Mental Health Monthly #17: Mania

Mental Health Monthly #17: Mania

Contributors:

Andrew White MD - Outpatient Psychiatrist; Fellowship Trained in Addiction Psychiatry; Denver Health

Travis Barlock MD - Emergency Medicine Physician; Swedish Medical Center

Summary

In this episode of Mental Health Monthly, Dr. Travis Barlock hosts Dr. Andrew White to discuss the elements of mania that may be encountered in the emergency department. The discussion includes a helpful mnemonic to assess mania, work-up and treatment in the ED, underlying causes of mania, mental health holds, inpatient treatment, and the role of sleep in mania.

Educational Pearls

  • Initial assessment of suspected mania can be done via DIGFAST:

    • Distractibility - Individual that is unable to carry a linear, goal-directed conversation

    • Impulsivity - Executive functioning is impaired and patients are unable to control their behaviors

    • Grandiosity - Elevated mood and sense of self to delusions of grandeur

    • Flight of ideas - Usually described as racing thoughts

    • Agitation - Increase in psychomotor activity; start several projects of which they have little previous knowledge

    • Sleep decrease - Typically, manic episodes start with insomnia and can devolve into multiday sleeplessness

    • Talkativeness - More talkative than usual with pressured speech and a tangential thought process

  • Interviewing patients requires an understanding of mood-based mania vs. psychosis-based mania

    • An individual with mood-based mania will more likely be restless, whereas a patient with psychosis-based mania will be more relaxed from a psychomotor standpoint

  • Treatment of manic patients in the ED includes the use of antipsychotics to manage acute symptomatology

    • Management can be informed and directed by the patient's history i.e. known medications that have worked for the patient

  • ED management of manic patients involves a work-up for a broad differential including agitated delirium, substance-induced mania, metabolic disorders, and autoimmune diseases.

  • Some individuals experience manic episodes from marijuana and other illicit substances

  • Antidepressants used in bipolar patients for suspected depression may induce mania

    • Important to avoid using antidepressants as first-line therapy

  • Mental health holds can be beneficial in patients with grave disabilities from mania

    • Oftentimes, undertreatment of manic episodes leads to re-hospitalization

  • Inpatient treatment:

    • Environment is important - ensure that patients get solo rooms if possible to minimize stimulation

    • Antipsychotics, including risperidone and olanzapine, with or without a benzodiazepine, are useful for short-term agitation

    • Long-term treatment involves coupled pharmacological treatments with non-pharmacological treatments

  • Sleep

    • Fractured sleep is one of the earliest warning signs that someone has an imminent manic episode

    • Poor sleep can be an inciting factor for mania, which then turns into a cycle that further propagates a patient's manic episode

Summarized and edited by Jorge Chalit, OMSII | Studio production by Jeffrey Olson, MS2

Jaksot(1145)

Podcast 678: ECMO for Refractory VFib

Podcast 678: ECMO for Refractory VFib

Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Refractory ventricular fibrillation, defined as 3 defibrillation shocks without resolution, was studied via RCT looking to compare ECMO with cardiac...

8 Kesä 20213min

Podcast 677: Oatmeal Cream for Hand Eczema

Podcast 677: Oatmeal Cream for Hand Eczema

Contributor: Jared Scott, MD Educational Pearls: Hand eczema is present in about 10% of the population and has a great prevalence in hairdressers, healthcare workers, and food service employees Usin...

7 Kesä 20214min

Podcast 676: Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis

Podcast 676: Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis

Contributor:  Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Patients with cirrhosis and ascites are frequently evaluated for spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, an infection of the ascites fluid that is not fro...

31 Touko 20214min

Pharmacy Phriday #10: Colorado Pharmacists Association 2020 Opioid Prescribing and Treatment Guidelines

Pharmacy Phriday #10: Colorado Pharmacists Association 2020 Opioid Prescribing and Treatment Guidelines

This week's Pharmacy Phriday features a short excerpt from a longer podcast released as promo for the Colorado's CURE initiative, Clinicians United to Resolve the Epidemic, that combats the opioid cri...

28 Touko 202121min

Podcast 675: CHF like it's 1966

Podcast 675: CHF like it's 1966

Contributor: Chris Holmes, MD Educational Pearls: Medicine is cyclical and practice is always evolving A description of recommended treatment for CHF from 1966 Give oxygen Give one dose morphine t...

26 Touko 20216min

Podcast 674: Facial Nerve Palsy in Kids

Podcast 674: Facial Nerve Palsy in Kids

Contributor: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Facial nerve palsy (Bell's palsy) can occur in pediatric patients with Lyme disease, viral infection, or even leukemia One trial sought out to find ...

25 Touko 20214min

Podcast 673: Leaving the ED with Naloxone

Podcast 673: Leaving the ED with Naloxone

Contributor: Don Stader, MD Educational Pearls: Patients are more likely to survive an opioid overdose if they have naloxone 10% risk of death in the year following an opioid overdose of patients see...

24 Touko 20216min

Podcast 672: Oxygen Things

Podcast 672: Oxygen Things

Contributor: Aaron Lessen , MD Educational Pearls: Patients on 10L or more of oxygen per minute in the ICU were randomized to oxygen goals of 90% or 96% to compare 90-day mortality rates Mortality ra...

18 Touko 20212min

Suosittua kategoriassa Tiede

tiedekulma-podcast
rss-mita-tulisi-tietaa
rss-poliisin-mieli
docemilia
radio-antro
utelias-mieli
filocast-filosofian-perusteet
rss-sosiopodi
ihanat-ipanat
mielipaivakirja
rss-bios-podcast
rss-duodecim-lehti
rss-ammamafia
rss-laakaripodi
rss-opeklubi