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Southwest Pulmonary and Critical Care Fellowships
In Memoriam
Saturday
Aug022014

August 2014 Critical Care Case of the Month: The Beans Are Done

Theodore Loftsgard RN, CNP

Zanele Manaka R.R.T., C.R.T.

Jocelyn Coy R.N.

Jared J. Jones, Pharm.D., R.Ph.

 

Division of Critical Care

Mayo Clinic

Rochester, Minnesota

 

Case Presentation

A 68-year-old woman was admitted to the ICU due to acute renal failure in setting of ovarian cancer recurrence.

She reports a two week history of abdominal pain with increased, loose ileostomy output, nausea, one episode of vomiting of food returns, and profound increasing generalized weakness. She states she has been voiding urine in normal frequency. She took her most recent dose of Xarelto 20mg the evening prior to presentation.

On ICU arrival, she was alert and oriented but pale and underweight with dry mucous membranes. She reported 2/10 generalized abdominal pain. Her blood pressure was stable. 

PMH

March 2013: Diagnosed with stage IIIC metastatic ovarian cancer.  She underwent extensive abdominal surgery including radical hysterectomy, diverting loop ileostomy and cholecystectomy.  Final pathology: grade 3 serous carcinoma involving omentum, descending colon, cecum and terminal ileum, both ovaries with implants on bilateral tubes and uterine serosa, right pelvic side wall, right diaphragm, 3 right paraaortic lymph nodes, and gallbladder. 

April 2013: She developed thrombus of the bilateral peroneal veins, left posterior tibial vein, and right soleal veins and was started on Lovenox She was recently transitioned to rivaroxaban (Xarelto).

February 2014: abdominal ultrasound showed numerous small, hypoechoic nodules and lesions throughout the liver which were worrisome for metastatic disease. She presented to the clinic today for a second opinion.

Current Medications

  1. Fentanyl 100 mcg/hr patch 72 hour 1 patch transdermally every 3 days
  2. Ibuprofen PRN
  3. Oxycodone PRN
  4. Rivaroxaban (Xarleto®) 20 mg daily
  5. Sertraline (Zoloft®) 25 mg daily

Past Medical/Surgical History

    Past Medical History   

  1. Craniocervical dystonia receives Botox injections.
  2. Ovarian cancer

    Past Surgical History  

  1. Appendectomy at 8 years old.
  2. Tonsillectomy.
  3. Laparoscopy in 1983 for infected Dalkon Shield.
  4. L5 bulging disk surgery in the 1990s.
  5. Total abdominal hysterectomy, bilateral salpingo-oophorectomies, cholecystectomy, lymphadenectomy, and tumor debulking for ovarian cancer March 2013.

Physical Exam

Vital signs: height 164.3 cm, weight 42.90 kg, BSA(G) 1.40 M2, BMI 15.892 Kg/M2, temperature 36.4 °C, respiratory rate 13 breaths/minute, blood pressure 148/77 mmHg.  pulse 64/minute.  SpO2 98% on room air.

Heart: S1, S2 with no murmur, click, rub. Sinus rhythm, rate 64, no ectopy.

Lungs: Respirations symmetrical and easy with bilateral breath sounds clear to auscultation.

Abdomen: Slightly firm, nondistended, mild tenderness to palpation, bowel sounds present. Ostomy pink with dark brown liquid output in bag.

Electrocardiogram

Figure 1. ICU admission electrocardiogram.

Ultrasonography

Figure 2. Panel A: Static image from abdominal ultrasound of inferior vena cava. Panel B: Static image from abdominal ultrasound showing longitudinal axis of left kidney. Panel C: Static image from abdominal ultrasound showing longitudinal axis of right kidney. Lower panel: movie of ultrasound of inferior vena cava.

Which of the following is (are) true? (Click on the correct answer to proceed to the next panel)

  1. The electrocardiogram shows tall, peaked T waves
  2. The inferior vena cava is collapsed suggesting volume depletion
  3. There is hydronephrosis of the left kidney
  4. There is hydronephrosis of the right kidney
  5. All of the above

Reference as: Loftsgard TO, Manaka Z, Coy J, Jones JJ. August 2014 critical care case of the month: the beans are done. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2014;9(2):72-82. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc087-14 PDF

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