Rhabdomyolysis Flashcards

1
Q

Define rhabdomyolysis.

A

Rhabdomyolysis is the end result of any disease process that causes muscle cell (myocyte) lysis.

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2
Q

What is the pathophysiology of rhabdomyolysis?

A

Result of traumatic or medical damage to the sarcolemma (myocyte cell membrane) of skeletal muscle cells
There is subsequent release of intracellular ions, myoglobin, CK and urates results in:

  • electrolyte disturbances
  • acidaemia
  • DIC
  • AKI
  • multi-organ failure
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3
Q

What is the diagnostic criterion for rhabdomyolysis?

A

CK 5 times the upper limit of normal or > 1000 IU/L

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4
Q

How common is rhabdomyolysis?

A

Some degree of rhabdomyolysis among 85% of critically injured patients admitted to trauma ITU

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5
Q

What are the causes of rhabdomyolysis?

A
  • Traumatic or medical destruction of muscle fibres:
  • Trauma
  • Muscle ischaemia
  • Vascular injuries
  • Inherited muscle enzyme disorders
  • Seizures
  • Infections
  • Metabolic abnormalities

Drugs:

  • Cocaine, amphetamines
  • Narcotics and CNS depressants
  • Salicylate toxicity
  • Diuretics due to potassium depletion
  • Statins
  • Antipsyhotics
  • Antidepressants (sertraline, venlafaxine)
  • DPP4 inhibitors
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6
Q

What are the clinical features of rhabdomyolysis?

A
  • Muscle weakness
  • Pain/tenderness
  • Swelling of the affected body region
  • Check for any signs of compartment syndrome
  • General malaise
  • Dark urine - due to urinary myoglobin
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7
Q

What investigations should you do in rhabdomyolysis?

A

CK - levels 5 times limit of normal or over 1000 IU/L
Urinalysis
FBC, U&Es, uric acid, coagulation profile , LFTs
TSH - rule out as cause
ESR - screen for inflammatory myopathy
ANA - screen for autoimmune disease
Muscle biopsy - only indicated if genetic aetiology suspected

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8
Q

How do you manage rhabdomyolysis?

A

Aggressive rehydration - promotes clearance of intracellular muscular toxins; 400ml/hr and monitoring urine output

Other:

+/- Sodium bicarbonate - started by a specialist only; alkalinises the urine and prevents crystallisation of uric acid
+/- Diuretic - little evidence for this
Monitor and treat hyperkalaemia - potassium > 6mmol/L requires cardiac monitoring; treat with insulin and glucose infusions, and calcium gluconate to protect the heart
Dialysis - in AKI with intractable hyperkalaemia, hypervolaemia or metabolic acidosis

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9
Q

What are the complications of rhabdomyolysis?

A
  • AKI
  • Electrolyte abnormalities
  • Compartment syndrome
  • DIC
  • Multisystem failure
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10
Q

What is the prognosis with rhabdomyolysis?

A

Most make a complete recovery
Permanent damage is rare

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