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SGEM#420: I get knocked down, but I get up again – do I have a scaphoid fracture?

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Which clinical features best predict occult scaphoid fractures? Emerg Med J. He will soon be transitioning out of the US military after […] The post SGEM#420: I get knocked down, but I get up again – do I have a scaphoid fracture? first appeared on The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine. Emerg Med J.

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Transfers In: Direct Admit vs Send To The ED

The Trauma Pro

The practice at many centers is to bring all transfer patients in through the emergency department. Bringing Patients To Your Emergency Department Patients can be reassessed to see if they meet any of your trauma activation criteria. Access to certain critical services may be more rapid from the emergency department.

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SGEM#451: I’ve Become So Numb – Serratus Anterior Plane Blocks for Rib Fractures

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Serratus Anterior Plane Blocks for Early Rib Fracture Pain Management: The SABRE Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Surg 2024 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Sean Baldwin is an Emergency Physician practising in Sydney, Australia in both a large tertiary emergency department and a small regional emergency department.

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From Collision to Clarity: PECARN cervical spine injury prediction rule for injured children

ALiEM

A 10-year-old boy presents to the emergency department (ED) after a high-speed motor vehicle collision. However, until now, there has been a gap in guidance for clinicians managing pediatric patients at risk for cervical spine injuries. Case Scenario: What would you do? He complains of neck pain and is reluctant to move his head.

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The 86th Bubble Wrap x Aghia Sophia Children’s ED

Don't Forget the Bubbles

This single-centre prospective study focused on a quality improvement (QI) project to reduce the overuse of chest X-rays (CXR) in paediatric patients with acute asthma exacerbations (AAE) arriving at the emergency department (ED ). Arch Acad Emerg Med. Pediatric Emergency Medical Journal 2023;10(4):109-117.

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Twisting and Turning - Ankle Injuries in the ED

Taming the SRU

Ankle fractures are the third most common fracture in the ED [2] and more than 20,000 patients are seen in the ED for ankle sprains each day [3]. traumatic axial loading with calcaneal fractures, pilons, and vertebral compression fractures) [5]. Gross deformities often suggest fracture or dislocation [Image 2].

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Common traumatic pathologies 

Mind The Bleep

In this injury, there is a fracture of the orbital floor and the inferior orbital rim remains intact. The “teardrop sign” is a radiological sign of inferior orbital wall fractures in which intraorbital fat +/- inferior rectus muscle herniates through the fracture. Teardrop sign (inferior orbital wall fracture).