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Rebaked Morsel: Pediatric Buckle and Greenstick Forearm Fractures

Pediatric EM Morsels

Trauma season is at hand and like all other pediatric emergency departments in the country, we find our ED breaking ( pun intended ) at the seams with orthopedic injuries. West, 2005. We see all different flavors of upper extremity injuries. Plint, 2006.

Fractures 290
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Episode 14: Thoracotomy

PHEM Cast

Emergency thoracotomy: “how to do it”. EMJ; 2005: 22-24. Emergency thoracotomy in thoracic trauma: a review. Emergency Department thoracotomy for the critically injured patient: Objectives, indications, and outcomes. World Journal of Emergency Surgery; 2006: 1:4. Hunt et al. Injury; 2006 (37): 1-19.

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Contrast Media Shortage of 2022 – Lessons Learned

EMDocs

Background and Context Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CECT) is of paramount importance in the emergency department (ED) due to its indispensable role in facilitating precise diagnostic outcomes. 3 A study of CT use trends in the ED has shown increasing use of CTs by almost 60% from 2005 to 2013. West J Emerg Med.

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Blood Pressure Management in Neurologic Emergencies: What Does the Evidence Say?

EMDocs

Introduction: Neurologic emergencies are common in the Emergency Department (ED), and blood pressure management is critical to immediate management. Poor blood pressure management can worsen the outcome of hemorrhagic stroke by increasing the risk of hematoma expansion, cerebral edema, and ischemia [8-14]. PMID: 11988609.

Stroke 98
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Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Ear Emergencies in the Department

Taming the SRU

Chief complaints involving the ear are a common occurrence in Emergency Departments across the US and include presenting symptoms such as ear pain or fullness, hearing loss, redness, trauma, vertigo, and foreign bodies. A retrospective analysis of the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS) from 2009 through 2011 identified 8.6

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Extracting External Auditory Canal Foreign Bodies

ACEP Now

Cantor is professor of emergency medicine and pediatrics, director of the pediatric emergency department, and medical director of the Central New York Regional Poison Control Center at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York. External auditory canal foreign body extraction outcomes. 2005; 46(4):172-8.

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SGEM#321: The Times they are a Changin’ for TXA in Epistaxis?

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Background: Epistaxis is a common Emergency Department (ED) complaint with over 450,000 visits per year and a lifetime incidence of 60% ( Gifford 2008 , Pallin 2005 ). You administer phenylephrine topically, reapply pressure and, consider the use of tranexamic acid (TXA).

EMS 52