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296
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
Chapter
6
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
CONVERSION REACTIONS
CATATONIA
PSYCHOGENIC SEIZURES
CEREBELLAR COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE
SYNDROME
‘‘AMYTAL INTERVIEW’’
Differentiating psychogenic neurologic symp-
toms from those caused by structural disease is
often very difficult. The difficulty arises in part
because many patients are very accurate in mim-
icking neurologic signs (actors are often used
to train medical students in the diagnosis of
neurologic illnesses) and, in part, because many
patients with psychogenic neurologic disorders
(conversion reactions) also have somatic disease,
the somatic illness representing a stressor that
causes psychologic problems. Examples abound:
approximately one-half of patients with psy-
chogenic seizures also have epilepsy.
1
Of those
who do not have epilepsy, over 20% show evi-
dence of a brain disorder characterized either
by epileptiform activity on electroencephalo-
gram (EEG), magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) abnormalities, or neuropsychologic def-
icits.
2
Psychogenic neurologic symptoms some-
times complicate the course of multiple sclero-
sis.
3
Merskey and Buhrich studied 89 patients
with classic motor conversion symptoms and
found that 48% had a cerebral disorder.
4
Of
all the psychogenic illnesses that mimic struc-
tural disease, psychogenic unresponsiveness is
among the most difficult to diagnose. With most
psychogenic illnesses that mimic structural
neurologic disease, the physician pursues a two-
pronged diagnostic attack. He must first de-
termine by the neurologic examination that the
patient’s neurologic signs and symptoms are not
in keeping with the anatomy and physiology of
the nervous system (i.e., they are anatomically
or physiologically impossible). Secondly, he
must discern from the history and mental status
examination that the patient’s emotional make-
up and current psychologic problems are suf-
ficient to explain the abnormal findings on a
psychologic basis. Because in psychogenic un-
responsiveness no history or mental status ex-
amination from the patient is possible (a history
should be obtained from relatives or friends),
the physician is left with only the first portion
of his diagnostic armamentarium (i.e., the
demonstration that despite apparent uncon-
sciousness, the patient is in fact physiologically
awake). Thus, the diagnosis of psychogenic
unresponsiveness must be approached with the
greatest care. A careful neurologic examination,
sometimes supplemented by caloric tests, EEG,
297
and an ‘‘Amytal interview,’’ as described below,
will usually establish the diagnosis and obviate
the need for extensive, potentially harmful lab-
oratory investigations. However, if after such a
meticulous examination of a patient with sus-
pected psychogenic unresponsiveness any ques-
tion remains about the diagnosis, a careful search
for other causes of coma is obligatory.
Psychogenic unresponsiveness is uncommon;
it was the final diagnosis in only eight of our
original 500 patients (Table 1–1). We have, how-
ever, encountered the condition as a challenging
diagnostic problem in several further patients at
a rate of about one every other year since that
time. In one study of conversion symptoms in
500 psychiatric outpatients, ‘‘unconsciousness’’
occurred in 17.
5
Two older series from London
each report six patients with psychogenic un-
responsiveness who were initially puzzling diag-
nostically.
6,7
Over how long a period of time
these cases were collected, or from how wide a
patient population, is not stated. More recently,
Lempert and colleagues found that 405 (9%) of
4,470 consecutive neurologic inpatients were
found to have psychogenic rather than neuro-
logic disorders
8
(Table 6–1). Among these only
Table 6–1 Signs and Symptoms (N = 717) of 405 Patients With Psychogenic
Dysfunction of the Nervous System*
Pain
Trunk and extremities
89
Headache
61
Atypical facial pain
13
Motor Symptoms
Astasia/abasia
52
Monoparesis
31
Hemiparesis
20
Tetraparesis
18
Paraparesis
10
Paresis of both arms
2
Recurrent head drop
1
Tremor
11
Localized jerking
1
Stereotyped motor behavior
1
Hypokinesia
1
Akinesia
1
Foot contracture
1
Isolated ataxia of the upper
extremities
Sensory Symptoms
Hypesthesia/anesthesia
81
Paresthesia/dysesthesia
63
Sensation of generalized vibration
1
Sensation of fever
1
Pressure in the ears
1
Seizures
With motor phenomena
47
Other (amnestic episodes, mental
and emotional alterations)
34
Vertigo/Sizziness
Attacks of phobic postural vertigo
47
Continuous dizziness
38
Ocular Symptoms
Amblyopia
10
Amaurosis
6
Visual field defects
6
Color blindness
2
Double vision
2
Other visual phenomena
6
Ptosis
1
Convergence spasm
1
Unilateral gaze paresis
1
Alimentary Symptoms
Dysphagia
4
Vomiting
4
Speech Disturbances
Dysarthria
9
Slow speech
1
Aphonia
2
Mutism
1
Neuropsychologic Symptoms
Cognitive impairment
2
Amnestic aphasia
1
Apathy
2
Coma
1
Other Symptoms
Bladder dysfunction
11
Stool incontinence
1
Cough
1
From Lempert et al.,
8
with permission.
298
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
one was comatose, although 34 had seizures
described as consisting of ‘‘amnestic episodes,
mental and emotional alterations.’’ How many
of these had disorders of consciousness is un-
clear. Another study conducted in the 566-bed
tertiary care hospital identified a conversion dis-
order in 42 patients over 10 years.
9
In 17 pa-
tients, the presenting complaints were ‘‘seizure
activity, syncope, or loss of consciousness.’’ Pa-
tients admitted directly to the hospital with-
out a definitive diagnosis were not included
among the 42; how many there were was not
stated.
Because the diagnosis of psychogenic neu-
rologic symptoms is often difficult, mistakes are
sometimes made. Sometimes a structural dis-
order is initially diagnosed as psychogenic,
10,11
but sometimes the opposite occurs. The latter
is typically true when psychogenic coma com-
plicates a physical illness.
12,13
Although errors
were common in the past, a recent systematic
review of misdiagnosis of conversion symptoms
suggests an error rate of only 4% since 1970.
14
Among the 390 patients with a diagnosis of non-
epileptic seizures and/or loss of consciousness,
only nine were misdiagnosed.
Several psychiatric disorders can result in
psychogenic unresponsiveness. These include
(1) conversion reaction, which may in turn be
secondary to a personality disorder, severe de-
pression, anxiety, or an acute situational reac-
tion
15
; (2) catatonic stupor, often a manifestation
of schizophrenia; (3) a dissociative or ‘‘fugue’’
state; and (4) factitious disorder or malingering.
The two major categories of psychogenic un-
responsiveness are those that result from a con-
version disorder (often called conversion hys-
teria) and those that are part of the syndrome of
catatonia (often thought to be a manifestation of
schizophrenia). The two clinical pictures differ
somewhat, but both may closely simulate de-
lirium, stupor, or coma caused by structural or
metabolic brain disease. The diagnosis of psy-
chogenic unresponsiveness of either variety is
made by demonstrating that both the cerebral
hemispheres and the brainstem-activating path-
ways can be made to function in a physio-
logically normal way, even though the patient
will seemingly not respond to his or her envi-
ronment.
The physician must recognize that with the
exception of factitious disorders and malinger-
ing, psychologically produced neurologic symp-
toms are not ‘‘imaginary.’’ The disorders are
associated with measurable changes in brain
function. Although routine tests including MRI,
evoked potentials, and EEG are usually normal,
measurement of cerebral metabolism is region-
ally abnormal.
16
Using single photon emission
computed tomography (SPECT), Vuilleumier
and colleagues conducted a study in which se-
ven patients with conversion symptoms mim-
icking motor or sensory dysfunction revealed a
consistent decrease of blood flow in the thala-
mus and basal ganglia contralateral to the def-
icit. These abnormalities resolved in those pa-
tients who recovered.
17
Spence and colleagues
studied two patients with psychogenic weakness
affecting their left arms. They compared posi-
tron emission tomography (PET) scans of these
patients with normal individuals, and also with
normal individuals who feigned paralysis of the
left arm. The left dorsolateral prefrontal cor-
tex was activated in the normal individuals and
those feigning paralysis, but was hypofunctional
in the patient’s with the conversion reaction. In-
terestingly, those feigning paralysis exhibited hy-
pofunction of the right anterior prefrontal cor-
tex when compared with controls.
18
A study of
four patients with ‘‘hysterical anesthesia’’ using
functional MRI revealed that stimuli to the an-
esthetic parts of the body did not activate areas
in the thalamus, posterior region of the anterior
cingulate cortex, or Brodmann’s areas 44 and
45. These are the areas activated by individuals
who perceived the stimuli. A patient studied
during catatonic stupor showed hypometabo-
lism in a large area of the prefrontal cortex in-
cluding anterior cingulate, medial prefrontal,
and dorsolateral cortices when compared with
controls.
16
The few other studies of functional
imaging in patients with catatonia also showed
hypometabolism in the frontal lobes.
19–21
Al-
though no patients with psychogenic coma have
been studied by these techniques (the catatonic
patient was stuporous), the data from patients
with other conversion reactions suggests that
one would find abnormalities of brain metabo-
lism in these patients as well.
CONVERSION REACTIONS
A conversion reaction is the cause of most psy-
chogenic comas. As used here, the term con-
version reaction describes a psychogenic or
nonphysiologic loss or disorder of neurologic
function involving the special senses or the
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
299
voluntary nervous system. Many physicians as-
sociate conversion reactions with a hysterical
personality (conversion hysteria) but, in fact,
conversion reactions may occur as a psycho-
logic defense against a wide range of psychi-
atric syndromes, including depressive states
and neuroses.
22
Furthermore, as indicated on
page 297, conversion symptoms, including
psychogenic unresponsiveness, may be a re-
action to organic disease, and thus occur in a
patient already seriously ill. We find it impos-
sible to differentiate conversion reactions, pre-
sumably representing involuntary responses by
patients to stress, from voluntary malingering
except by the direct statement of the subject
involved and perhaps by PET.
18
Patients suffering from psychogenic unres-
ponsiveness, owing to either a conversion reac-
tion or to malingering, usually lie with their eyes
closed and do not attend to their surroundings.
The respiratory rate and depth are usually nor-
mal, but in some instances the patient may be
overbreathing as another manifestation of the
psychologic dysfunction (hyperventilation syn-
drome). The pupils may be slightly widened, but
are equal and reactive except in the instance of
the individual who self-instills mydriatic agents.
Oculocephalic responses may or may not be
present, but caloric testing invariably produces
quick-phase nystagmus away from the ice water
irrigation rather than either tonic deviation of
the eyes toward the irrigated ear or no response
at all. It is the presence of normal nystagmus in
response to caloric testing that firmly indicates
that the patient is physiologically awake and
that the unresponsive state cannot be caused by
structural or metabolic disease of the nervous
system. (A rare patient with pre-existing vestib-
ular dysfunction may be awake, but not have
caloric responses.) Henry and Woodruff de-
scribed six patients with psychogenic unrespon-
siveness in whom the eyes deviated tonically
toward the floor when the patient lay on his
side.
6
The authors postulate that the deviation
of the eyes was psychologically mediated as a
way of avoiding eye contact with the examiner.
In some patients, the eyes deviate upward (or
sometimes downward) when the eyelids are
passively opened. Upward eye deviation also
occurs during syncopal attacks.
23
When one at-
tempts to open the closed lids of a patient suf-
fering from psychogenic unresponsiveness, the
lids often resist actively and usually close rap-
idly when they are released. The slow, steady
closure of passively opened eyelids that occurs
in many comatose patients cannot be mimicked
voluntarily. Similarly, slow roving eye move-
ments cannot be mimicked voluntarily. Patients
suffering from psychogenic unresponsiveness as
a conversion symptom usually offer no resis-
tance to passive movements of the extremities
although normal tone is present; if an extremity
is moved suddenly, momentary resistance may
be felt. The patient usually does not withdraw
from noxious stimuli. Dropping the passively
raised arm toward the face is a maneuver said to
be positive when the patient’s hand avoids hit-
ting the face. However, the weight of the upper
arm sometimes pulls the hand away from the
face, giving the appearance of voluntary avoid-
ance.
24
The deep tendon reflexes are usually nor-
mal, but they can be voluntarily suppressed in
some subjects and thus may be absent or, rarely,
asymmetric. The abdominal reflexes are usually
present and plantar responses are invariably ab-
sent or flexor. The EEG is that of an awake
patient, rather than one in coma.
Patient 6–1
A 26-year-old nurse with a history of generalized
convulsions was admitted to the hospital after a
night of alcoholic drinking ostensibly followed by
generalized convulsions. She had been given 50%
glucose and 500 mg sodium amobarbital intrave-
nously. Upon admission she was reportedly unre-
sponsive to verbal command, but when noxious
stimuli were administered she withdrew, repeti-
tively thrust her extremities in both flexion and
extension, and on one occasion spat at the exam-
iner. Her respirations were normal. The remainder
of the general physical and neurologic examina-
tion was normal. She was given 10 mg of diazepam
intravenously and 500 mg of phenytoin intrave-
nously in two doses 3 hours apart. Eight hours later,
because she was still unresponsive, a neurologic
consultation was requested. She lay quietly in bed,
unresponsive to verbal commands and not with-
drawing from noxious stimuli. Her respirations
were normal; her eyelids resisted opening actively
and, when they were opened, closed rapidly. The
eyes did not move spontaneously, the doll’s eye
responses were absent, and the pupils were 3 mm
and reactive. Her extremities were flaccid with
300
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
normal deep tendon reflexes, normal superficial
abdominal reflexes, and flexor plantar responses.
When 20 mL of ice water was irrigated against the
left tympanum, nystagmus with a quick compo-
nent to the right was produced. The examiner in-
dicated to a colleague that the production of nys-
tagmus indicated that she was conscious and an
EEG would establish that fact. She immediately
‘‘awoke.’’ Her speech was dysarthric and she was
unsteady on her feet when she arose from bed. An
EEG was marked by low- and medium-voltage fast
activity in all leads with some 8-Hz alpha activity
and intermittent 6- to 7-Hz activity, a recording
suggesting sedation owing to drugs. She recovered
full alertness later in the day and was discharged a
day later with her neurologic examination having
been entirely normal. An EEG done at a subse-
quent time showed background alpha activity of
8 to 10 Hz with a moderate amount of fast activity
and little or no 5- to 7-Hz slow activity.
Comment: This patient illustrates a common
problem in differentiating ‘‘organic’’ from psycho-
genic unresponsiveness. She had been sedated
and had a mild metabolic encephalopathy, but the
preponderance of her signs was a result of psy-
chogenic unresponsiveness. The presence of nys-
tagmus on oculovestibular stimulation, and an EEG
that was only mildly slowed without other signs of
neurologic abnormality, effectively ruled out or-
ganic coma.
The converse of Patient 6–1 is illustrated by
Patient 5–3 (see page 194). In the latter, the
initial examination suggested psychogenic un-
responsiveness, but vestibular testing elicited
tonic deviation of the eyes without nystagmus.
The tonic eye deviation clearly indicated phys-
iologic rather than psychologic unresponsive-
ness. A rare patient with psychogenic unrespon-
siveness is able to inhibit nystagmus induced by
caloric testing (probably by intense visual fixa-
tion), but in that instance there is no tonic de-
viation of the eyes and the combination of other
signs can establish the diagnosis.
When a patient with severe organic illness,
whether systemic or neurologic, becomes unre-
sponsive, the physician sometimes fails to en-
tertain the possibility that the unresponsiveness
is psychogenic and represents a conversion re-
action to a difficult psychologic situation. Patient
6–2 illustrates this.
Patient 6–2
A 69-year-old woman was admitted to the coronary
care unit complaining of chest pain. On examina-
tion she was diaphoretic and the electrocardiogram
(ECG) showed changes suggestive of an acute an-
terior wall myocardial infarction. She was awake
and alert at the time of admission and had a nor-
mal neurologic examination. The following morn-
ing she was found to be unresponsive. On ex-
amination her respiratory rate was 16 and regular,
pulse 92, temperature 37.5, and blood pressure
120/80. The general physical examination was un-
remarkable, revealing no changes from the day
before. On neurologic examination she failed to
respond to either verbal or noxious stimuli. She
held her eyes in a tightly closed position and ac-
tively resisted passive eye opening, and the lids, af-
ter being passively opened, sprung closed when
released. Oculocephalic responses were absent.
Cold caloric responses yielded normal, brisk nys-
tagmus. Pupils were 4 mm and reactive. Tone in the
extremities was normal. The deep tendon reflexes
were equal throughout and plantar responses were
flexor. The neurologist who examined the patient
suggested to the cardiologist that the unrespon-
siveness was psychogenic and that psychiatric con-
sultation be secured. At the patient’s bedside the
incredulous cardiologist began to discuss how the
diagnosis of psychogenic unresponsiveness was
made. When the decision was finally made to con-
sult a psychiatrist, the patient, without opening her
eyes, responded with the words, ‘‘No psychiatrist.’’
In this instance, the presence of severe heart
disease led the patient’s physicians to refuse
initially to entertain a diagnosis of psychogenic
unresponsiveness. In Patient 6–3, the presence
of severe organic neurologic disease masked
the diagnosis for a considerable period.
Patient 6–3
A 28-year-old man with hepatic carcinoma met-
astatic to the lungs was admitted to the hospital
complaining of abdominal pain. His behavior was
noted to be inappropriate a few days after admis-
sion, but this was believed secondary to the
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
301
opioids given for pain. The inappropriate behavior
progressed to lethargy and then stupor. When first
examined by a neurologist, he was unresponsive
to verbal stimuli but grimaced when stimulated
noxiously. He held his eyes open and blinked in
response to a bright light. Nuchal rigidity and bi-
lateral extensor plantar responses were present,
but there were no other positive neurologic signs.
A lumbar puncture revealed bloody cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) with xanthochromic supernatant fluid
and a CSF glucose concentration of 15 mg/dL. The
EEG consisted of a mixture of theta and delta ac-
tivity, which was bilaterally symmetric. Carotid
arteriography failed to reveal the cause of his
symptoms, which were believed to be caused by
leptomeningeal metastases. For the next 2 weeks
his state of consciousness waxed and waned. When
awake he continued to act oddly. Two weeks after
the initial neurologic examination, he was noted
to be lying in bed staring at the ceiling with no
responses to verbal stimuli and with 6-mm pu-
pils, which responded actively to light. Bilateral
extensor plantar responses persisted. The EEG now
was within normal limits, showing good alpha ac-
tivity, which blocked with eye opening. Because
of the confusion about the exact cause of his di-
minished state of consciousness, an ‘‘Amytal inter-
view’’ was carried out (see page 307). After 300 mg
of intravenous Amytal was given slowly over sev-
eral minutes, the patient awoke, was fully oriented,
and was able to perform the serial sevens test
without error. During the course of the discussion,
when the problems of his cancer were broached,
he broke into tears. Further history indicated that
the patient’s brother had a history of hospitaliza-
tions for both mania and depression. A diagnosis
of psychogenic unresponsiveness superimposed
on metastatic disease of the nervous system was
made. The patient was started on psychotropic
drugs and he remained alert and responsive through-
out the remainder of his hospital stay.
The two patients above illustrate the difficul-
ties in making a diagnosis of psychogenic un-
responsiveness in patients with organic disease.
Merskey and Buhrich have stressed the fre-
quency of conversion hysteria in patients suf-
fering from structural disease.
4
Of 89 patients
with hysterical conversion symptoms, 67% had
some organic diagnosis; 48% of the group with
organic diagnoses had either an organic cere-
bral disorder or a systemic illness affecting the
brain. The authors believe that organic cere-
bral disease predisposes patients to the devel-
opment of conversion reactions.
CATATONIA
The second major category of psychogenic un-
responsiveness is catatonia. Catatonia is a symp-
tom complex characterized by either stupor or
excitement accompanied by behavioral distur-
bances that include, among others, mutism, pos-
turing, rigidity, grimacing, waxy flexibility (a mild
but steady resistance to passive motion, which
gives the examiner the sensation that he is bend-
ing a wax rod), and catalepsy (the tonic main-
tenance for a long period of time of a limb in a
potentially uncomfortable posture where it has
been placed by an examiner). Tables 6–2 and
6–3 list the signs of catatonia and some of its
causes.
In a retroprospective clinical study of patients
admitted to a psychiatric unit with catatonic
symptoms, only four of 55 were schizophrenic;
39 had affective disorders, three had reactive
psychoses, and nine suffered from organic brain
diseases, which included toxic psychosis, en-
cephalitis, alcoholic degeneration, and drug-
induced psychosis.
27
Patients with catatonic
stupor usually give the appearance of being ob-
tunded or semi-stuporous rather than coma-
tose. This state is compatible with normal pu-
pillary and oculovestibular function even when
the obtundation has a structural origin. In ad-
dition, catatonic stupor is accompanied by a va-
riety of autonomic and endocrine abnormalities
that give the patient a particularly strong ap-
pearance of organic neurologic disease.
Catatonia occurs in two forms: retarded and
excited. The patient in a catatonic stupor who
presents a problem in the differential diagnosis
of stupor or coma usually appears unresponsive
to his or her environment. Severe and prolonged
catatonic stupor, as described below, is uncom-
mon, since such patients are usually treated early
with psychotropic medications before the full
picture develops. The patient in catatonic stu-
por usually lies with the eyes open, apparently
unseeing. The skin is pale and frequently mar-
red by acne and has an oily or greasy appear-
ance. The patient’s pulse is rapid, usually be-
tween 90 and 120, and may be hypertensive.
Respirations are normal or rapid. The body
temperature is often elevated 1.08C to 1.58C
above normal. Such patients usually do not
302
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
move spontaneously and appear to be unaware
of their surroundings. They may not blink to
visual threat, although optokinetic responses
are usually present. The pupils are dilated and
there is frequently alternating anisocoria; they
are, however, reactive to light. Some patients
hold their eyes tightly closed and will not permit
passive eye opening. Doll’s eye movements are
absent and caloric testing produces normal oc-
ular nystagmus rather than tonic deviation. At
times there is increased salivation, the patient
allowing the saliva either to drool from the
mouth or to accumulate in the back of the phar-
ynx without being swallowed. Such subjects
may be incontinent of urine or feces or, on the
contrary, may retain urine requiring catheteri-
zation. Their extremities may be relaxed, but
more commonly are held in rigid positions and
are resistant to passive motion. Many patients
Table 6–2 Signs of Catatonia
Excitement
Nonpurposeful hyperactivity
or motor unrest
Immobility
Extreme hypoactivity, reduced
response to stimuli
Mutism
Reduced or absent speech
Stupor/coma
Unresponsive to all stimuli;
eyes closed, flaccid, or rigid
Staring
Fixed, nonreactive gaze,
reduced blinking
Posturing
Spontaneous maintenance
of posture (the posture itself
may or may not be abnormal)
for longer than is usual
Grimacing
Maintenance of odd facial
expressions
Echolalia
Mimicking of examiner’s speech
(may be delayed)
Echopraxia
Mimicking of examiner’s
movements (may be delayed)
Stereotypy
Repetitive, non-goal-directed
movements
Mannerisms
Odd, purposeful voluntary
movements
Verbigeration
Repetition of meaningless
phrases or sentences
Rigidity
Maintenance of position despite
efforts to be moved
Negativism
Apparently motiveless resistance
to instructions or attempts
to make contact
Waxy
flexibility
During reposturing there is
initial resistance, then the
new posture is maintained
Withdrawal
Refusal to eat, drink, or make
eye contact
Impulsivity
Sudden inappropriate behaviors
with no explanation
Automatic
Exaggerated cooperation with
request or continuation of
obedience movement requested
Mitgehen
Raising of arm in response to
light finger pressure (like an
angle-poise lamp) despite
instructions to the contrary
Gegenhalten
Resistance to passive movement
in proportion to strength
of stimulus
Ambitendency Indecisive, hesitant movement
Grasp reflex
Reflex grasping movement
of hand in response to stroking
palm
Perseveration
Repeatedly returns to same topic
or persists with movement
Combativeness Usually undirected aggression
or violent behavior
Modified from Bush et al.
25
Table 6–3 Some Reported Causes
of Catatonia
Category
Association
Idiopathic
Perhaps nearly 50% of patients
Psychiatric
Affective disorders, dissociative
disorders, schizophrenia,
drug-indued and other psychoses,
obsessive compulsive disorder,
personality disorder
Neurologic
Cerebral tumors, subarachnoid
hemorrhage, subdural
hemorrhage, hemorrhagic
infarcts, closed head injury,
multiple sclerosis, narcolepsy,
tuberous sclerosis, epilepsy,
Wernicke’s encephalopathy,
Parkinsonism, systemic
lupus erythematosus
Metabolic
Addison’s disease, Cushing’s
disease, diabetic ketoacidosis,
hypercalcemia, acute intermittent
porphyria, Wilson’s disease
Drugs and
toxins
Alcohol, anticonvulsants,
disulfiram, neuroleptics,
amphetamines, mescaline,
phencyclidine, aspirin,
l
-dopa, steroids
Infections
Encephalitis (especially herpes),
malaria, syphilis, tuberculosis,
typhoid, acquired immuno-
deficiency mononucleosis,
viral hepatitis
Modified from Philbrick and Rummans.
26
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
303
demonstrate waxy flexibility. Catalepsy is pres-
ent in about 30% of retarded catatonics. Cho-
reiform jerks of the extremities and grimaces
are common. The deep tendon reflexes are usu-
ally present and there are no pathologic re-
flexes.
Although appearing comatose, the patient is
fully conscious. This normal level of conscious-
ness is attested to both by a normal neurologic
examination at the time the patient appears
stuporous and by the fact that when he or she
recovers, the patient is often (but not always)
able to recall all the events that took place
during the ‘‘stuporous’’ state (Patient 6–4).
Patient 6–4
A 74-year-old woman with a history of hyperten-
sion and hypothyroidism, but otherwise in good
health, was admitted to the hospital for replace-
ment of her left hip. She had a previous replace-
ment of the right hip several years before. She re-
covered well from the surgery, but 3 days later at
4:30 a.m., she was found unresponsive in bed. She
lay quietly with eyes closed but did not respond to
voice or noxious stimuli. She was seen by a neu-
rologist at 7:30 a.m. She was unresponsive to
voice, her eyes were open, and she would direct
her eyes to sound and would blink to threat, but
would not follow commands and did not respond
to noxious stimuli. Tone was normal, as was the
remainder of the neurologic exam. Ninety minutes
later she ‘‘awoke’’ and responded entirely appro-
priately. She reported that at 4:30 a.m., unable to
sleep, she had the sudden feeling that she had
died. Physicians whom she recognized entered the
room, but she was unable to respond to them. She
reported that the noxious stimuli were very pain-
ful, but she could not move, nor could she respond
to questions. She continued to think that she was
dead until somewhat later in the morning, when a
nurse whom she knew well sat by the bedside and
talked to her gently. Because the nurse was being
so nice she thought she had to respond and she
began to talk. There had been no history of pre-
vious psychologic disorder nor was there any hint
during the rest of her hospitalization of a psycho-
logic abnormality.
Comment: It is hard to classify this patient with
psychogenic coma, but the patient’s mutism and
inability or unwillingness to move suggest a form
fruste of catatonia. That this disorder can be tran-
sient and occur in people without other underlying
psychologic difficulty is well known and is per-
haps illustrated by this patient.
While the patient with the retarded form of
catatonia may be difficult to distinguish from a
patient with stupor caused by structural disease,
the patient with the excited type of catatonia
may be difficult to distinguish from a patient
with an acute delirium. Both may be wildly ag-
itated and combative, and such behavior may
make it impossible to test for orientation and
alertness. Hallucinatory activity can be caused
by either organic or psychologic disease, al-
though pure visual hallucinations are usually
due to structural or metabolic disease, and pure
auditory hallucinations to psychologic disease.
The segmental neurologic examination, insofar
as it can be tested in a delirious or excited pa-
tient, may be normal with either structural or
organic disease. Grimacing, stereotypic motor
behavior, and posturing suggest catatonia ra-
ther than metabolic delirium.
Although the passage of time usually resolves
the diagnostic problem, the only immediately
distinguishing feature between psychogenic and
organic delirious reactions is seen on the EEG.
In patients with an acute toxic delirium caused
by hepatic encephalopathy, encephalitis, alco-
hol, or other sedative drugs, slow EEG activity
predominates. The EEG of the patient with the
delirium of withdrawal from alcohol or barbi-
turates is dominated by low-voltage fast activity.
The EEG is usually normal in patients with cat-
atonia unless there is an underlying medical
illness.
28,29
Thus, an entirely normal EEG with
good background alpha activity that responds to
eye opening and noise suggests that an either
unresponsive or excessively excited patient is
suffering from catatonia rather than structural
or metabolic disease of the nervous system. If
the EEG is dominated by high-voltage slow ac-
tivity in the case of a stuporous patient, or low-
voltage fast activity in the case of an excited
patient, the likelihood is that the disorder is met-
abolic or structural rather than psychogenic.
PSYCHOGENIC SEIZURES
More difficult than identifying psychogenic
coma is differentiating a psychogenic seizure
from an epileptic seizure.
30
Psychogenic
304
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
seizures are common; in one population study,
psychogenic seizures affected 4% of the pop-
ulation.
1
The patient often presents in the
emergency room having symptoms that may
mimic a generalized tonic-clonic seizure or a
complex partial seizure.
31
There is often no
history available and the patient may be unre-
sponsive, or appear to be stuporous or coma-
tose. Because 50% of such patients also have
epilepsy, differentiating a psychogenic from an
epileptic seizure in a particular episode may be
very difficult. Some clues both from the history
and examination are given in Table 6–4. As
indicated in the table, the physician should sus-
pect a psychogenic seizure when the patient’s
motor movements are unusual, particularly
when the seizure lasts a long time. An EEG is
usually unavailable and even if available, is
often so marred by movement artifact as to not
be interpretable. Furthermore, some EEGs in
patients with complex partial seizures are nor-
mal. The physician should draw a prolactin
level. An elevated prolactin level strongly sug-
gests that a generalized tonic-clonic or com-
plex partial seizure is epileptic.
32
A normal pro-
lactin level does not rule out a nongeneralized
seizure. Because the diagnosis is often uncer-
tain and because, as indicated below, intrave-
nous benzodiazepines treat psychogenic alter-
ations of consciousness as well as epilepsy,
Table 6–4 Findings That Can Help Distinguish Psychogenic From
Epileptic Seizures
Psychogenic
Seizures
Epileptic
Seizures
History
Started <10 years of life
Unusual
Common
Seizures in presence of doctors
Common
Unusual
Recurrent ‘‘status’’
Common
Rare
Multiple unexplained physical symptoms
Common
Rare
Multiple operations/invasive tests
Common
Rare
Psychiatric treatment
Common
Rare
Sexual and physical abuse
Common
Rare
Observation
Situational onset
Occasional
Rare
Gradual onset
Common
Rare
Precipitated by stimuli (noise, light)
Occasional
Rare
Purposeful movements
Occasional
Very rare
Opisthotonus, ‘‘arc de cercle’’
Occasional
Very rare
Tongue biting (tip)
Occasional
Rare
Tongue biting (side)
Rare
Common
Prolonged ictal atonia
Occasional
Very rare
Vocalization during ‘‘tonic-clonic’’ phase
Occasional
Very rare
Reactivity during ‘‘unconsciousness’’
Occasional
Very rare
Rapid postictal reorientation
Common
Unusual
Undulating motor activity
Common
Very rare
Asynchronous limb movements
Common
Rare
Rhythmic pelvic movements
Occasional
Rare
Side-to-side head shaking
Common
Rare
Ictal crying
Occasional
Very rare
Closed mouth in ‘‘tonic phase’’
Occasional
Very rare
Closed eyelids
Very common
Rare
Convulsion >2 minutes
Common
Very rare
Resisted lid opening
Common
Very rare
Pupillary light reflex
Usually retained
Commonly absent
Lack of cyanosis
Common
Rare
Modified from Reuber and Elger.
31
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
305
one can often stop the episode with intrave-
nous benzodiazepines. However, if there is a
strong suspicion that the seizures are psycho-
genic, anticonvulsants should not be given. In
most instances, a definitive diagnosis will re-
quire evaluation in an epilepsy unit, often with
a video-EEG.
CEREBELLAR COGNITIVE
AFFECTIVE SYNDROME
At times mistaken for catatonia, the cerebellar
cognitive affective syndrome
33
was originally
described in children following surgery to the
vermis of the cerebellum. Because the children
were awake but mute, the disorder was called
the cerebellar mutism syndrome.
34
Cerebellar
mutism also occurs in adults either after surgery
involving the posterior fossa or as a result of
lesions affecting the vermis and posterior lobes
of the cerebellum. Such patients are awake, but
may be somnolent. Whatever their level of alert-
ness, they do not speak and often behave abnor-
mally, either by not responding to the examiner
or by behaving inappropriately. Patients may re-
fuse to swallow food although they are not dys-
phagic. In children the syndrome characteris-
tically occurs after a period of normality in the
postoperative period. The mutism begins hours
to days after awakening from anesthesia. The
syndrome is largely reversible, but neuropsycho-
logic tests given long after apparent recovery
demonstratedefectsinexecutivefunction,affect,
and language.
34
Patient 6–5
A 32-year-old man with a cerebellar ependymoma
complained of headache and mild imbalance. He
had been operated on twice 2 years before with a
vermis splitting operation that removed most of
the lesion, but left residual tumor in the lateral wall
of the fourth ventricle. An operation was under-
taken to remove the residual tumor. The surgeon
did not invade the vermis but lifted the cerebel-
lar tonsil to successfully resect the residual tumor.
Neurologic consultation was sought in the imme-
diate postoperative period when the patient ap-
peared to be ‘‘unresponsive.’’ He was lying in bed
with his eyes open. He was still intubated, so that
he could not speak, but he did not appear to re-
spond to any verbal commands. He moved sponta-
neously and sometimes appeared to withdraw
from noxious stimuli but never would look at
the examiner or regard the examiner in any way.
When the patient was extubated he did not speak.
Gradually over the next 24 to 36 hours, the patient
began to respond by closing his eyes to command,
but rarely looking at the examiner. He would carry
out some commands, particularly grasping the
examiner’s hand. However, he had difficulty with
commands involving the lips or tongue (oral buc-
cal apraxia). Transiently, he demonstrated cata-
lepsy. He would say his name, but to other ques-
tions he would only repeat his name. Later, when
one of us asked him his name he responded
‘‘George Bush.’’ It turned out that the nurse had
asked him who the president was about 10 min-
utes before and he had responded appropriately.
Over time he made a good recovery and was
discharged from the hospital. However, even at dis-
charge his affect seemed flat and he himself re-
ported that he was not the same as prior to surgery,
Figure 6–1. (A) A fluid-attenuated inversion recovery
sequence demonstrating hyperintensity in the vermis, a
result of the first two operations, with residual tumor. (B)
A 24-hour postoperative film done during the time when
the patient was responding poorly. The hyperintensity in
the vermis is more marked and there is new hyperintensity
in the right posterior lobe of the cerebellum.
306
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
although he could not describe what the changes
were.
Comment: The cerebellar cognitive affective
syndrome is rare in adults and can easily be mis-
taken for catatonia or psychogenic unresponsive-
ness. This patient had suffered modest damage to
the vermis of the cerebellum from the first two
operations (Figure 6–1A), and suffered further tran-
sient damage to both a vermis and the right pos-
terior lobe of the cerebellum as a result of the
trauma of the third operation (Figure 6–1B). In-
terestingly, the surgeon noted that when she first
interviewed him his affect seemed ‘‘flat.’’ She re-
ferred him to a psychiatrist, who noted that his
behavior had changed after the first operation in
that he found himself ‘‘apathetic’’ and ‘‘not happy
with the way I am.’’ She found impaired memory,
and language ‘‘adequate, but not descriptive of
his feelings and emotions.’’ These changes were
probably a result of the vermis damage from the
first two operations.
‘‘AMYTAL INTERVIEW’’
In many instances, an immediate distinction
between organic and psychologic delirium or
stupor cannot be made on the basis of the neu-
rologic examination or the EEG, and in these
instances an Amytal interview is often helpful.
Although historically we have used Amytal, clin-
ical evidence suggests that a benzodiazepine
such as lorazepam works just as well and is
more available.
35
We use the term Amytal in-
terview loosely to describe the slow intrave-
nous injection of an anxiolytic agent. The Am-
ytal interview is conducted by injecting the
drug intravenously at a slow rate while talking
to the patient and doing repeated neurologic
examinations. It is important that the discus-
sion remain fairly neutral and not represent a
direct challenge of the patient’s veracity. Pa-
tients with structural or metabolic disease of
the nervous system usually show immediately
increasing neurologic dysfunction as the drug
is injected. Neurologic signs not present prior
to the injection of amobarbital (such as ex-
tensor plantar responses or hemiparesis) may
appear after only a small dose has been intro-
duced, and behavioral abnormalities, especially
confusion and disorientation, grow worse. On
the other hand, patients with psychogenic un-
responsiveness or psychogenic excitement fre-
quently require large doses of amobarbital be-
fore developing any change in their behavior,
and the initial change is toward improvement
in behavioral function rather than worsening
of abnormal findings. Thus, a patient appar-
ently stuporous may fully awaken after several
hundred milligrams of Amytal and carry out a
rational conversation (see Patient 6–3). A stu-
porous and withdrawn patient who is catatonic
may become fully rational. An excited patient
may calm down and demonstrate that he or she
is alert, is oriented, and has normal cognitive
functions. Patients in nonconvulsive status epi-
lepticus may also awaken (see page 281).
In a few instances, even the Amytal interview
does not make a distinction between organic
and psychologic delirium. In such instances, the
patient must be hospitalized for observation
while a meticulous search for a metabolic
cause of the delirium is made. In one of our
patients, a diagnosis of catatonic stupor, al-
though strongly suspected, did not make itself
certain until the patient fully awoke after a
thorough diagnostic evaluation had proved un-
informative and electroshock therapy was ini-
tiated.
35
Once a psychogenic basis for unre-
sponsiveness is established, a more extensive
developmental and psychiatric history must be
obtained to determine the type of psychiatric
Figure 6–1. (B) (continued ).
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
307
disturbance. The exact psychiatric diagnosis will
determine the treatment. While the Amytal in-
terview is a relatively safe procedure for diag-
nostic purposes, and is the first line treatment
for catatonia,
35
most psychiatrists do not rec-
ommend it for treatment if the patient relapses
into psychogenic unresponsiveness after the
diagnosis has been made. Intravenous barbitu-
rates given with the assumption that they will
remove a symptom can be hazardous, because
the patient who has resolved his or her conflict
by developing the conversion symptom may
develop more serious psychologic disturbances
should the symptom abruptly be removed.
36
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308
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
Chapter
7
Approach to Management
of the Unconscious Patient
A CLINICAL REGIMEN FOR DIAGNOSIS
AND MANAGEMENT
PRINCIPLES OF EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT
Ensure Oxygenation, Airway,
and Ventilation
Maintain the Circulation
Measure the Glucose
Lower the Intracranial Pressure
Stop Seizures
Treat Infection
Restore Acid-Base Balance
Adjust Body Temperature
Administer Specific Antidotes
Control Agitation
Protect the Eyes
EXAMINATION OF THE PATIENT
Verbal Responses
Respiratory Pattern
Eye Opening
Pupillary Reactions
Spontaneous Eye Movement
Oculocephalic Responses
Caloric Vestibulo-Ocular Responses
Corneal Responses
Motor Responses
Tendon Reflexes
Skeletal Muscle Tone
GUIDES TO SPECIFIC MANAGEMENT
Supratentorial Mass Lesions
Infratentorial Mass Lesions
Metabolic Encephalopathy
Psychogenic Unresponsiveness
A FINAL WORD
A CLINICAL REGIMEN
FOR DIAGNOSIS
AND MANAGEMENT
Of the acute problems in clinical medicine, none
is more challenging than the prompt diagnosis
and effective management ofthe patient in coma.
The challenge exists in part because the causes
of coma are so many and the physician pos-
sesses only a limited time in which to make the
appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic judg-
ments. Coma caused by a subdural or epidural
hematoma may be fully reversible when the
patient is first seen, but if treatment is not
promptly undertaken, the brain injury may be-
come either irreparable or fatal within a very
short period of time. A comatose patient suf-
fering from diabetic ketoacidosis or hypoglyce-
mia may rapidly return to normal if appropriate
treatment is begun immediately, but may die
or be rendered permanently brain damaged if
treatment is delayed. In extradural hematoma,
meticulous evaluation of acid-base balance and
substrate availability is not only useless, but it is
309
also dangerous, because precious time may be
lost. In untreated diabetic coma, time spent per-
forming imaging is meddlesome, fruitless, and
potentially dangerous.
The physician evaluating a comatose patient
requires a systematic approach that will allow
directing the diagnostic and therapeutic en-
deavors along appropriate pathways. The pre-
ceding chapters of this text presented what
may appear to be a bewildering variety of dis-
ease states that cause stupor or coma. However,
these chapters have also indicated that for any
disease or functional abnormality of the brain
to cause unconsciousness, it must either (1)
produce bilateral dysfunction of the cerebral
hemispheres, (2) damage or depress the phys-
iologic activating mechanisms that lie along the
central core of the upper brainstem and dien-
cephalon, or (3) metabolically or physiologically
damage or depress the brain globally. Condi-
tions that can produce these effects can be
divided into (1) supratentorial mass lesions that
compress or displace the diencephalon and
brainstem, (2) infratentorial destructive or ex-
panding lesions that damage or compress the
reticular formation, or (3) metabolic, diffuse,
or multifocal encephalopathies that affect the
brain in a widespread or diffuse fashion. In ad-
dition, the clinician must be alert to unre-
sponsiveness of psychiatric causes. Conditions
associated with loss of motor response but in-
tact cognition must be excluded as etiologies
(e.g., brainstem infarction, degenerative loss of
motor nerves, or acute peripheral neuropathy
[Guillain-Barre´ syndrome] producing a locked-
in state
1
). Using these physiologic principles,
one may considerably narrow the diagnostic
possibilities and start specific treatment rap-
idly enough to make a difference in outcome.
This chapter outlines a clinical approach that
in most instances allows the physician to assign
the cause of unresponsiveness promptly into
one of the above four main categories while
preventing irreversible damage to the patient’s
brain.
The key to making a categorical clinical di-
agnosis in coma consists of two steps: first, the
accurate interpretation of a limited number of
physical signs that reflect the integrity or im-
pairment of various levels of the brain, and sec-
ond, the determination of whether structural
or metabolic dysfunction best explains the pat-
tern and evolution of these signs. As Table 7–1
indicates, each of these pathophysiologic cate-
gories causes a characteristic group of symptoms
and signs that usually evolve in a predictable
manner. Once the patient’s disease can be as-
signed to one of the three main categories, spe-
cific radiographic, electrophysiologic, or chem-
ical laboratory studies can be employed to make
disease-specific diagnoses or detect conditions
that potentially complicate the patient’s man-
Table 7–1 Differential Characteristics
of States Causing Sustained
Unresponsiveness
I. Supratentorial mass lesions compressing
or displacing the diencephalon or brainstem
Signs of focal cerebral dysfunction present
at onset
Signs of dysfunction progress rostral to caudal
Neurologic signs at any given time point
to one anatomic area (e.g., diencephalon,
midbrain-pons, medulla)
Motor signs often asymmetric
II. Subtentorial masses or destruction causing coma
History of preceding brainstem dysfunction
or sudden onset of coma
Localizing brainstem signs precede or
accompany onset of coma
Pupillary and oculomotor abnormal findings
usually present
Abnormal respiratory patterns common
and usually appear at onset
III. Metabolic, diffuse, or multifocal coma
Confusion and stupor commonly precede
motor signs
Motor signs are usually symmetric
Pupillary reactions are usually preserved
Asterixis, myoclonus, tremor, and
seizures are common
Acid-base imbalance with hyper- or hypoventi-
lation is frequent
IV. Psychiatric unresponsiveness
Lids close actively
Pupils reactive or dilated (cycloplegics)
Oculocephalic responses are unpredictable;
oculovestibular responses physiologic
for wakefulness (i.e., nystagmus is present)
Motor tone is inconsistent or normal
Eupnea or hyperventilation is usual
No pathologic reflexes are present
Electroencephalogram is normal
310
Plum and Posner’s Diagnosis of Stupor and Coma
agement. Once diagnosis is made and treatment
started, changes in these same clinical signs and
laboratory tests can be used serially to extend
or supplement treatment (medical or surgical),
to judge its effect, and, as indicated in Chapter 9,
to estimate recovery and prognosis.
Many efforts have been made to find an ideal
clinical approach to the unconscious patient.
Most such approaches repeat or even enlarge
upon the complete neurologic examination,
which makes them too time consuming for
practical daily use. A few are admirably brief
and to the point (Chapter 2) (e.g., Glasgow
Coma Scale), but have been designed for lim-
ited purposes, such as following patients with
head injury; generally they provide too little
information to allow diagnosis or the monitor-
ing of metabolic problems. The recently de-
scribed FOUR score scale (Chapter 2) gives
more information, but is still limited.
2
The
clinical profile described in Chapter 2, which
has been employed extensively by ourselves
and others, has advantages. The examination
judges the normal and abnormal physiology
of functions described earlier in Chapter 2:
arousal, pupillary responses, eye movements,
corneal responses, the breathing pattern, skel-
etal muscle motor function, and deep tendon
reflexes. Most of these functions undergo pre-
dictable changes in association with localizable
brain abnormalities that can locate the lesion
or lesions. The constellation and evolution of
these abnormal functions in a given patient can
determine the cause of altered consciousness,
whether supratentorial (focal findings start ros-
trally and evolve caudally), infratentorial (focal
findings start in the brainstem), metabolic (lacks
focal findings, but evidence of diffuse fore-
brain dysfunction), or psychiatric (lacks focal
or diffuse signs of brain dysfunction).
PRINCIPLES OF EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT
No matter what the diagnosis or the cause of
coma, certain general principles of manage-
ment apply to all patients and should be ad-
dressed as one pursues the examination and
undertakes definitive therapy (Table 7–2). Al-
gorithms describing the initial management of
the comatose patient have also been published
(Figure 7–1).
Ensure Oxygenation, Airway,
and Ventilation
The brain must have a continuous supply of oxy-
gen, and adequate blood oxygenation depends
on sufficient respiration. Scrupulous attention
must be given to the airway and the lungs them-
selves. Check the airway. If the airway is ob-
structed, attempt to clear it by suctioning and
then arrange for a cuffed endotracheal tube to
be placed by a skilled practitioner. Prior to plac-
ing the tube, extend the head gently, elevate the
jaw, and ventilate the patient with 100% oxygen
using a mask and bag to ensure maximal possi-
ble blood oxygenation during the procedure.
Tracheal irritation usually produces a sympa-
thetic discharge with hypertension, tachycardia,
and occasional premature ventricular contrac-
tions. The increase in heart rate and mean arte-
rial pressure transiently raises intracranial pres-
sure, possibly worsening outcome,
4
an effect
that can be mitigated by lidocaine administra-
tion (either topically or IV), IV thiopental, or
propofol. Detailed reviews of rapid sequence
intubation address these and several other phar-
macologic agents used to ease intubation and
prevent complications.
5–7
The choice depends
on the specific clinical situation.
8,9
Rarely, par-
ticularly in hypoxemic patients, a vagal discharge
leading to bradycardia or cardiac arrest occurs.
Maximal oxygenation helps prevent cardiac ar-
rhythmias that otherwise may result from the
vagal stimulation. To place an endotracheal tube
usually requires the physician to extend the
neck, raising concern that the procedure may
Table 7–2 Principles of Management
of Comatose Patients
1. Ensure oxygenation
2. Maintain circulation
3. Control glucose
4. Lower intracranial pressure
5. Stop seizures
6. Treat infection
7. Restore acid-base balance and
electrolyte balance
8. Adjust body temperature
9. Administer thiamine
10. Consider specific antidotes (e.g., naloxone,
flumazenil, etc.)
11. Control agitation
Approach to Management of the Unconscious Patient
311
further damage an already injured cervical
spine. In any patient who may have suffered a
traumatic injury (obvious or suspected) requir-
ing intubation, the neck should be manipulated
as little as possible and fixed in a cervical collar.
(The same principle applies to testing oculoce-
phalic reflexes.) Several techniques exist for
intubating patients with suspected cervical cord
injuries. These include nasotracheal intubation,
the use of a laryngeal mask,
10
and fiberoptic en-
doscopic intubation.
11
However, in one series,
as many as 12% (37 of 308) of patients intubated
by physicians in one emergency department
were subsequently shown to have cervical spine
injuries,
12
but none suffered worsening neuro-
logic injury.
13
Whatever technique is used, the
most important point is that a skilled physician
should perform the procedure.
EVALUATE RESPIRATORY
EXCURSIONS
Arterial blood gas measurement is the most re-
liable method of determining adequate venti-
lation but, as a rule of thumb, if breath sounds
can be heard at both lung bases, and if the re-
spiratory rate is greater than 8 per minute, ven-
tilation is probably adequate. A pulse oximeter
placed on the finger allows continuous record-
ing of blood oxygenation and pulse rate, but may
slightly overestimate oxygen saturation in dark-
skinned individuals and is falsely elevated with
carbon monoxide intoxication. Noninvasive CO
2
monitoring, if available, is also useful. Patients
comatose from drug overdose or who are hy-
pothermic have depressed metabolism and re-
quire less ventilation than awake individuals.
The comatose patient ideally should maintain
a PaO
2
greater than 100 mm Hg and a PaCO
2
between 35 and 40 mm Hg.
After initial management, patients with
metabolic coma who are not intubated should
be kept in a semiprone Trendelenburg posi-
tion and turned from side to side each hour.
Others, particularly those with increased in-
tracranial pressure (ICP), are kept supine with
the head of the bed elevated 15 to 30 degrees.
It is necessary to perform chest physical ther-
apy frequently and to suction the airway using a
sterile technique. The inspissation of dried mu-
AIRWAY: intubate if GCS
≤ 8 and
pCO2 > 45 torr
BREATHING: maintain Sa02 > 90% pCO2 < 40torr
CIRCULATION: maintain MAP > 70 mmHg
Check fingerstick glucose and administer glucose if < 45 mg/dl; draw blood sample for
electrolytes, arterial blood gas, liver and thyroid function tests, complete blood count,
toxicology screen (blood & urine), ECG
Hyperventilation, mannitol 0.5–1.0 g/kg if clinical evidence of increased ICP/herniation
(some prefer 30ml 23.4% NaCl)
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