Background: Neurological emergencies account for between 2.6 and 14% of medical emergencies, a number that can be salvaged, if addressed in time. This study aimed to answer the questions of demand, type and outcome of neurological emergencies by conducting a retrospective analysis of neurological emergencies serviced by 108, the first professional emergency service in India. Method: During the period between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2008, a total of 24,760 calls were received by 108, of which confirmed neurological emergencies (n = 14,448) were followed up and evaluated. Risk factor analysis and stratification were done with respect to survival outcome at 48/120 h. Results: The subjects had a mean age of 37.4 (±19.5) years, were mainly male (63%) and were victims of seizures (51.5%), stroke (24%) or unconsciousness (21%). Risk stratification observed that rural area (p < 0.001), emergencies of stroke and coma (p < 0.001), age (p < 0.001), lower vital sign measurements (p < 0.001) and time to reach hospital (p = 0.05) were the main risk factors. Conclusion: Emergency medical systems should implement a prehospital stroke protocol including the use of vital sign monitoring, point-of-care clinical diagnostics and advance forewarning systems. Geriatric clinics attending to the elderly age group, especially located in rural areas, with better identification of stroke and coma as medical emergencies, either through neuroimaging or clinical diagnostic facilities, will definitely improve outcomes. As seizures form a large chunk of neurological emergencies, genetic testing and counseling to detect hereditary causes could identify and keep most victims on regulated treatment in order to reduce adverse outcomes.
Abbreviations: DALY = disability-adjusted life years NGO = non-governmental organization PTSD = post-traumatic stress disorder WHO = World Health Organization Abstract Introduction: Behavioral emergencies constitute an important component of emergencies worldwide. Yet, research on behavioral emergencies in India has been scarce. This article discusses the burden, types, and epidemiology of behavioral emergencies in India. Methods: A computerized search of Medline, Psychinfo, and Cochrane from 1975 to 2009 was performed, and all articles were evaluated and collated. The results were summarized. Results and Conclusions: There is an acute need for psychiatric emergency services in India. Suicides, acute psychoses, and substance-related problems form the major portion of behavioral emergencies, while current trends show a rise in disaster-and terrorism-related emergencies. Saddichha S, Vibha P: Behavioral emergencies in India: Would psychiatric emergency services help? Prehosp Disaster Med 2010;26(1):65-70.
Behavioral emergencies constitute an important component of medical emergencies. Psychiatric emergency services, which handle the bulk of behavioral emergencies, are inadequate to meet the burden. Strategies to deal with them are also hampered by the lack of adequate research and availability of data. Since behavioral emergencies may present differently in different groups, requiring differing management, consensus guidelines need to be arrived at for tackling behavioral emergencies. In addition, training professionals for psychiatric emergency services should form a part and parcel of emergency management services.
Although there is sufficient evidence of manic switch induced by bupropion or electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in bipolar depression, the evidence is not robust for unipolar recurrent depression. We present two patients with unipolar recurrent depression, with no family history of bipolarity or relevant personal medical history, who switched states while on a possible combination of bupropion and ECT. We believe that a hypersensitive state caused by ECT may have been aggravated by the dopamine synergistic action of bupropion, causing the switch. As current guidelines (American Psychiatric Association versus the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence) give contradictory advice regarding the treatment of patients with severe depression especially about combining pharmacotherapy and ECT, such patients need to be carefully evaluated before being treated with ECT.
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