Mon.May 20, 2024

article thumbnail

An undergraduate who is an EKG tech sees something. The computer calls it completely normal. How about the physicians?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This was sent by an undergraduate (not yet in medical school, but applying now) who works as an ED technician (records all EKGs, helps with procedures, takes vital signs) and who reads this blog regularly. Edited by Smith He also sent me this great case. A 63 year old man with a history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, prediabetes, and a family history of CAD developed chest pain, shortness of breath, and diaphoresis after consuming a large meal at noon.

EKG/ECG 122
article thumbnail

When a Medicine Works but Overall Benefit is Minimal to None

Sensible Medicine

The story of reversal agents for anticoagulants exposes many of the complexities of treating human beings. I like the story and I think you will too. Some background, then to the ANNEXA-I study. The new anticoagulants are called direct acting oral anticoagulants or DOACs. Rivaroxaban (Xarelto) and apixaban (Eliquis) are the two most popular. These drugs surpassed the old one, warfarin, because of convenience, efficacy and safety.

Stroke 102
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

FitScriptâ„¢: Functional health quackery and a misleading alternative cancer cure testimonial

Science Based Medicine

Perusing the hellscape that is what Twitter has degenerated into as X, I found an alternative cancer cure testimonial, which led me into "functional health" nonsense that I hadn't encountered before. Introducing FitScript. The post FitScriptâ„¢: Functional health quackery and a misleading alternative cancer cure testimonial first appeared on Science-Based Medicine.

68
article thumbnail

Rosh Review My EMCert Monthly Question

RebelEM

A 67-year-old woman with a history of atrial fibrillation on apixaban presents to the ED for epistaxis that began 30 minutes ago. Her bleeding is difficult to control with direct nasal pressure and topical agents but resolves with silver nitrate cauterization. Her vital signs are within normal limits. How should this patient’s apixaban be managed? Administer a one-time dose of intravenous vitamin K Administer andexanet alfa Bolus 1 unit of prothrombin complex concentrate Give intravenous tranexa

EMS 59
article thumbnail

Explore the Frontiers of Pre-Hospital Care Research

RCEM Learning

The post Explore the Frontiers of Pre-Hospital Care Research appeared first on RCEMLearning.

article thumbnail

Early versus Later Anticoagulation for Stroke with Atrial Fibrillation

EM Ottawa

Methodology: 3/5 Usefulness: 2/5 Fischer U, et al. N Engl J Med. 2023 Jun 29;388(26):2411-2421. Question and Methods: RCT at 103 sites to compare outcomes at 30 days for early versus late DOAC initiation among patients with ischemic stroke and atrial fibrillation. Findings: Primary outcome (ischemic stroke, systemic embolism, major bleeding, vascular death) occurred in […] The post Early versus Later Anticoagulation for Stroke with Atrial Fibrillation appeared first on EMOttawa Blog.

Stroke 56
article thumbnail

Big-Rig Truck Braking Protocols That Keep Civilians Safe

Medical Law

Mastering truck braking techniques is crucial to preventing brake failure in semi-trucks. A fully loaded big rig truck weighs up to 30 tons, and it becomes a deadly hazard when the driver is unable to stop it, especially while traveling downhill. This is part of why brake failure is a leading cause of catastrophic truck accidents on the road. Sadly, a lot of trucking companies attempt to cut costs and save money by hiring inexperienced or inadequately-trained drivers who simply don’t know how to