Diagnosis of death

Revision as of 05:38, 7 September 2017 by Mholtz (talk | contribs) (Categorized. Will require further modification)

Background

Patients frequently present to the emergency department in severe distress and expire, making diagnosis of death a critical skill for the EM physician. Pronouncing a patient dead has historically changed as medical technology has advanced, requiring more clarification. The definition or classification of death can also change based on the setting the patient is present in as well. For example in a mass casualty setting triaging a patient as "black" or dead, is done purely on the basis of responsiveness and spontaneous circulation and ventilation. [1] Interestingly there is not much training within medical education about pronouncing patients early in medical training, where one study cites only 30% of new interns know what is needed for pronunciation. [2] There is also significant pressure and weight on getting this final diagnosis right, and so missing any other potential etiologies that may masquerade as death is high stakes.

Differential Diagnosis

  • Asystole
  • Brain Death
  • PEA
  • Drug overdose
  • Persistent Vegetative State
  • Hypothermia
  • Electrolyte Derangement
  • Hypotension
  • Acidosis or Alkalosis

Evaluation

Evaluation of the patient depends on the clinical setting the patient is in, as above, triage in settings of mass casualty changes the evaluation of death. The two main categories for diagnosis of death are cardiorespiratory and neurological.

Cardiorespiratory: No spontaneous respiratory effort accompanied with 5 minutes of asystole- causing inadequate cerebral perfusion for long enough to cause neurologic compromise.

Neurological: Two separate doctors must successfully declare the patient brain dead, preferably physicians skilled in neurological management, i.e. a neurologist or neurosurgeon.

  1. Patient in question needs to be uncoscious, apneic , and artificially ventilated.
  2. Clear etiology of severe brain injury.
  3. Consider all reversible causes of coma (differential above)
  4. Test brainstem reflexes, and demonstration they are absent
  5. Apnea testing [3]

Disposition

No disposition is needed. Take care to acknowledge family needs.

Further Reading

Drug overdose may mimic brain death [1]

Pronouncing Minnie, from annals of Emergency Medicine. [2]

References