Remove EKG/ECG Remove EMS Remove Ultrasounds
article thumbnail

Chest Pain in Children: ReBaked Morsel

Pediatric EM Morsels

EKG Reasonable screen for cardiac etiology [ Kane, 2010 ]: Chest Pain with Exertion? Ultrasound diagnosis of occult pneumothorax. The role of point-of-care ultrasound in the diagnosis of pericardial effusion: a single academic center retrospective study. Ultrasound J. Abnormal exam (ex, murmurs, hepatomegaly)?

EKG/ECG 271
article thumbnail

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

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Bedside cardiac ultrasound showed moderately decreased LV function. She had an ECG recorded: This is left bundle branch block (LBBB), with appropriate proportional discordance. Dodd KW, Elm KD, Dodd EM, Smith SW. Here is one of the strips This is clearly polymorphic VT and probably torsade de pointes Subsequent ECGs.

EKG/ECG 116
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

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. He called EMS, who arrived on scene about two hours after the onset of pain to find him hypertensive at 220 systolic.

EKG/ECG 126
article thumbnail

Concerning EKG with a Non-obstructive angiogram. What happened?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

EMS obtained the following vital signs: pulse 50, respiratory rate 16, blood pressure 96/49. It appears EMS obtained two EKGs, but unfortunately these were not saved in the medical record. The EMS crew was only BLS certified, so EKG interpretation is not within their scope of practice.

EKG/ECG 127
article thumbnail

Another deadly triage ECG missed, and the waiting patient leaves before being seen. What is this nearly pathognomonic ECG?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Pain improved to 1/10 after EMS administers 324 mg aspirin and the following EKG is obtained at triage. If this EKG were handed to you to screen from triage without any clinical information, what would you think? Do you appreciate any dynamic changes compared to the patient’s prior EKG? What do you think?

EKG/ECG 139
article thumbnail

Expert human ECG interpretation and/or the Queen of Hearts could have saved this patient's anterior wall

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

He called EMS who brought him to the ED. He had active chest pain at the time of triage at 0137 at night, with this triage ECG: What do you think? I sent this ECG, without any text at all, to Dr. Smith, and he replied: "LAD OMI with low certainty. Back to the case: Unfortunately, the ECG was not understood by the provider.

EKG/ECG 127
article thumbnail

EM@3AM: Brainstem Strokes

EMDocs

We’ll keep it short, while you keep that EM brain sharp. A 74-year-old female with a past medical history of hypertension, diabetes, recent basilar artery stent placement with a 20 pack-year smoking history presents to the ED via EMS for altered mental status and episodes of apnea. Semin Ultrasound CT MR. 2013 Apr;34(2):131-41.

Stroke 111