SAQ 440 – Environmental – collapsed marathon runner with heat stroke and rhabdomyolysis
Model Answer
Environmental – collapsed marathon runner with heat stroke and rhabdomyolysis.
a. Differential diagnoses
- Heat stroke or heat exhaustion; heat stroke is most likely given hyperthermia and reduced GCS.
- Dehydration/hypovolaemia.
- Hypoglycaemia.
- Hyponatraemia or other metabolic disturbance.
- Serious infection including CNS infection.
- Seizure, intracranial haemorrhage, or head injury.
- Drug ingestion or withdrawal such as amphetamines, anticholinergics, thyroxine, or neuroleptic malignant syndrome.
- Thyroid storm.
b. Initial treatment aims
- Restore circulating volume with cooled IV crystalloid, for example 20 mL/kg initially with reassessment.
- Urgently cool the patient with a clear method and target core temperature.
- Support airway and breathing, and prepare for modified RSI/intubation if airway or ventilation becomes unsafe.
- Monitor core temperature, ECG, glucose, urine output, and electrolytes.
- Look for and treat alternative causes such as sepsis, trauma, or drugs.
c. Abnormalities and significance
| Abnormality | Significance |
|---|---|
| Urea 20 and creatinine 400 | Acute kidney injury. |
| CK 26,000 | Rhabdomyolysis. |
| Potassium 5.6 | Hyperkalaemia from renal failure/rhabdomyolysis, with arrhythmia risk. |
| Haemoglobin 180 | Haemoconcentration/dehydration. |
| Platelets 45 | Thrombocytopaenia/coagulopathy or DIC risk. |
| White cell count 23 | Stress response, dehydration, or infection. |
d. Next management
- Continue cooled IV crystalloid while monitoring volume status.
- Insert urinary catheter and target urine output around 1-2 mL/kg/hr; consider urinary alkalinisation if used locally and monitor pH.
- Continue active cooling.
- Refer to ICU; dialysis may be required if renal failure, hyperkalaemia, acidosis, or low urine output does not improve.
- Correct coagulopathy/blood product deficits and monitor serial electrolytes.
- Give empiric antibiotics if infection remains a significant possibility.
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