Episode 197: Acute Agitation

Episode 197: Acute Agitation

Author: Core EM June 3, 2024 Duration: 0:00

We discuss an approach to the acutely agitated patient and review medications commonly used.

Hosts:
Jonathan Kobles, MD
Brian Gilberti, MD

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Show Notes

Background/Epidemiology

Definition and Scope: Agitation encompasses behaviors from restlessness to severe altered mental states. It’s a common emergency department presentation, often linked with acute medical or psychiatric emergencies.

Significance: Patients with agitation are at high risk for morbidity and mortality, necessitating prompt and effective management to prevent harm to themselves and healthcare providers.

A Changing Paradigm in Describing Agitation

Terminology Shift: Move away from terms like ‘excited delirium’ due to their politicization and stigmatization. Focus on describing agitation by severity and underlying causes.

Agitation as a Multifactorial Process

Complex Nature: Recognize agitation as a result of various factors, including medical, psychiatric, and environmental influences.

Recognizing Agitation

Signs and Symptoms: Identify agitation early by monitoring for behaviors such as hostility, pacing, non-compliance, and verbal aggression.

Initial Evaluation

Severity Assessment: Determine the severity of agitation and prioritize reversible causes and life-threatening conditions.

Diagnostic Steps: Perform vital signs check, blood glucose levels, ECG, and a targeted medical screening exam.

Life Threats

Immediate Concerns: Identify and address immediate life threats such as hypoxia, hypoglycemia, trauma, and acute neurological emergencies.

Forming a Differential Prior to Treatment

Prioritization: Severe agitation requires immediate treatment to facilitate further evaluation and reduce risk of harm.

Physician/Staff Safety

Safety Measures: Ensure personal and team safety by maintaining a calm environment and preparing for potential violence.

Multimodal Approach

Self-check In: Physicians should mentally prepare and approach the situation calmly to ensure effective management.

Verbal De-escalation: Use techniques focused on safety, therapeutic alliance, and patient autonomy to manage agitation non-pharmacologically.

Medication Administration

Oral/Sublingual Medications: Consider oral medications for less severe cases to maintain patient autonomy and avoid invasive procedures.

IM or IV Medications: Use intramuscular or intravenous medications for rapid control in severe cases.

Specific Medication Regimens

PO Regimens:

Medications: Antipsychotics like Zyprexa (olanzapine) 5-10 mg, benzodiazepines like Ativan (lorazepam) 1-2 mg.

Benefits: Empower patients with a sense of autonomy, avoid injection-related trauma.

Pharmacokinetics:

Olanzapine: Onset in 15-45 minutes, peak effect in 1-2 hours, duration 12-24 hours.

Lorazepam: Onset in 30-60 minutes, peak effect in 2 hours, duration 6-8 hours.

IV/IM Regimens:

Medications: Droperidol, haloperidol, midazolam, ketamine.

ACEP 2023 Guidelines: Recommend droperidol with midazolam or an atypical antipsychotic for severe agitation.

Pharmacokinetics (IM):

Haloperidol: IM onset in 15, time to sedation ~25 minutes, can last for 2 hours

Droperidol: IM onset in 5-10 minutes, duration 2-4 hours but can last as long as 12 hours

Midazolam: IM onset ~15 minutes, , duration 20 minutes – 2 hours.

Lorazepam: IM onset ~15-30 minutes, , duration up to 3 hours

Ketamine: IM onset in ~5 minutes, duration 5-30 minutes.

Special Situations

Elderly/Dementia: Optimize environment, use non-pharmacologic measures, avoid benzodiazepines to reduce delirium risk.

Parkinson’s Disease: Avoid antipsychotics that can precipitate a Parkinsonian crisis.

Autism/Pediatrics: Engage caregivers, create a calming environment, avoid aggressive measures.

Alcohol Withdrawal: Utilize benzodiazepines and phenobarbital.

Re-dosing and Physical Restraints

Re-dosing: Use the lowest effective dose, consider continuous monitoring, and reassess frequently.

Physical Restraints: Employ as a last resort, ensuring close monitoring for any adverse effects.

Final Points

Clinical Leadership: Physicians should lead with clear communication, planning, and support for the team.

Continuous Learning: Regular debriefing and assessment after each incident to improve future responses.

 


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There’s a particular kind of pressure that comes with working in an emergency department, where decisions need to be both swift and sound. Core EM-Emergency Medicine Podcast exists in that space, offering a direct line to the essential knowledge and clinical reasoning that emergency medicine demands. Created by the team at Core EM, each episode feels less like a formal lecture and more like a focused conversation with a trusted colleague. You’ll hear discussions that break down critical topics, from managing common presentations to unraveling complex, high-acuity cases, all grounded in current evidence and practical reality. This podcast serves as a reliable resource for physicians, residents, and advanced practice providers looking to solidify their foundation or stay sharp on the latest evidence. It’s about cutting through the noise to deliver core content that’s immediately applicable at the bedside. Tune in for a clear, concise, and always relevant dive into the principles that define emergency care, designed to fit into a busy clinician’s life between shifts or during a commute.
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