Grand Rounds Recap 01.20.2021


Leadership Curriculum

Pitching an Idea

  • Identify your audience

  • Know yourself

  • Set your goals

  • Define current standards

  • Outline needs and resource costs

  • Sell it

  • Audience: 

    • Power dynamics - know the dynamics, if you have to do it in stages to build support

    • Personal relationships - do not bring this into the negotiations if avoidable as can change them

    • Culture differences - age, background, training, etc

    • Know what style your audience uses - see below

    • Know why should we do this and why shouldn’t we do this?

  • What is your style?

    • Avoidance 

      • Will eventually get there whether you want to get there or not

      • May back out early and may need another facilitator to push you

    • Compromising 

      • Goals are set but willing to compromise and know what they will compromise on

      • When they give something up and expect you to as well

    • Accommodating

      • Doesn’t want to make anyone mad

      • Values personal relationships and keeping everyone happy more than getting what they want

    • Competitive 

      • If I don’t win I don’t win, wants everything 

  • Goals

    • What is the ideal outcome

    • What is the settle point

    • What point do you walk away

  • Start on the same page

    • Define standards, an argument is only valid if both sides think so

    • Get as much objective data as you can

    • Weave in your audience’s own language as best you can

  • Real world implementation

    • Money and people are the things we need to know

    • What is it going to cost, what kind of people are needed

    • Thinking through all of the steps of implementation

  • Getting others to care - this is the real pitch!

    • The person pitching is always more important than the pitch itself

    • PRACTICE

    • Be excited and positive, read the room along the way

    • Keep it objective: don’t assign blame

    • Utilize any leverage you can

  • Knowing people along the way or knowing that the idea will fit the mission 

    • Sometimes no is not right now: this takes reading the room

    • More research, follow-up!

Final pitches included:

  • Knowing the key stakeholders and who you are pitching too

  • Pertinent data to support your idea

  • Understanding the counter-arguments, benefits, drawbacks, what are the settle points, and cut points 

  • Come up with possible solutions


qi/kt: TIa WITH drs. chuko and goff

Stroke: Acute neurologic injury that occurs due to cerebral, spinal, or retinal infarction or brain hemorrhage

Minor stroke: ongoing debate

  • Generally cited as NIHSS <5 or mRS 0-1

  • Others have adopted the description of “non-disabling”

TIA: time-based sudden onset of a focal neurologic symptom and/or sing lasting less than 24 hours and caused by reversible cerebral ischemia

  • Became a tissue dx - caused by focal ischemia without acute infarction

Epidemiology

  • TIA=0.3% of all ED visits in the US

  • 240K per year

  • 20-25% of strokes are preceded by TIA

Risk factors: 

  • HTN is #1

  • DM

  • HLD

  • A fib

  • Age

  • Smoking/ETOH

Pathophysiology

  • Embolic: discrete, prolonged (hrs), extracranial vs cardiac origin

  • Thrombotic: atherothrombotic based lesions 

  • Low flow/stenosis: short-lived (minutes) and often recurrent 

  • Cryptogenic: often a cortical pattern of ischemia w/o identifiable source

Localization 

  • Consider the vascular territory and consider the etiology based on the imaging 

  • Multiple lesions, consider more embolic with showering

  • Dense lesions in a vascular territory

  • Deeper brain structures - can be embolic or thrombotic but more unique (less likely to be these causes)

Morbidity

  • JAMA 2000

    • 90 days 10.5% returned to the ED w/ stroke, ⅕ within the first 2 days 

  • JAMA 2020

    • 2.4% develop strokes within 2 days

    • 2.8% develop strokes within 7 days

    • 4.1% develop strokes within 30 days

  • Change is from: 

    • Better at treating cardiovascular risk factors 

    • Change in definition

TIA Mimics

  • Migraine

  • Syncope

  • Peripheral vestibular process

  • Seizure, etc

  • Most common mimics: 

    • Migraine

    • Syncope

    • Peripheral vestibular disturbance, 

    • Seizure 

    • This was done after a full workup and final dx by a neurologist

History: 

  • Need to know LKN, duration, activity at onset

  • Symptoms: full neurological symptoms w/ severity and course

    • Other associated: headache, nausea, vomiting, LOC, chest pain

  • PMH: risk factors, personal stoke history

  • Family history: hypercoagulable disorders, stroke TIA

  • Collateral history: EMS report and family members 

  • Positive sx

    • Excess of central nervous system

    • More likelihood of a mimic (visual, motor (jerking), flashing lights, pain, paresthesia)

  • Negative sx

    • Loss or reduction of central nervous system neuron function

Physical Exam: 

  • Diligent and full exam - visual fields, dysphagia, and inability to walk are very important to document

Lab evaluation: 

  • CBC

  • BMP: metabolic abnormalities

  • Coags: PT/INR, PTT

  • Lipid Panel: 

    • SPARCL Study - For LDL range 100-190 

      • High dose atorvastatin vs placebo

      • ARR 2.2% 

      • NNT to prevent 1 stroke at one year - 258 and at 5 years 45

    • AHA guideline is that statins are recommended for patients with:

      • History of TIA

      • LDL >100. 

      • Target >50% reduction or less than 70

Cardiac evaluation

  • Cardiac disease is the most common cause of death in TIA diseases in long term follow up

    • LVH, A fib, and AV conduction abnormalities double the risk or cardiac events at 90 days

    • 10% of TIA patients showed A fib

      • 25% of these showed new onset

      • Additional 2% on 24 hour monitoring

  • 25% of ischemic strokes are classified as cryptogenic

    • Maybe indicate undetected paroxysmal AF likely accounts for a proportion of these events

  • High Sensitivity troponin

    • TRELAS study

      • 24% stroke patients w/ coronary culprit lesion found vs 79% in NSTEMI-ACS patients

      • 50% stroke patients had no angiographic evidence of CAD

      • Mechanism: likely type 2 MI or neurogenic heart syndrome

  • Echocardiogram

    • 10-18% with Cardiac source of embolism

    • 10-11% change in management

    • Actionable findings:

      • PFO

      • Akinetic apical segment

      • Complex aortic arch atherosclerosis

      • LV thrombus (surgical management or AC changes)

Imaging: 

  • Non-con Head CT initially - looking for bleeds or intracranial mimics 

  • CTA: looking for high grade stenosis as a cause

    • Similar recs from the AHA. 

  • MRI imaging as soon as possible 

    • MRI DWI: get changes within minutes - hyperintense signals due to cytotoxic edema within minutes. 

    • Sensitive 83-97% for early ischemia. 

    • DWI + 2-3x greater risk of stroke following TIA

    • MRI DWI: 32.5% showed acute infarction

    • MRI DWI: 35.2% showed ischemic lesions 

  • Vascular imaging sensitivities:

    • CTA: 77-90% 

    • MRA: 82-94%

    • Carotid US 70-90%

High Risk Criteria: 

  • Crescendo TIAs (very serious and should have the stroke team involved)

  • Symptomatic internal carotid stenosis >50%

  • Known/suspected cardiac source of embolism

  • Known hypercoagulable state including pregnancy, ABCD2 score >=3

  • Benefits of admission

  • Expedited diagnostic investigations

  • Ready access to thrombolysis

  • Early CEA

  • Greater opportunity for risk factor modification 

  • ABCD2 score: 

    • The Canadians: prospective validation: >5 high risk (31% sensitivity, 87% specificity at 7 days for a stroke)

    • >2, 94% sensitivity 12% specificity at 7 days

    • Annals in 2013: adequate risk start in the ED? NO - does not perform well

Treatment

  • DAPT- CHANCE and POINT trials

    • Starting ASA + clopidogrel within 12 hours of symptom onset reduces the 90 day stroke incidence at the cost of increasing bleeding rates when compared to ASA alone

  • THALES: Ticagrelor and ASA

    • Reduced risk of stroke after TIA (5 vs 6.3%)

    • Reduces risk at 30 days


taming the sru WITH dr. gawron

 Combined Trauma and Medical Resuscitation

  • 1.3% from the NHTSA medical emergencies precipitate MVCs (survey data)

  • 29% ‘black out’, 35% seizure, 11% Heart attack, 20% Diabetic reaction

  • Neuro emergencies as cause of accident 

    • MVCs suspicious for medical cause (110 patients):

      • 49% had seizure

      • 6.3% stroke

      • 1.8% ICH

    • Found down trauma: 

      • 2017 - 66% had acute medical condition alone, 7% major trauma, 10% both

  • Preparation

    • Keep in mind that the trauma team is a specialist - they are at risk for narrowing their focus

    • It is important for us to consider the big picture and understand the other etiologies 

  • Recognition:

    • Mechanism - single vehicle, “found down”, falls (esp elderly)

    • Risk factors: advanced age, medical conditions

    • Clinical clues: abnormal telemetry, pumps/line/tubes, neuro deficits, findings that doesn't match the mechanism

  • Performance under pressure

    • Stressors: 

      • Primary-those which arise from the demands on the task in front of us

      • Secondary - aspects of the situation that are unrelated to the challenge itself

        • Secondary are more likely to impair you performance 

      • Selective attention - allows us to focus on the task but can lead to worse performance if there are multiple inputs of information

    • Thinking under pressure - Dual-process theory

      • System 1: intuitive, unconscious reasoning that relies on heuristics

      • System 2: conscious, analytics 


Clinical knowledge: cyanotic congenital heart lesions WITH dr. kein

Cyanosis 

  • Peripheral: distal extremities, vasoconstriction, diminished peripheral blood flow

  • Central - blue discoloration around lips, tongue and sublingual, +/- peripheral

    • Low SaO2, abnormal hemoglobin

  • CHD, sepsis, respiratory disorders, hemoglobinopathies

  • Historical clues to cyanosis 

    • Feeding: diaphoresis, crying, decreased intake, increased time and decreased weight gain

    • Activity: irritability, decreased activity

    • Breathing: fast or irregular 

  • Physical exam findings: tachypnea, tachycardia, hepatomegaly , lethargy

Cyanotic Congenital Heart Diseases

  • Truncus Arteriosus: 

    • Single truncal valve that leads to an artery that splits to the aorta and PA w/ a large VSD

    • Equal pressures in the pulmonary and systemic - leads to early pulmonary HTN

    • Presents: birth to 2 months

    • Heart  failure, exam findings (bounding pulses)

    • CXR: cardiomegaly, right sided arch

    • EKG: Normal/RVH or LVH

  • Transposition of the Great Vessels

    • Aorta off RV and PA off LV

    • Presents at birth with severe cyanosis

      • 92% are diagnosed within the first day of life

    • Loud single S2

    • CXR: egg-on-a-string

    • EKG: RAD, RVH

  • Tricuspid atresia

    • No connection between RA and RV

    • Entirely dependent of the ductus for pulmonary perfusion

    • Presents: birth to 2 weeks (when the ductus closes)

    • Single S2

    • CXR: +/- small heart

    • EKG: LVH,  R/L Atrial enlarge

  • TAPVA

    • All 4 pulmonary veins don’t drain where they are supposed to

      • Most common is supra-cardiac

    • Presentation: obstruction dependent 

    • CHF, shock

    • No specific exam findings

    • CXR: snowman or figure 8

    • EKG: RAD, RVH, RAE

  • Tetralogy of Fallot

    • Large VSD, RVO tract obstruction, overriding aorta, RVH

    • R and L sided pressures are equal 

    • Cyanosis is dependent on the degree of obstruction

    • Presents: Birth to 2 weeks

    • Symptoms: tet spell - hypercyanotic spell that resolves with increased SVR / decrease preload (knee to chest)

      • Murmur

    • CXR: boot shaped heart

    • EKG: RAD, RVH

  • Ebstein’s Anomoly

    • Leaky and displaced tricuspid valve, with ductal dependent pulmonary blood flow

  • AV septal defect

    • Total mixing lesion

    • Frequently with Trisomy 21

      • 50% of kids with Trisomy 21 will have cardiac defect

  • Double outlet RV

    • Both the pulm and systemic arise from the RV, VSD dependent

  • Pulmonic atresia

    • Will present similarly to Tetralogy of Fallot

  • HLHS

    • Underdeveloped LV and small Aorta

    • Frequently present in shock 

Initial management of blue baby:

  • Hyperoxia test: give 100% for 10 minutes - if ABG <100, then cardiac in origin

  • Modified Hyperoxia test: put them on O2 in ED and put on pulse ox and see if up trends

  • STAT echo

  • Ductal Dependent (transposition, tetrology, epstein, critical pulm atresia) -prostaglandin E1 

    • 0.05mc/kg/min

    • Watch for APNEA, hypotension 

      • Be prepared to intubated

      • Maintain O2 sat 75-85% (higher can increase pulmonary circulation too much)

  • Judicious fluid management (nothing >10cc/kkg)

  • Early inotropic support

  • Cardiology and cardiac surgery consultants

Tet Spell Management: TOF, other RV outflow tract obstruction lesions (pulmonic stenosis)

  • Hyperpnea, tachypnea, agitation ->AMS, LOC, death

  • Stepwise treatment approach:

    • Knees to chest (with parental comfort)

    • 100% O2

    • Morphine (to calm agitation)

    • 5-10 IV fluid bolus (increase preload)

    • Phenylephrine infusion

    • Propranolol (to decreased HR and allow adequate filling)

Surgical Repair

  • General postop complications 

    • Postpericardiotomy syndrome (echo for effusion/tamponade, salicylates)

    • Pleural effusions - may be chronic

    • Infectious complications (2% will end up septic)

  • Modified Blalock-Taussig Shunt: Goal saturation of 70%

    • Shunt obstruction - should have a murmur

    • If suspect, start fluids and heparin

  • Arterial switch for Transposition lesions

    • When they are switched the coronary arteries are re-implanted. 

  • ED visits in children with CHD: many other reasons that are not cardiac related 

    • Important to remember that they have decreased reserves 

  • Adults w/ CHD: arrhythmias, endocarditis, bleeding and thromboembolic risk

    • Concomitant renal/lung/liver disease

    • Pre-existing EKG abnormalities (bundle branch)

    • Baseline O2 saturations 

    • Chest pain consideration

  • Much lower frequency of the pain being due to ischemia or ASC  


wellness grand rounds WITH dr. shewakramani

Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs: people are at different stages and at different stages people need different things

  • This can make it hard to figure out what is important and what your passion is

  • In residency often living in the physiological needs area

How wellness is approached in healthcare: do a lot of activities, yoga, massage

  1. These take time, we only have so much

  2. You can do all of this and feel great into the shift - what about during the shift? 

    • Your day can easily be ruined by patients and moments 

Bayleaf: 7 steps to a happy life/job/sucky day

  • First know when: recognize what your trigger is

  • The steps work sequentially but are interconnected/interdependent

  • B: Breathe

    • Fight the natural desire to respond back to angry people/patients

    • Focus on the air entering and let it out 

    • This creates space to choose the most appropriate response, better response 

  • A: Accept

    • What it isn't: ignoring the issues and pretending everything is ok

    • What it is: it just is - you can’t change the problems, but now what?

      • There is no purpose in resisting 

    • Serenity prayer: things we can control, things we can influence, and things we have to accept/adapt.

      • Realizing that the only thing we have complete control over is you

      • Influence: we can share ideas but people may not accept this

      • Accept: elements of the issues you can neither control nor influence

  • Y: ask whY

    • Socrates: he got smarter by asking questions

      • The one thing that I know is that I know nothing

    • Why are you here? But asking in the way of kindness not bitterness 

      • Patients will pick up on the bitterness 

  • L: Listen

    • It is more than just hearing, it is paying attention to the people and how they move/react 

    • It is not waiting our turn to talk or leave the room

    • The best communication is when you can listen well and turn it around 

    • Who is coming into who’s life? 

    • People trust the person, not the degree

    • Nobody cares how much you know, until they know how much you care

      • Teddy Roosevelt 

    • Seek first to understand then to be be understood

      • Steve Covey 

    • Echoing: using someone else's words, it allows you to enter their world 

  • E: Empathize

    • Understanding feelings and be there with them 

    • Walk a mile in their shoes, or walk a mile in your shoes in a relevant situation

  • A: Appreciate

    • What it isn't: being sarcastic about it, sarcasm spreads

    • Finding something to learn from

    • What is this teaching me?

    • Feel grateful for things that you have, in the negatives things you can learn 

  • F: Forgive

    • This is a tough one, but all the prior steps have brought us here

    • You can’t just forgive, otherwise you will feel like a doormat

    • We can not expect our patients to be perfect and kind, they are uncomfortable