Remove Burns Remove Emergency Department Remove Wellness
article thumbnail

Diagnostics and Therapeutics: Vascular Access in the Emergency Department

Taming the SRU

However, in at least 10% of patients, blind insertion of a peripheral IV may be unsuccessful for a variety of reasons including obesity, edema, IV drug use, surgical scars, dialysis, burns, and others (1,2). Ann Emerg Med. Intraosseous vascular access in adults using the EZ-IO in an emergency department. Int J Emerg Med.

article thumbnail

But Can You Just PO?

Taming the SRU

Fluid management in the Emergency Department (ED) is crucial in the adequate resuscitation of the acutely ill and decompensating patient. Other conditions that lead to intravascular fluid depletion include but are not limited to starvation/dehydration, vomiting, diarrhea, burns/trauma, hyperglycemia, and hemorrhage.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

How to Best Inspect, Protect, and Dress Wounds in the Emergency Dept.

ACEP Now

About three percent of emergency department (ED) visits are due to skin and soft tissue infections, but data are lacking on the contribution of chronic wounds to this number. Hydrogel dressings are preferred for minor burns, partial- and full-thickness wounds, wounds with necrosis, and deep wounds with tunneling or sinus tracts.

Burns 97
article thumbnail

Bullous Skin Lesions, Meet Emergency Medicine

Taming the SRU

This differential is broad and reflects the clinical diversity of their presentations - in this post we will parse through the specifics of bullous lesions as well as what there is to do for them acutely. What can you do from the Emergency Department if suspected? What can you do from the Emergency Department if suspected?

article thumbnail

Don’t Forget About the IO in the Critically Ill Patient

RebelEM

CVC vs PIV The critically ill patient is often associated with pathology that makes IV access difficult such as shock state, hypovolemia, obesity, IV drug abuse, end-stage renal disease, cardiac arrest, as well as other conditions. World J Emerg Surg 2023 PMID: 36918947 3. Int J Emerg Med 2009 PMID: 20157465 4. Crit Care Med.

article thumbnail

High sensitivity cardiac troponins for ED chest pain evaluation (2022 ACC pathway)

ALiEM

Intermediate-risk patients may be further stratified based on recent stress testing or coronary angiogram findings plus a modified HEART or Emergency Department Assessment of Chest Pain (EDACS) score. Pulses are well felt in all four limbs. Low-risk patients do not routinely require stress testing in the ED. J Am Coll Cardiol.

EKG/ECG 110
article thumbnail

Three Ways for Emergency Medicine Docs to Practice Mindfulness

ACEP Now

Emergency physicians spend only 5 to 10 percent of their time for personal activities on shift. While there has been ample discussion of “the practice of mindfulness” in health care workers that improves mental well-being, when do we have this time? 13-15 Even the thought of gratitude can positively influence mental wellness.