Sat.Jan 27, 2024 - Fri.Feb 02, 2024

article thumbnail

SGEM#428: Don’t Worry, Be Happy – The Safety of Nitroglycerin Administration in RVMI

The Skeptics' Guide to EM

Reference: Wilkinson-Stokes M, Betson J, Sawyer S. Adverse events from nitrate administration during right ventricular myocardial infarction: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Emerg Med J. February 2023 Date: January 24, 2024 Guest Skeptic: Dr. Rupinder Sahsi is a fellow EBM enthusiast with academic appointments at McMaster University and Wright State University who works as an emergency physician […] The post SGEM#428: Don’t Worry, Be Happy – The Safety of Nitroglycerin Administration in R

Paramedic 308
article thumbnail

Episode 70: Airway evaluation for non-anesthesiologists, with Jed Wolpaw

Critical Care Scenarios

We discuss assessing patients prior to intubation or other airway management, including both elective and emergent circumstances, with Dr. Jed Wolpaw, anesthesiologist and intensivist from Johns Hopkins, anesthesiology residency program director, and host of the ACCRAC podcast. Find us on Patreon here! Buy your merch here! Takeaway lessons References We discuss assessing patients prior to intubation or other airway management, including both elective and emergent circumstances, with Dr.

OR 286
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

SAEM Clinical Images Series: Back Lesion

ALiEM

An 18-year-old-female with no known past medical history presented with a lesion on her back that had been present and enlarging for five months. It was not painful unless she touched it, and then only mildly tender. She denied any known cause, wound, prior rash, or other lesions. Her review of systems and past medical history were negative. Additional Images Physical Exam Vitals : Normal Skin : An erythematous lenticular, or biconvex, lesion with distinct borders is noted at the left posterior

article thumbnail

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. After an initially narrow QRS, there is a very large abnormal extra wave at the end of the QRS complex. These are Osborn waves usually associated with hypothermia. There is also large T wave inversion and long QT.

ICU 138
article thumbnail

The AcT Trial: Tenecteplase vs Alteplase for Acute Ischemic Stroke

REBEL EM

Background : Alteplase, a class of medication that converts plasminogen to plasmin leading to fibrin degradation and subsequent clot lysis, has been the standard of care for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients that meet eligibility criteria. Tenecteplase, a modified version of alteplase, is being increasingly utilized for AIS due to its favorable pharmacological profile, ease of administration, and cost effectiveness.

EMS 135
article thumbnail

DKA gone wrong

EMergucate

Simulation report 1/2/24 In situ sim ED JHC Hi everyone, Thank you so much for participating and helping … Continue reading →

ED 130
article thumbnail

SAEM Clinical Images Series: Retrobulbar Spot Sign

ALiEM

A 59-year-old male with no known past medical history other than an incidental abdominal aortic aneurysm presented with sudden onset, painless vision loss in his left eye. The patient was watching TV two days prior when he saw a “brightness” in his left eye and then progressive blurriness until his vision faded away, all occurring within the span of a minute.

ALS 161

More Trending

article thumbnail

Cannabidiol in refractory status epilepticus

Don't Forget the Bubbles

A UK-based study found that 4% of admissions to a tertiary paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) over a 10-year period were due to refractory status epilepticus (RSE) – seizures which fail to terminate despite appropriate first and second-line treatments. Of those patients admitted with RSE, a subset will go on to develop super-refractory status epilepticus (SRSE).

ALS 120
article thumbnail

Imaging Case of the Week 581 Answer

EMergucate

The wrist x-rays show multiple fractures but the main injury is trans scaphoid perilunate dislocation.

EMS 130
article thumbnail

Year in Review: NVFC Hazmat PIT Crew Program

NVFC

The National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC), in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, launched a new hazmat train-the-trainer program, Partners in Training (PIT) Crew, in early 2023. This program provided in-person courses to hundreds of first responders across the country in its first year.

article thumbnail

CV-EMCrit Wee – MCS Minute: ECMO and the DO2/VO2 ratio with Trina Augustin

EMCrit Project

The first MCS Minute EMCrit Project by Katrina Augustin.

122
122
article thumbnail

FirstNet Authority Board Approves Investment for Network Evolution

FirstNet Authority

FirstNet Authority Board Approves Investment for Network Evolution Press Releases michelle.fordi… Mon, 01/29/2024 - 13:53 The First Responder Network Authority (FirstNet Authority) is an independent authority within the U.S. Department of Commerce. Created in 2012, its mission is to ensure the building, deployment, and operation of the nationwide broadband network that equips first responders to save lives and protect U.S. communities.

article thumbnail

Imaging Case of the Week 582

EMergucate

The following shoulder x-ray is from an adult who is complaining of shoulder pain following MVA. What can be seen?

EMS 130
article thumbnail

Chest pain and a computer ‘normal’ ECG. Therefore, there is no need for a physician to look at this ECG.

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

Written by Jesse McLaren, comments by Smith A 55 year old with a history of NSTEMI presented with two hours of exertional chest pain, with normal vitals. Below is the triage ECG, with a computer interpretation (Marquette 12 SL) of “normal” which was confirmed by the over-reading cardiologist. What do you think? Should this patient continue to stay in the waiting room, without interruption of the physician to interpret the ECG, because the computer interpretation is normal?

STEMI 118
article thumbnail

CIPSRT Symposium | March 19-20, 2024 Ottawa, ON – Registration is open!

Paramedic Chiefs of Canada

We are pleased to inform you that registration for the CIPSRT Symposium (March 19-20, 2024), is now live. Access link and registration through QR code Please Share! Download: EN Social Register NOW Symposium 2024.jpg Download: Social graphic Symposium 2024 EN.jpg Download: Symposium 2024 EN Poster.pdf Download: CIPSRT Symposium 2024 FR.jpg Download: Social graphic Symposium 2024 FR.jpg Download: Symposium 2024 FR Poster.

116
116
article thumbnail

PulmCrit wee: Polypharmacy in the ICU – when in doubt, deprescribe

EMCrit Project

Polypharmacy is technically defined as taking five or more medications on a daily basis. Polypharmacy is increasingly becoming the norm among adults, due to several factors (an aging population, increasing numbers of medical problems, and increasingly complex regimens available to treat chronic disorders such as heart failure). Indeed, the term “polypharmacy” is arguably antiquated now […] EMCrit Project by Josh Farkas.

ICU 115
article thumbnail

Episode 83 – Thalidomide Embryopathy

The Curious Clinicians

The history and science behind a drug that harmed thousands in-utero On the Curious Clinicians, we like to often discuss more lighthearted topics, such as why some people think cilantro tastes like soap or whether the post-Thanksgiving turkey coma is a real thing. This episode deals with something whose pathophysiology and history are considerably darker, but important to talk about nonetheless: How thalidomide was heavily, irresponsibly marketed and prescribed to pregnant women in the 1950’s an

ACS 110
article thumbnail

Chest pain, ST Elevation, well-formed Q-waves, and infarction with peak hs troponin I over 1000 ng/L. Is it OMI?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

A 60-something male presented stating that he had had chest pain that morning which awoke him from sleep but then resolved after several minutes. He has had similar pain in the past which he attributed to acid reflux. He has a history of untreated hypertension. He is pain free now. His systolic BP was 200. The patient is pain free at the time of this ECG: What do you think?

OR 110
article thumbnail

Pulsara Around the World - February 2024

Pulsara

January Recap With four trade shows — NAEMSP, Florida Fire Conference, Arrowhead EMS Conference, and the MHCA Statewide Symposium — under our belts, January 2024 was our busiest January since 2019! Pictured: Brandon Means, Kate Leatherby, and Tim Hakamaki set up the booth at NAEMSP. We're also excited to announce that we published our first pediatric and behavioral-health-focused case study!

article thumbnail

The UK-REBOA trial

First 10 EM

REBOA (resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta) has been discussed in the emergency medicine world for quite some time now, but always with very limited data. There have been some observational studies that suggested REBOA was associated with worse outcomes, but the outcomes were largely assumed to be the result of confounders. (Norii 2015, […] The post The UK-REBOA trial appeared first on First10EM.

EMS 105
article thumbnail

Extracorporeal Life Support in Infarct-Related Cardiogenic Shock

EMOttawa

Methodology: 4/5 Usefulness: 3.5/5 Thiele H, et al. N Engl J Med. 2023 Oct 5;389(14):1286-1297. Editorial: Routine Early ECLS in Infarct-Related Cardiogenic Shock? Question: Does early ECLS therapy confer a mortality benefit in patients with MI complicated by cardiogenic shock? Methods: Open label RCT with 417 patients comparing 30-day all-cause mortality between ECLS versus standard […] The post Extracorporeal Life Support in Infarct-Related Cardiogenic Shock appeared first on EMOttawa B

article thumbnail

Apply Now for Free Turnout Gear and Helmets

NVFC

13 fire departments will each receive four sets of gear through MSA and DuPont’s Globe Gear Giveaway Proper personal protective equipment is critical to the safety, health, and effectiveness of firefighters, yet many volunteer fire departments struggle to find the budget to provide their firefighters with adequate, up-to-date turnout gear. MSA Safety, DuPont Personal Protection, and the National Volunteer Fire Council (NVFC) team up each year to help volunteer departments meet this need through

article thumbnail

A 40-something with chest pain

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This was sent by Sam Ghali @EM_RESUS A 44 year old man presented with chest pain The tech came running with the ECG as the computer called "STEMI!" What do you think? Sam sent this to me and asked: "What do you think, Steve?" My answer: --Tough one! --But I'm going to stick my neck out and say "Not OMI" --STE in V2 has a near "saddleback" configuration, and that is a sign of false positive STE.

STEMI 99
article thumbnail

Ep 134 Tonsils: Underestimated and underappreciated

This Podcast Will Kill You

Raise your hand if you or someone you know has had their tonsils removed. If your hand is sky-high, there’s a pretty good chance that you (or that person you know) are from the US and were born before 1980. Of course, maybe that’s not the case, but tonsillectomies certainly fit in the category of 20th century fads, along with Tamagotchis and the Atkins diet.

OR 98
article thumbnail

Using Artificial Intelligence in the Medical Field

Life in the Fastlane

Sheralyn Guilleminot and Mike Cadogan Using Artificial Intelligence in the Medical Field Full interview with critical care clinician and AI enthusiast, Dr Sameer Shaikh, on the many ways to use AI to save time and increase efficiency in healthcare

article thumbnail

Make the Commitment to Support Your Department’s Members

NVFC

As we begin a new year, now is a great time for your department to show its commitment to the health and well-being of your members. The NVFC is recognizing departments that are taking the steps needed to create a psychologically healthy fire department. This means focusing on areas relating to member involvement, health and safety, member growth and development, work-life balance, member recognition, and effective communication.

102
102
article thumbnail

How to Support First Responders in Your Community through Engaged Giving

First Responders Foundation

First responders are our everyday heroes, facing challenging situations to keep our communities safe. Beyond the essential emergency services they provide, many first responders are deeply involved in community-building activities like Jiu-Jitsu, anti-bullying, and women’s self-defense classes. Supporting these initiatives not only benefits first responders but also strengthens community bonds.

article thumbnail

Update to Start 2024

EM Literature of Note

A brief post collating a few bits of my various work published across the interwebs … The Annals of Emergency Medicine Podcast continues to summarise the meatiest articles from each month, featuring a cycle of new co-hosts, as well: Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Soundcloud Naturally, there are continuing Journal Club features, covering the following articles: Zone 1 endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta vs resuscitative thoracotomy for patient resuscitation after severe hemorrha

article thumbnail

Critical Care Reviews… Down Under!

Life in the Fastlane

Chris Nickson Critical Care Reviews… Down Under! Expressions of interest are open to attend the "Critical Care Reviews Down Under" meeting in Melbourne, December 10th & 11th 2024.

article thumbnail

Blood Pressure Management in Neurologic Emergencies: What Does the Evidence Say?

EMDocs

Authors: Sameer Desai, MD (EM Attending Physician, University of Kentucky); Omar Abbas Ahmed Malik, MBBS (Patients’ Aid Foundation, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Center) // Reviewed by: Jessica Pelletier, DO (EM Education Fellow, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis); Marina Boushra, MD (EM-CCM Attending Physician, Cleveland Clinic Foundation); Alex Koyfman, MD (@EMHighAK); Brit Long, MD (@long_brit) Case: A 39-year-old male is brought in by EMS with a sudden-onset severe headache

ALS 94
article thumbnail

Podcast round up: December 2024. St Emlyn’s

St. Emlyn's

St.Emlyn's - Emergency Medicine #FOAMed Iain and Simon review the best of the blog and the state of UK emergency care in this podcast round up from January 2024. The post Podcast round up: December 2024. St Emlyn’s appeared first on St.Emlyn's.

article thumbnail

The First10EM monthly wrap-up for January 2024

First 10 EM

The First10EM monthly wrap up is a place for me to share updates about the website, about my academic life, and also interesting content, such as books, podcasts, and other FOAMed, that I have encountered in the prior month. Obviously the focus is on content I have found, but I hope the community gets engaged […] The post The First10EM monthly wrap-up for January 2024 appeared first on First10EM.

87
article thumbnail

What will happen if you implement the Queen of Hearts in your Hospital?

Dr. Smith's ECG Blog

This case was sent by Dr. Jean-christophe Reiters, an interventionalist in Belgium. He has been following the blog for 4 years. He has now implemented the Queen of Hearts in his hospital. He wanted to share one of the first cases. A 55 year old with no previous cardiac history presented with 3 hours of chest pain. The pain was persistent and reportedly still present at the time of the ECG.

STEMI 85
article thumbnail

Journal Feed Weekly Wrap-Up

EMDocs

We always work hard, but we may not have time to read through a bunch of journals. It’s 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: Do Febrile Neonates with COVID-19 Need a Full Workup? Spoon Feed This systematic review and meta-analysis of almost 4,000 febrile infants ≤ 90 days old diagnosed with COVID-19 indicated that these patients have a lo

OR 94
article thumbnail

Lung Protective Ventilation

EMOttawa

In our first part, we talked about the basics of mechanical ventilation and how to set up the ventilator for the busy ED doc! In part two, we discuss lung protective ventilation and go through a few cases to help solidify what we’ve learned. If you haven’t read part one – check it out here! […] The post Lung Protective Ventilation appeared first on EMOttawa Blog.

ED 81
article thumbnail

How to Become a Wilderness EMT

Unitek EMT

Combine your love for the outdoors with a career in saving lives. Wilderness Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) are specialized healthcare providers trained for emergency response in remote, rugged areas with limited medical resources. The responsibilities of Wilderness EMTs are unique and demanding. They must possess not only the medical knowledge and skills of a standard […] The post How to Become a Wilderness EMT appeared first on Unitek EMT.

EMT 74
article thumbnail

EARLYDRAIN – Lumbar Cerebrospinal Fluid Drain Among Patients With aSAH

The Bottom Line

In patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH), does lumbar CSF drainage compared to standard therapy improve clinical outcomes as measured by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score at 6 months?

73