Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Mild Therapeutic Hypothermia in Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Originally Published: Modern Resident, Dec/Jan 2010

Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal, Publications Committee Co-Chair

Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) is the only intervention that has been shown to improve outcomes in comatose patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. TH is now recommended by the American Heart Association (AHA) for the

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Tox Talks

Originally Published: Modern Resident, Dec/Jan 2010

Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal, Publications Committee, Co-Chair

Iron toxicity remains a common toxidrome in the emergency department and is the leading cause of pediatric overdose death under age 6. Its antidote, defuroxamine, was recently designated by the Antidote Summit Authorship Group (Ann Emerg Med, Sept. 2009) as a medicine recommended for availability within 60 minutes of every emergency department in the country.



Thursday, October 7, 2010

Tox Talks: Toxic Alcohols

Originally Published: Modern Resident, Oct/Nov 2010 

Original Author: Neal Shelley, MD Georgetown/Washington Hospital Center Emergency Medicine

Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal, Publications Committee, Co-Chair  

Just like ethanol, ethylene glycol and methanol cause inebriation and are often ingested by a desperate alcoholic or as a suicide attempt.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Critical Care Pearls: Emergencies Among Mechanically Vented Patients

Originally Published: Modern Resident, October/November 2010
Original Article Author: Sundeep Bhat, MD
Stanford/Kaiser Emergency Medicine
Submitted by: Rachel Engle, DO (Communications Committee Chair)

After successful intubation, the work of an emergency physician is not over! There are several scenarios and trouble-shooting tips for approaching unstable patients who are already mechanically ventilated.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Board Review: Methadone Intoxication

Originally Published: Modern Resident, Jun/Jul 2010

Original Author: Dana Kindermann, MD Georgetown-Washington Hospital Center Dept. of Emergency Medicine

Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal, Publications Committee, Co-Chair 


Case history:
56 y/o male BIBA, found in apartment by roommate with altered mental status x 24h, found lying in feces. Patient (pt) with multiple substance abuse related admissions and ED visits. On arrival, pt slow to respond, confused, A&O x 2, denies pain, takes 150mg PO methadone daily, denies other med/drug use. Initial EKG: QTc - 500ms, bigeminy. Pt loaded with IV Mg, IV fluids; all initial labs normal and pt transferred to floor. Three hours later, pt develops Torsades de Pointes (TdP).

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Board Review: The Pediatric Airway

Originally Published: Modern Resident, Jun/Jul 2010

Original Author: Karen Serrano, MD
University of Wisconsin Dept. of Emergency Medicine

Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal, Publications Committee, Co-Chair
 
Managing the pediatric airway poses unique challenges for the emergency physician, requiring a good understanding of pediatric anatomy and familiarity with child-specific tools and approaches for emergency airway.
Children are more susceptible to airway obstruction than adults. One millimeter of edema in a small caliber pediatric airway (4mm diameter in a neonate) leads to dramatically increased airway resistance compared to the same amount of swelling in an adult (d=8mm) due to the effect of radius to the 4th power on rate of flow. The relatively large tongue of children can also collapse against the posterior pharynx, resulting in airway obstruction. Maneuvers such as the chin-lift or

Saturday, February 27, 2010

EM Today: Updates from the Interview Trail



Originally Published: Modern Resident, February/March 2010
Original Article Author: Alex Fisher, OMS-IV
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey School of Osteopathic Medicine
Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal (Publications Committee Co-Chair)


The interview season for EM is over! I'm not going to miss it. Most students would agree that by now, they have had their fair share of traveling, disruption and trying to balance a meager student loan budget with the costs of it all. The good news is there is light at the end of the tunnel, and you are moving one step closer to becoming a brilliant and dashing EM doc!


Friday, February 26, 2010

I Was Just Filling up the Tank, Right? When Erythrocyte Transfusion Goes Awry



Originally Published: Modern Resident, February/March 2010
Original Article Author: Robert Katzer, MD Georgetown-Washington Hospital Center
Submitted by: Saadiyah Bilal (Publications Committee Co-Chair)

Despite a large amount of research on the issue, there is no universally followed set of indications. However, the transfusion of blood and blood products is a hazardous activity, and we all agree that there are several dangers associated with it. This article deals specifically with the noninfectious reactions encountered during and after transfusion.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Board Review: Retained Foreign Bodies


Originally Published: Modern Resident, October/November 2010
Original Article Author: Teresa M. Ross, MD
Georgetown-Washington Hospital Center
Submitted by: Rachel Engle, DO (Communications Committee Chair)

A case study: A 59 year old diabetic female was sent to the ED from her podiatrist's office over concern for a retained foreign body (FB) in her toe. Four days prior, she had impaled her right great toe on a blue wooden toothpick. She self-extracted a broken portion of the toothpick, but the toe had become progressively red and swollen, now with inclusion of the distal, dorsal portion of her foot. She complained of a painful FB sensation migrating towards the plantar aspect of the MTP joint of the great toe, worse with walking. She had no fever. At her podiatrist's office, a plain film of the foot was reportedly negative.

In the ED, the toe was obviously cellulitic. No FB was palpable on exam, but a punctuate hemorrhage on the toe seemed to indicate where the initial entry point had been. Bedside ultrasound localized a 1cm long FB penetrating the skin towards the MTP joint, 0.5cm below the skin at its closest point. However, after a successful nerve block, a 20 minute exploration failed to visualize the toothpick. The patient noted that she felt the toothpick had "moved even deeper" after all the probing on exam. The risk of deeper exploration towards the joint was deemed to outweigh the benefits of extraction, and the procedure was terminated.

The patient received a first course of IV Vancomycin. The toe was wrapped for delayed primary closure, and the patient was sent home on clindamycin, levofloxacin and oxycodone for pain. She was instructed to return for wound check and surgical referral in two days. The patient did not return to the ED for wound check, but did follow up in podiatry clinic, where they continued conservative management. Should we have tried harder to remove the foreign body?

Pearl: When to Try, When to Stop