Rhabdomyolysis Flashcards
Define rhabdomyolysis.
Rhabdomyolysis is the end result of any disease process that causes muscle cell (myocyte) lysis.
What is the pathophysiology of rhabdomyolysis?
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
What is the diagnostic criterion for rhabdomyolysis?
CK 5 times the upper limit of normal or > 1000 IU/L
How common is rhabdomyolysis?
Some degree of rhabdomyolysis among 85% of critically injured patients admitted to trauma ITU
What are the causes of rhabdomyolysis?
- 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
What are the clinical features of rhabdomyolysis?
- 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
What investigations should you do in rhabdomyolysis?
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
How do you manage rhabdomyolysis?
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
What are the complications of rhabdomyolysis?
- AKI
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Compartment syndrome
- DIC
- Multisystem failure
What is the prognosis with rhabdomyolysis?
Most make a complete recovery
Permanent damage is rare