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It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of July 26-30, 2021. We cover pediatric DKA, preventing and treating delirium, myocarditis in adults and children, and how to get a better glottic view.
Date: July 29th, 2021 Reference: Azizi et al. Optimal anatomical location for needle decompression for tension pneumothorax: A multicenter prospective cohort study. Injury 2021 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Robert Edmonds is an emergency physician in the Air Force in Ohio. This is Bob’s 14th episode cohosting the SGEM. DISCLAIMER: THE VIEWS AND OPINIONS OF THIS PODCAST DO NOT REPRESENT THE […] The post SGEM#339: I Don’t Need this Pressure On – Chest Wall Thickness at Needle Decompression Site first appear
Some useful videos: Hopefully you found the podcast interesting, but since this is quite a visual topic we have put together some videos to demonstrate some of the pathologies discussed and what they look like on ultrasound: How does ultrasound work? Want to know how to use ultrasound? This is a whole 45 minute introductory lecture. Although a face-to-face course is really required before you start on patients!
Speaker: Simran Kaur, Co-founder & CEO at Tattva.Health
AI is transforming clinical trials—accelerating drug discovery, optimizing patient recruitment, and improving data analysis. But its impact goes far beyond research. As AI-driven innovation reshapes the clinical trial process, it’s also influencing broader healthcare trends, from personalized medicine to patient outcomes. Join this new webinar featuring Simran Kaur for an insightful discussion on what all of this means for the future of healthcare!
In this main episode podcast we discuss the conservative management of large spontaneous pneumothorax, when a pigtail chest tube with Heimlich valve is indicated, detection of persistent air leak, removal of chest tube, surgical indications for spontaneous pneumothorax, management pitfalls and more. The post Ep 158 Management of Primary Spontaneous Pneumothorax appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
The GEL Jr. team is back with another great use for pediatric POCUS! You might not have known that you can actually use ultrasound to confirm that your endotracheal tube is in the right place! But how good is it?? [link] [link] The GEL Jr. team is back with another great use for pediatric POCUS! You might not have known that you can actually use ultrasound to confirm that your endotracheal tube is in the right place!
It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of July 19-23, 2021. We cover treatment of blunt cerebrovascular injury, CNS and PNS side effects of metronidazole, chest POCUS or CXR for PTX, performance of the Canadian syncope rule in a different demographic, and more HEART score woes.
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It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of July 19-23, 2021. We cover treatment of blunt cerebrovascular injury, CNS and PNS side effects of metronidazole, chest POCUS or CXR for PTX, performance of the Canadian syncope rule in a different demographic, and more HEART score woes.
Background Renal colic is a commonly encountered diagnosis in the emergency department that is known to cause significant pain. In clinical practice, the initial goal is prompt pain management while simultaneously working to confirm the suspected diagnosis. Because of the severity and acuity of the pain associated with renal colic, opioid pain management has often been used.
Date: July 14th, 2021 Reference: Pernica et al. Short-Course Antimicrobial Therapy for Pediatric Community-Acquired Pneumonia: The SAFER Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Pediatr. 2021. Guest Skeptic: Dr. Andrew (Andy) Tagg is an Emergency Physician with a special interest in education and lifelong learning. He is the co-founder of website lead of Don’t Forget the Bubbles (DFTB).
So it is with gradual amazement and a great sense of accomplishment that we have witnessed the remarkable interest that our field of acute care has taken in VExUS. This has also been tempered by the humility of experience, as all of us have seen fads come and go, and also because an interventional approach based on VExUS is not yet evidence-based, as the studies remain to be done, some being underway.
In this month's EM Quick Hits podcast: Arun Sayal on the nuances of assessment for scaphoid fractures, Justin Morgenstern on the evidence for therapeutic hypothermia post-arrest and the TTM2 trial, Sarah Reid on HEADS-ED mental health screening tool for children, youth and young adults, Andrew Petrosoniak on pelvic trauma and pelvic binder tips and pitfalls, Michelle Klaiman on what we need to know about Kratom and Anand Swaminathan on why femoral lines are often a great central line choice.
It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of July 12-16, 2021. We cover high risk pediatric bruising, urine concentration and UA accuracy, atrial fibrillation management, shorter NPO time for formula fed infants, and TTM2, which showed normothermia was as good as hypothermia post-arrest.
Want to experience the greatest in board studying? Check out our interactive question bank podcast- the FIRST of its kind here: [link] This week Iltifat and Blake are reunited in Alabama on the Bayou. When faced with kayaking, camping, and gators, its time for us to review myths and proper treat drowning and submersion injuries. Want to experience the greatest in board studying?
Case submitted by Dr. Mike Runyon, written by Meyers, Grauer, and Smith A child between the ages of 5 and 10 was brought in by parents for new onset recurrent episodes that were interpreted as most likely panic attacks. Before arriving at that diagnosis, the providers wanted to make sure all other diagnosable causes were ruled out. An ECG was ordered and is shown below.
Istruzioni per il lettore: nel testo si riportano accorgimenti maturati nella mia piccola esperienza (quindi perfettamente opinabili), unita a dati emersi dalla letteratura. Qualsiasi impostazione ventilatoria è su indicazione e condivisione medica (per gli amanti delle diagnosi infermieristiche si tratta di un problema collaborativo). Non si discuteranno le prestazioni, tipologie di interfaccia e modelli di … Leggi tutto NIV, come iniziare?
Eight patients presented with potentially ischemic symptoms and T-wave inversions. Which had occlusion MI, which were reperfused and which were reoccluded? Jesse McLaren helps you discover the nuances of Wellens syndrome and T-wave inversions on this month's ECG Cases blog. The post ECG Cases 23 – Wellens syndrome, reperfusion and reocclusion MI appeared first on Emergency Medicine Cases.
It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of July 5-9, 2021. We cover the impact of pharmaceutical company payments on physician prescribing behavior, NoPAC RCT on TXA for epistaxis, a point-counterpoint on LP vs no LP after negative head CT for potential SAH, and the STYLETO RCT on using an ETT stylet vs none in critically ill patients.
Want to experience the greatest in board studying? Check out our interactive question bank podcast- the FIRST of its kind here: [link] This week Iltifat and Blake are reunited in Alabama on the Bayou. When faced with kayaking, camping, and gators, it’s time for us to review myths and proper treat drowning and submersion injuries. Want to experience the greatest in board studying?
The frontal chest x-ray is from a 79 year old septic patient with cough and dyspnoea. What can be noticed? What group of organisms need particular attention with this x-ray appearance?
Date: July 1st, 2021 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Justin Morgenstern is an emergency physician and the creator of the #FOAMed project called First10EM.com. Reference: Dankiewicz et al: TTM2 Trial Investigators. Hypothermia versus Normothermia after Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest. NEJM 2021 Case: A 58-year-old man collapsed in front of his family. When paramedics arrived, they found him to be in […] The post SGEM#336: You Can’t Always Get What You Want – TTM2 Trial first appeared on The Skeptics Guide to E
EMplify – July 2021 Announcements: Be on the lookout for an announcement regarding the new EB Medicine app, coming to an App Store near you this month !! HIV- An Interview With Dr. Daniel Egan See the EB Medicine Article @ [link] Why HIV? 2018 , 1,2 million people living with HIV, almost 40k new infections People living with HIV visit the ED 3 x per year on average HIV infected patients accounted for 6 in 1000 ED visits in 2017 New Transmission of HIV, Figure 1 What does acute infection look li
Welcome back to the tasty morsels of critical care podcast. Today we’ll look at everyone’s favourite yeast – Candida. Firstly, remember the distinction between yeasts and moulds. Yeasts, like Candida species are single celled critters whereas moulds like aspergillus are. Read More » Welcome back to the tasty morsels of critical care podcast. Today we’ll look at everyone’s favourite yeast – Candida.
It’s the JournalFeed Podcast for the week of Jun 28-Jul 2, 2021. We cover POCUS for diverticulitis, postpartum hemorrhage, impact of physicians age and gender on patient perception, procalcitonin vs MASCC score for febrile neutropenic patients, and parsing ST elevation from benign early repolarization or early STEMI.
Want to experience the greatest in board studying? Check out our interactive question bank podcast- the FIRST of its kind here: emrapidbombs.supercast.tech All aboard the TRALI, its time for TACO Tuesday. Wow how often can you fit the entirety of our podcast in one catchy sentence?? Lets dig into these commonly tested transfusion reactions. Want to experience the greatest in board studying?
Patients and physicians who have the devices listed below and use the mylife Cloud and/or mylife Mobile Application should update to the current version of the application and update account passwords ASAP. The app is not sufficiently protecting usernames and passwords making their data vulnerable to exposure/hacking. [link]. mylife website: [link]. mylife Diabetescare devices: Ypsomed mylife YpsoPump.
Date: July 1st, 2021 Guest Skeptic #1: Dr. Chris Carpenter is Professor of Emergency Medicine at Washington University in St. Louis and a member of their Emergency Medicine Research Core. He is a member of the SAEM Board of Directors and the former Chair of the SAEM EBM Interest Group and ACEP Geriatric Section. He is […] The post SGEM#337: Amazing GRACE-1 How Sweet the Guidelines – Recurrent, Low Risk Chest Pain in the Emergency Department first appeared on The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medic
Welcome back to the tasty morsels of critical care podcast. Today we look at anaphylaxis. Oh’s Manual 67 forms the basis for most of this. In many ways this is fairly straightforward. You give adrenaline and they get better. However. Read More » Welcome back to the tasty morsels of critical care podcast. Today we look at anaphylaxis. Oh’s Manual 67 forms the basis for most of this.
Want to experience the greatest in board studying? Check out our interactive question bank podcast- the FIRST of its kind here: emrapidbombs.supercast.tech All aboard the TRALI, its time for TACO Tuesday. Wow how often can you fit the entirety of our podcast in one catchy sentence?? Let’s dig into these commonly tested transfusion reactions. Want to experience the greatest in board studying?
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