AMS Triage - First Five Moves

- ABCs & Vitals: Secure airway (intubate if GCS ≤ 8), ensure adequate breathing/circulation, get a full set of vitals.
- Check Glucose: Immediate fingerstick. If <70 mg/dL, give 50mL of D50W IV.
- IV, O₂, Monitor: Establish IV access, apply supplemental oxygen, and place on a cardiac monitor.
- "Coma Cocktail": Consider based on clinical suspicion:
- Thiamine (100mg IV): Give before glucose in suspected alcohol use disorder or malnutrition.
- Naloxone (0.4-2mg IV/IM): For suspected opioid overdose (respiratory depression, pinpoint pupils).
- Initial Labs/Data: Draw blood for basic labs (CBC, BMP, LFTs, coags, tox screen), get an EKG, and a focused history (AMPLE).
⭐ Wernicke's Prevention: Always administer thiamine before glucose in patients with suspected chronic alcohol use or malnourishment to prevent precipitating Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome.
The AMS Jigsaw - Finding the Cause

📌 AEIOU-TIPS Mnemonic:
- Alcohol, Acidosis (DKA), Ammonia
- Electrolytes (esp. Na⁺), Endocrine (thyroid, adrenal), Encephalopathy
- Infection: Sepsis (UTI, PNA), CNS (meningitis/encephalitis)
- Opioids, Oxygen (hypoxia/hypercarbia)
- Uremia
- Trauma (TBI, subdural), Temperature, Toxins (TCAs, salicylates)
- Insulin (hypo/hyperglycemia)
- Psychiatric, Poisons
- Stroke, Seizure (post-ictal, non-convulsive), Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
⭐ In a patient with suspected alcohol use disorder and AMS, always administer thiamine before glucose to prevent precipitating Wernicke's encephalopathy.
Detective Work - Lab & Scan Plan
- Tier 1: Immediate & Bedside
- Fingerstick glucose: The fastest check.
- Vitals & EKG: Rule out hemodynamic or arrhythmic causes.
- Tier 2: Core Labs
- Bloodwork: CBC, BMP, LFTs, ammonia, coagulation panel.
- Gas analysis: ABG/VBG for acid-base disturbances.
- Toxicology: Urine drug screen, ethanol, salicylate, & acetaminophen levels.
- Infectious: Blood cultures, urinalysis, chest X-ray.
- Tier 3: Imaging & Specialized Tests
- Non-contrast head CT: The essential first scan for any undifferentiated AMS to rule out intracranial hemorrhage, mass, or hydrocephalus.
- EEG: Critical if non-convulsive status epilepticus is suspected, especially with a negative CT.
- Lumbar Puncture (LP): If meningitis/encephalitis is a concern (after CT).
⭐ Always obtain an EEG if a patient's mental status fails to improve despite a normal head CT and correction of metabolic derangements. Non-convulsive status epilepticus is a common, reversible, and often missed diagnosis.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The differential for AMS is broad; use mnemonics like AEIOU-TIPS to structure your approach.
- Always check fingerstick glucose immediately; hypoglycemia is a common and reversible cause.
- In suspected Wernicke's encephalopathy (alcoholism, malnutrition), give thiamine before administering glucose.
- Delirium is an acute and fluctuating disturbance in attention, unlike the chronic progression of dementia.
- Suspect opioid overdose with the triad of respiratory depression, miosis, and CNS depression.
- Have a low threshold for lumbar puncture if infection (meningitis/encephalitis) is suspected.
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