July 2020 Critical Care Case of the Month: Not the Pearl You Were Looking For...
Wednesday, July 1, 2020 at 8:00AM
Rick Robbins, M.D. in bradycardia, brevetoxin, diagnosis, gastrointestinal, mortality, neurotoxic shellfish poisoning, oysters, red tide, shellfish poisoning, temperature reversal, treatment

Yuet-Ming Chan MD1

David C. Miller MD2

Farshad Shirazi MD3

Janet Campion MD2

1Department of Medicine, 2Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine and 3Arizona Poison and Drug Information Center

University of Arizona School of Medicine

Tucson, AZ USA

 

History of Present Illness

A 75-year-old man presented with unsteady gait, difficulty concentrating and abdominal pain with loose stools. One day prior to admission, he experienced waxing and waning nausea, cramping abdominal pain, one episode of emesis and loose stools. He described acute gait disorder related to difficulty with balance. Due to concern for dehydration, he drank 10-12 cans of carbonated water without further emesis. He also experienced vague and alternating sensations of feeling “hot” in half of his body and “cold” in the other half of his body. Forty-eight hours prior to presentation, he had just returned from a five-day trip to New Orleans.

PMH, SH, and FH

The patient has hypertension and hyperlipidemia that is well-controlled. Regular medicines include losartan, diltiazem, HCTZ and simvastatin. He is a professor of medicine. He had distant tobacco use with a 10 pk-yr history. He denies recreational drug use. He endorsed drinking one glass of wine per day during his recent trip. He had eaten oysters and redfin fish during his trip.

Physical Examination

Laboratory

Initial laboratory testing was notable for hyponatremia of 126, otherwise a metabolic panel, complete blood count, troponin, urinalysis, urine drug screen and thyroid stimulating hormone were unremarkable. EKG showed sinus bradycardia without ischemic changes. An abdominal flat plate (KUB) showed a nonspecific bowel gas pattern without evidence of obstruction. Chest x-ray was negative for acute cardiopulmonary abnormality.

He was given 1 liter of normal saline with improvement of sodium to 131, but his pulse remained low at 36. He also developed worsening nausea and mentation, was incoherent at times, and began telling staff that “I’m going to die.”

For the initial presentation of nausea, vomiting, bradycardia, hyponatremia, mental status changes, what is your leading diagnosis?

  1. Acute porphyria
  2. Excessive water intake
  3. Neurotoxic shellfish poisoning
  4. Recreational drug use
  5. Small cell lung cancer

Cite as: Chan Y-M, Miller DC, Shirazi F, Campion J. July 2020 critical care case of the month: not the pearl you were looking for. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2020;21(1):1-8. doi: https://doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc002-20 PDF

Article originally appeared on Southwest Journal of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep (https://www.swjpcc.com/).
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