definition Any injury that has: 1. Involvement of Muscle Mass Prolonged Compression 2. – 3. Usually 4-6 hours Compromised local circulation Epidemiology • Earthquakes • Bombings • Structural Collapse • Trench Collapse • “Down and Out” Epidemiology • Tangshan, 1976 – 242,800 dead (20%) • Armenia, 1988 – 50,000 dead – 600 needed Hemodialysis Crush Epidemiology • Earthquake Victims – 3-20% of all victims – Number of limbs affects risk • 1 Limb 50% • 2 Limbs 75% • >3 Limbs 100% • Structural Collapse – 40% of survivors (Those requiring extrication) Structural Collapse • 10% survive with severe injuries • 7/10 develop crush syndrome • 80% dead • 10% survive with minor injuries Advances in Management • In situ fluid resuscitation – Israel, 1982 – 1/8 developed ARF • Aggressive Fluid Resuscitation, post-extrication – Japan, 1995 Kobe, 1995 372 crush syndrome 202 developed ARF 78 required Hemodialysis Aggressive Fluid Management Advances in Management • Disaster Relief Task Force – Marmara, Turkey – Task Force: • Trained Personnel • Portable HD – 462 ARF (18% mortality) Limb Compression Myoglobinemia • Local Pressure • Local Tamponade • Muscle necrosis • Capillary necrosis • Edema ARF SHOCK Muscle Ischemia Muscle Infarction Acidosis & Hyperkalemia Extracellular Fluid Shifts Cardiac Arrhythmia Pathophysiology • • • • • Local Pressure Local Tamponade Muscle necrosis Capillary necrosis Edema • Severity of syndrome is relative to muscle mass involved Pathophysiology • Syndrome usually requires 4-6 hours of compression • Mechanisms of muscle cell injury: – Immediate cell disruption – Direct pressure on muscle cells – Vascular Compromise (4 hours) • Microvascular pressure • Edema and/or Compartment Syndrome • Bleeding Pathophysiology • Crushed +/- ischemic muscle – – – – – Deficiency in ATP Failure of Na/K ATPase Sarcolemma Leakage (Influx of Ca) Lysis if muscle cell membrane Leaks K, Ca, CK, myoglobin • Hypovolemia – Fluid Sequestration – Increased osmoles in EC space Cell Death • Platelet Aggregation • Vasoconstriction • Hemorrhage • Increased Vascular Permeability • Edema • Hypoxia Products of Muscle Breakdown • Amino acids & other organic acids – Acidosis – Aciduria – Dysrhythmias • Creatine phosphokinase – laboratory markers for crush injury • Free radicals, superoxides, peroxides – further tissue damage Products of Muscle Breakdown • Histamines: – Vasodilation – Bronchoconstriction • Lactic acid – acidosis – Dysrhythmias • Leukotrienes – lung injury – hepatic injury. • Lysozymes – cell-digesting enzymes that cause further cellular injury • Myoglobin – precipitates in kidney tubules, especially in the setting of acidosis with low urine pH; leads to renal failure • Nitric oxide – causes vasodilation which worsens hemodynamic shock Products of Muscle Breakdown • Phosphate – hyperphosphatemia causes precipitation of serum calcium – Hypocalcemic dysrhythmias • Potassium – dysrhythmias • Worsened when associated with acidosis and hypocalcemia. • Prostaglandins – Vasodilatation – lung injury • Purines (uric acid) – Nephrotoxic • Thromboplastin – disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) Crush Syndrome • • • • • • • Potassium Phosphate Purines Lactic Acid Thromboplastin Creatine Kinase Myoglobin • Hypovolemic Shock • Hyperkalemia • Metabolic Acidosis • Compartment Syndrome • Acute Renal Failure Limb Compression Myoglobinemia • Local Pressure • Local Tamponade • Muscle necrosis • Capillary necrosis • Edema ARF SHOCK Muscle Ischemia Muscle Infarction Acidosis & Hyperkalemia Extracellular Fluid Shifts Cardiac Arrhythmia Acute Renal Failure • Myoglobin – Brown urine • pH – Volume Status – Acids • Renal Effects? • Myoglobin Gel – Distal tubules – Oliguric Renal Failure – Electrolyte Abnormalities • Within 3-7 days post-extrication ARF Treatment • Aggressive Hydration – In situ IVF – GOAL: • UOP: 200-300cc (2cc/kg/hr) • Alkalinization of Urine – 1st: Bicarbonate – 2nd: Acetazolamide – GOAL: • Urine pH b/w 6-7 • Forced Diuresis – Lasix – Mannitol Limb Compression Myoglobinemia • Local Pressure • Local Tamponade • Muscle necrosis • Capillary necrosis • Edema ARF SHOCK Muscle Ischemia Muscle Infarction Acidosis & Hyperkalemia Extracellular Fluid Shifts Cardiac Arrhythmia Shock • Hypovolemic Shock – >10 L can sequester in the area of crush injury – Study by Oda • Annals of EM, 1997 • Kobe, 1995 • Most commom cause of death (66%) in the 1st 4 days Shock Treatment • Early Aggressive Resuscitation – – – – IVF Blood Products Other products? Close Monitoring • Oral Rehydration – Not so good… • IV Access – Peripheral – Central – Intraosseus • Bolus Therapy – 250cc aliquots – Titrate to radial pulses and/or UOP Limb Compression Myoglobinemia • Local Pressure • Local Tamponade • Muscle necrosis • Capillary necrosis • Edema ARF SHOCK Muscle Ischemia Muscle Infarction Acidosis & Hyperkalemia Extracellular Fluid Shifts Cardiac Arrhythmia Dysrhythmia • Hyperkalemia • Hypocalcemia • Acidosis What do you see? Is this better or worse? Hmm… Hyperkalemia • Mild (5.5-6.5 mEq/L) – peaked T waves • Moderate (6.5-7.5 mEq/L) – prolonged PR interval – decreased P wave amplitude – depression or elevation of ST segment – slight widening of QRS • Severe (7.5-8.5 mEq/L) – Widening of the QRS • bundle branch • intraventricular blocks – Flat and Wide P waves – AV Blocks – ventricular ectopy • Life-threatening (>8.5 mEq/L) – – – – loss of P waves High-grade AV blocks Ventricular dysrhythmias Widening of the QRS complex • eventually forming a sinusoid patern. Now, what do you see? What K is this? Describe the ECG. Management • What are your management options? Management • Alkalinization – Bicarbonate – Acetazolamide • Calcium – Ca Gluconate – Ca Chloride • Beta-Agonists – Albuterol, etc. • Insulin/Glucose • Potassium Binding Resins – Kayexalate Hypocalcemia • Signs – Chvostek’s – Trousseau’s • Tetany • Seizures • Hypotension • ECG Changes – Bradycardia – arrhythmias – Long QT segment Treatment? • Implications of Hyperphosphatemia? – Metastatic calicification – Rebound hypercalcemia • Treat only if symptomatic. Acidosis • Myocardial Irritability • Precipitates Arrhythmia • May be refractory to treatment • Treatment already discussed Physical Examination • Signs & Symptoms of Crush Injury – – – – – – – Skin Injury Swelling Paralysis Paresthesias Pain Pulses Myoglobinuria In Situ Management • Patient Access • IV Access • IV Hydration – Bicarbonate – Mannitol • Extrication Post-Extrication • Physiologic Changes – Reestablish circulation • Perfused fluids into damaged tissue • Cell components enter venous circulation Post-Extrication Complications Delayed Causes of Death • ARF • ARDS • Sepsis • Ischemic Organ Injury • DIC • Electrolyte Disturbances “Renal Disaster” Epidemiology Sever, et al. • Spitak, Amenia Earthquake, 1988 • 600 Crush Victims • 225 Needed HD – Sufficient supplies – Inefficient response • Resource Issues – Allocation Problems – Personnel – Support Stucture • Developed a method to respond to large-scale events requiring hemodialysis – Tested in Turkey, Iran, Pakistan Renal Disaster • Logistics – Dialysis • 1-3x/day • 12-18 days But wait! • What about chronic renal patients? • How many patients per machine? • Where do you get supplies? • How do you organize your response? • Who get to decide who receives dialysis? • Who operates the machinery? • How do you monitor progress? • Where can you get laboratory support? • With appropriate use of resources… • …a substantial number of lives can be saved. Crush Syndrome Treatment – Early IV Fluid – Close fluid management – Correct electrolyte abnormalities – Consider dialysis as a life-saving therapy Local Relief Efforts • Assess Severity of Renal Disaster • Determine status of local infrastructure • Estimate consumption of hospital resources and supplies • Prepare work schedules for personnel • Estimate need for dialysis • Deliver supplies and personnel • For each patient: – 8-10 sets of HD equipment – 4-5 units of blood products – 5 liters of crystalloid per day – 15g of Kayexalate Questions?