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Hypothermia and drowning

Don't Forget the Bubbles

You request a 12 lead ECG and repeat a blood gas, asking for it to be run on the PICU analyser. Your trusted nurse hands you the ECG: Paediatric ECG interpretation has never been your strong suit. What is the likely cause of Elsa’s ECG changes? You look at her monitor, and an arterial blood gas performed moments ago.

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What is this ECG finding? Do you understand it before you hear the clinical context?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Pendell Meyers First try to interpret this ECG with no clinical context: The ECG shows an irregularly irregular rhythm, therefore almost certainly atrial fibrillation. These are Osborn waves usually associated with hypothermia. C), with Cardiac Echo -- A Pathognomonic ECG. Is there a long QT?

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Hyperthermia and ST Elevation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

An initial EKG was obtained: Computer read: sinus tachycardia, early acute anterior infarct. Here is her prior EKG: When compared to the old EKG – Q waves present before, TWI in aVR present before, but all other changes are new. What is the differential for this EKG? T wave inversion III, aVR, TWF in aVF. Is this an OMI?

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An elderly male with acute altered mental status and huge ST Elevation

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

EKG on arrival to the ED is shown below: What do you think? ng/mL (consistent with prior baseline), and a repeat EKG was obtained 1 hour after the initial EKG. limb lead reversal is now resolved) Unfortunately, QOH V1 got tricked by this second ECG! 2) There was no terminal QRS distortion on these ECGs.

EKG/ECG 106
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Should we activate the cath lab? A Quiz on 5 Cases.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Triage is backed up, and 10 minutes into your shift one of the ED nurses brings your several ECG s that has not been overread by a physician. ECG#1 ECG#2 ECG#3 ECG#4 ECG#5 See outcomes of all 5 below, with the Queen of Hearts AI Bot interpretation. (THE True Positive ECG#2 : Also sinus rhythm.

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EM Quick Hits 24 Lateral Canthotomy, Cannabis Poisoning, Hyperthermia, Malignant Otitis Externa, BBB in Occlusion MI, Prone CPR

Emergency Medicine Cases

In this month's EM Quick Hits podcast: Anand Swaminathan on lateral canthotomy, Emily Austin on pediatric cannabis poisoning, Reuben Strayer on an approach to hyperthermia, Brit Long on diagnosis and management of malignant otitis externa, Jesse McLaren on ECG diagnosis of occlusion MI in patients with BBB and Peter Brindley on prone CPR.

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ECG Pointers: Recurrent and Refractory Torsades de Pointes

EMDocs

An ECG is performed and is shown below: Figure 1. Adapted from Dr. Smith’s EKG Blog. Another ECG is obtained and shown below. Source: [link] As you are calling the ICU and cardiology team, the patient has recurrence of her symptoms and repeat ECG shows return of the PVT. She denies chest pain. What do you do?

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