Remove Documentation/Coding Remove Sepsis Remove Wellness
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Sepsis Screening Decreases Mortality. Well, not really.

Sensible Medicine

This comment might be one of the reasons I’ve been skeptical of sepsis screening. If there is one thing a medicine resident or hospitalist should be able to do well is identify the patients who are sick and need attention. Maybe because of my skepticism, I’ve found studies of sepsis screening interesting.

Sepsis 90
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Torsade in a patient with left bundle branch block: is there a long QT? (And: Left Bundle Pacing).

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

She was managed for sepsis with antibiotics including azithromycin, had hypotension with arterial and central lines placed and pressors. I do not see OMI here and all trops were only minimally elevated, consistent with either chronic injury from cardiomyopathy or with acute injury from sepsis. She was intubated.

EKG/ECG 117
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ECG Blog #366 — Diltiazem didn't work.

Ken Grauer, MD

Figure-2: I've color-coded P waves from Figure-1 according to P wave morphology ( See text ). NOTE: For clarity — I've color-coded P waves in the long lead II rhythm strip according to morphology. MAT almost always occurs in one of 2 common predisposing settings. Remember — 12 leads are better than one!

EKG/ECG 195
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Referrals

Mind The Bleep

However, as an F1, you may well know the patient best and therefore you may be best placed to refer the patient. She is otherwise in good health and is responding well to chemotherapy. could it be driven by a much more pressing sepsis ). We think she now needs inotropes and more ventilator support. rate control? ablation?).

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Putting Clinical Gestalt to Work in the Emergency Department

ACEP Now

Our nurse did not study Paul Ekman’s Facial Action Coding System for Action Units to code “fear” in the patient’s face. 4 However, emergency physicians rely on gestalt to predict outcomes well. However, more data can be extra noise, which is both time-consuming and can be misleading.

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The Latest in Critical Care, 2/5/24 (Issue #28)

PulmCCM

You can read the document here. Read the original document here. In 18 severe sepsis patients in 3 years at one center who underwent PET scanning (apparently done ad hoc), 14 of the 18 had positive tests, and 11 were true positives, leading to surgery in 2 and pacemaker removal in 2 (and longer / new antibiotics in 2).

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The DIMPLES study

Don't Forget the Bubbles

The DIMPLES study by PERUKI sought to investigate the incidence of new-onset diabetes in the paediatric population across the UK and Ireland, as well as the characteristics of these ED presentations, and to determine if SARS-CoV2 infection was involved. Which patients were involved? How good was this paper? Do you believe the results?