Episode 197: Acute Agitation

Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast

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

Hosts:
Jonathan Kobles, MD
Brian Gilberti, MD

Download Leave a Comment Tags: Agitation, psychiatry, Toxicology

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 antipsych

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