Sat.Dec 07, 2024 - Fri.Dec 13, 2024

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Difficult Airway Society Meeting 2024

St. Emlyn

St.Emlyn's - Emergency Medicine #FOAMed Explore key takeaways from the DAS 2024 meeting, including airway management in obstetrics, ethics of training, challenges in critical care, and international practices. Insights tailored for emergency and anaesthesia professionals. The post Difficult Airway Society Meeting 2024 appeared first on St.Emlyn's.

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Medical Malpractice Insights: Recurrent belly pain +/- hyponatremia

EMDocs

Heres another case from Medical Malpractice Insights Learning from Lawsuits , a monthly email newsletter for ED physicians. The goal of MMI-LFL is to improve patient safety, educate physicians and reduce the cost and stress of medical malpractice lawsuits. To opt in to the free subscriber list, click here. Stories of med mal lawsuits can save lives.

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ECG Blog #460 — A Wide Tachycardia.

Ken Grauer, MD

I was sent the ECG in Figure-1 initially told only that it was obtained from an older man with palpitations. The cardiology team thought the rhythm was an SVT ( S upra V entricular T achycardia ) with QRS widening as a result of aberrant conduction. QUESTION: Do YOU agree that the rhythm is consistent with an SVT , in which there is QRS widening because of aberrancy?

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ED Volumes Keep Climbing as Patients Demand Acute, Unscheduled Care

ACEP Now

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates of emergency department (ED) visits for 2022 were recently released. 1 It was the highest volume ever reported by the CDC, at 155.4 million visits, with an all-time high utilization rate of 473 visits per 1,000 populations. This visit rate puts American EDs back on the data line it has followed since World War II.

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Bridging Innovation & Patient Care: The Growing Role of AI

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!

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Podcast – Reflections from the London Trauma Conference 2024: Insights and Inspiration

St. Emlyn

St.Emlyn's - Emergency Medicine #FOAMed A podcast with some of the highlights from the London Trauma Conference 2024 The post Podcast – Reflections from the London Trauma Conference 2024: Insights and Inspiration appeared first on St.Emlyn's.

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Mpox in adult patients: updates on diagnosis and clinical management in the ED

EMDocs

Authors: Noah Kronk, MS-4 (University of Missouri-Columbia); Jessica Pelletier, DO, MHPE (APD, EM Attending Physician, University of Missouri-Columbia, USA) // Reviewed by: Alex Koyfman, MD (@EMHighAK); Brit Long, MD (@long_brit) Case A 30-year-old female presents to the emergency department (ED) with fever, fatigue, and an extensive rash. Five days prior, she began experiencing fever, headache, and myalgias, followed by swollen lymph nodes and a rapidly progressing rash.

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Treating Acute Pulmonary Embolism with EKOS and the Inari FlowTriever

ACEP Now

Approximately 60,000 to 100,000 patients die from pulmonary embolism (PE) each year in the United States, and PE is the third leading cause of cardiovascular mortality. 1 A wide spectrum of severity exists in PE presentations, ranging from mild shortness of breath to cardiac arrest. A PE is classified into one of three categories: low risk, submassive, and massive.

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Emergency Evidence Updates – November 2024

The Bottom Line

Whats new in the Critical Care literature monthly updates

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Mastering EKG Training: Essential Skills for Healthcare Providers 

American Medical Compliance

By 2050, an alarming 61% of adults in the United States are projected to have some form of cardiovascular disease, according to a report published in the American Heart Association Journals. This statistic shows the urgency of early detection and proactive management to reduce the devastating impact of these conditions. Electrocardiograms (EKGs) are at the top of modern healthcare as indispensable diagnostic tools for identifying arrhythmias, heart attacks, and other cardiac disorders.

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Sudden Palpitations in a Young Adult

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Magnus Nossen and Ken Grauer ( with Comment by Smith ) The ECG in Figure-1 was electronically transmitted by the ambulance service for evaluation. The patient is a young adult male with acute onset of palpitations. He was hemodynamically stable at the time ECG #1 was recorded. QUESTIONS: How would you interpret this ECG? What entities to consider in your differential diagnosis?

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The Promise and Perils of Artificial Intelligence in Emergency Care: Reflections from EUSEM 2024

St. Emlyn

St.Emlyn's - Emergency Medicine #FOAMed In October, I had the opportunity to give a talk on the ethics of Artificial Intelligence at the EUSEM Congress in Copenhagen. My focus was on the ethical implications of […] The post The Promise and Perils of Artificial Intelligence in Emergency Care: Reflections from EUSEM 2024 appeared first on St.Emlyn's.

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Critical Care Evidence Updates – November 2024

The Bottom Line

Whats new in the Critical Care literature monthly updates

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Resus Chat with Matt Siuba! #FOAMed #interfaces #FOAMcc #FOAMer

Thinking Critical Care

Every resus doc needs to have a holistic approach to shock – MAP and forward flow simply isn’t enough. Here, Matt and I chat a bit about recent things we’ve heard in the world around us, as well as how we use and see the use of the interface concept. Don’t forget to come up your game at #HR25!!!

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PulmCrit: ADAPT and SCREEN trials are full of sound and fury, signifying little

EMCrit

I think ICU docs may have developed a bit of an RCT problem; not an addiction, but perhaps a dependency. It all started off fine at first. RCTs are the apex trial design, the only trial capable of proving causality. But we've taken it too far. Currently, a cluster-randomized trial is underway to study whether […] EMCrit Project by Josh Farkas.

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The Word “Mental” in Project 2025. (viii)

Maria Yang, MD

The eighth instance of the word mental in Project 2025 is on page 648 in the section about the Veterans Health Administration: Examine the surpluses or deficits in mental health professionals throughout the enterprise, recognizing that the department needs a blend of social workers, therapists, psychologists, and psychiatrists with a focus on attracting high-quality talent.

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The Benefits of Finding Your New Contract Now

Core Medical Group

The holidays are upon us, the end of the year is inching closer and closer, and one question remains top of mind for travelers: how can I set myself up for success in 2025?

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Advice for Internship: Part II

Sensible Medicine

Last week, I expanded on my nine pieces of “Advice for Internship.” As I noted, a little over a year ago I updated this list after an inpatient attending block during which I was reminded just how hard it is to be an intern. Part II is a bit less pithy, more parochial, but maybe more useful than Part I. The advice might be a bit internal medicine oriented, but I do think it is broadly applicable.

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SAEM Clinical Images Series: My Mom Could Not See

ALiEM

An 87-year-old female with a history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, chronic kidney disease stage IIIB, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and schizophrenia presented for evaluation due to sudden visual loss in her right eye, which began 12 hours before she arrived at the emergency department. She has experienced a sudden loss of vision in her right eye for more than six hours.

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Middle meningeal artery embolization for subdural hematoma

PulmCCM

Adjunctive embolization in subacute or chronic subdural hematoma (EMBOLISE trial) Middle meningeal artery (MMA) embolization can reduce the blood supply to dural vascular membranes, theoretically reducing the rate of subdural hematoma expansion or recurrence. Among 400 patients, those randomized to surgical evacuation plus MMA embolization with Medtronic’s Onyx™ liquid embolic product had a lower rate of hematoma recurrence or progression leading to repeat surgery (4%), compared to 1

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ECG 11/12/2024

EMergucate

A 23yr presents following a syncope, he denies chest pain. The following ECG is taken: What does this ECG demonstrate?

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Clinical Governance Day – Wednesday, 18th December

Greater Sydney Area HEMS

Visit the post for more.

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Difficult Airway Society Meeting 2024

PHARM

St.

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242. Glaucoma and TikTok Sun Stare challenge

Board Bombs

Dont let this condition blindside you. TikTok challengers beware! This is a classic eye pathology that you must respond to in MINUTES. Want to experience the greatest in board studying? Check out our interactive question bank podcast- the FIRST of its kind at here. Cite this podcast as: Briggs, Blake. 242. Glaucoma and TikTok Sun stare challenge. December 8th, 2024.

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Lab case 453 interpretation

EMergucate

PH = 6.782, that is severe acidaemia. HCO3 = 2.5 mmol/L, that is extremely low. So we have metabolic acidosis.

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A Response to the NEJM's Sepsis Review Article

PulmCCM

An excellent review article titled “Sepsis and Septic Shock” was published 4 December 2024 in the New England Journal of Medicine. It’s a wonderful contribution to the literature and well worth reading. But it feels like something important was missed, or misplaced. Here’s a complementary take from a community physician’s perspective.

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Low Grade Spleen Injury With Contrast Blush

The Trauma Pro

It is almost a given that low-grade solid organ injuries are relatively benign and seldom require any intervention. In fact, some trauma centers actually discharge these patients home from the emergency department. But what about low-grade isolated spleen injuries with a contrast blush? Apparently, a few authors believe that this may be a benign condition that doesn’t require any specific management.

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Big practice change coming? How fast do you correct hyponatremia?

First 10 EM

When managing hyponatremia, the primary concern (at least as far as I have always been taught) is osmotic demyelination syndrome. We are warned not to correct the sodium too quickly, because the neurologic outcome can be awful. However, demyelination is very rare, and apparently there is a lot of data that suggests correcting sodium too […] The post Big practice change coming?

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Lab case 454

EMergucate

2-year-old boy brought to ED by ambulance as category 1 for severe croup. His blood gases showed the following.

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An elderly woman with acute chest pain -- real or fake ST Elevation?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers An elderly female called EMS with acute chest pain. Her vitals were within normal limits, and here is her EMS ECG: What do you think? Sinus rhythm, and QRS shows likely subtle RBBB, plus LAFB. While some STE could be expected by the large wide S wave in inferior leads, there is is STE and possibly HATW in II, III, and AVF, with reciprocal findings in aVL.

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Thrombolytics in Stroke: Moving Beyond Controversy to Comprehensive Care

ACEP Now

The use of thrombolytics for acute ischemic stroke may be one of the most controversial topics in emergency medicine during the last several decades. This debate recurs in multiple forums including many previous pieces in ACEP Now. 1 The reason is understandablethrombolytics in stroke is a high-risk, higher-reward treatment. If the potential for harm were absent, or if the benefit of thrombolytics was only marginal, there would be no controversy.

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Journal Feed Weekly Wrap-Up

EMDocs

We always work hard, but we may not have time to read through a bunch of journals. Its time to learn smarter. Originally published at JournalFeed , a site that provides daily or weekly literature updates. Follow Dr. Clay Smith at @spoonfedEM , and sign up for email updates here. #1: What Happened to Plain Albuterol? Meet the New Combo Inhalers Spoon Feed According to a large number of RCTs, both pediatric and adult patients seem to have better asthma control with combined asthma therapy: inhaled

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Curious case of the HoCUS PoCUS

EM Ottawa

A 59-year-old man presented to a community Emergency Department with a one-month history of subjective fevers and dyspnea. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, he had only consulted a physician via telephone, during which he was prescribed two courses of antibiotics for presumed pneumonia. Despite treatment, his symptoms persisted. He denied any recent travel, intravenous drug use, […] The post Curious case of the HoCUS PoCUS appeared first on EMOttawa Blog.

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SAEM Clinical Images Series: An On-Target Diagnosis

ALiEM

A 25-year-old female with no pertinent past medical history presented to an emergency department in Massachusetts with four days of generalized malaise, myalgias, congestion, low-grade fever, and a rash behind her left knee. The patient denied cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea. She lives with three roommates, none of whom were sick, and she denied any other known sick contacts.

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Strategies to Reduce Ambulance Patient Offload Delays

ACEP Now

As emergency departments (EDs) have become the focus of bottlenecks in the entire health care systemfrom insufficient inpatient beds leading to hospital boarding to dwindling access to primary carea siege atmosphere has developed. Although EDs offer around-the-clock access to highly trained physicians and a full suite of imaging and laboratory services, their very success has led to tremendous overcrowding and enormous strains on staff.

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Weaning Sedation in Paediatric Intensive Care

Don't Forget the Bubbles

It is time to take a look at withdrawal syndrome and delirium and how to reduce them in children requiring intravenous sedation and analgesia within the Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). Isla is a 2-month-old infant in the PICU. She has been ventilated since birth as she was found to have an antenatal defect, which required surgical repair on day three of life.

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The Best Online Echocardiography Courses

Life in the Fast Lane

Mike Cadogan The Best Online Echocardiography Courses Looking for online echocardiography courses?