1 Palliative care, part 1 (Tintinalli) Flashcards
the goal of palliative care
to relieve the suffering of patients with serious illness
regardless of the patient’s prognosis, relief of suffering should be a primary goal for both emergency medicine and palliative care
remarks on hospice care
a branch of palliative care
a comprehensive program of palliative treatment that is appropriate when patients with chronic, progressive, and eventually fatal illness are determined to have a life expectancy of 6 months or less
remarks on palliative care
patient centered rather than disease centered
palliative care is guided by the axiom that distressing symptoms should be treated.
*it thus provides expert assessment and treatment of symptoms, including pain, dyspnea, and vomiting
most common reason for seeking care in the ED
pain
Unfortunately, only 60% of patients reporting pain receive pain medications
remarks on assisting surrogates in making EOL care choices for patients who lack decision-making capacity
assist them to make EOL care choices based on the patient’s own preference, values, and goals
describe a patient with decisional capacity
one who has the mental ability to
1) grasp and retain information about his or her condition,
2) weight risks and benefits
3) and demonstrate these abilities by verbalizing a medical decision
most common targets of symptom management
pain control
dyspnea
nausea/vomiting
constipation
agitation
the biggest obstacle to aggressive pain management with opiates
fear of respiratory depression
respiratory depression is not a sudden occurrence, but instead is part of a progression that starts with sedation, somnolence, and then respiratory depression
remarks on IV opiates
IV opiates reach maximum therapeutic levels and have peak effects or side effects at 6-10 minutes
Therefore, IV pain medications can be safely redosed every 15 minutes until relief is reached if potential adverse effects are monitored
how to manage dyspnea
When treating breathlessness/dyspnea in an opioid-naive patient,start with morphine at a dose of 0.05 mg/kg IV, and monitor for sedation and hypoventilation
This is half of the starting dose of morphine when it is used to treat pain.
Use a goal of maintaining a RR of at least 10-12 breaths/min.
Although opioids have traditionally been withheld due to concerns about respiratory depression, opioids are beneficial in treating the agitation and anxiety provoked by dyspnea
can be used to treat chemotherapy-induced N/V
ondansetron
steroids (dexamethasone)
can be used to treat N/V from increased intracranial pressure and bowel obstruction from cancer
steroids
can be used for refractory nausea in the palliative care setting
dopamine antagonists such as
haloperidol
droperidol
indications of metoclopramide
symptoms of diabetic gastroparesis
compression of the stomach due to tumor or ascites
medications that are indicated for agitation in palliative care
antipsychotics such as haloperidol
anxiolytics such as midazolam
opiates such as morphine
There is no evidence that these palliative interventions hasten death.
The causes of agitation in patients with terminal illness are multifactorial, including pain, effects of the terminal illness, anxiety, terminal restlessness, breathlessness, and mental anguish