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Emergency Medical Minute

Emergency Medical Minutewww.emergencymedicalminute.com
Our near daily podcasts move quickly to reflect current events, are inspired by real patient care, and speak to the true nature of what it’s like to work in the Emergency Room or Pre-Hospital Setting. Each medical minute is recorded in a real emergency department, by the emergency physician or clinical pharmacist on duty – the ER is our studio and everything is live.

Episodes

Podcast #319: Cardiac Arrest Survival Factors

Author: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Shockable rhythms like V-fib or V-tach have a better prognosis than patients with PEA or asystole. Recent study has shown an initial electrical frequency in PEA between 10-24/min had worse outcomes than PEA with initial rhythm over 60/min. Patients with an initial electrical frequency in PEA over 60/min did just as well as patients with shockable rhythms. Of them, there was a 22% survival rate with 15% having a good neurologic outcome. References: Wei...

Apr 20, 20182 min

Podcast #318: Nystagmus

Author: Erik Verzemnieks, M.D. Educational Pearls: ● Common causes of nystagmus: Congenital disorders, CNS diseases (MS, CVA), Intoxication ● Drugs associated (ETOH, Ketamine, PCP, SSRI, MDMA, Lithium, Phenytoin, Barbiturates) ● If a patient has nystagmus and is intoxicated, consider other drugs and etiologies as potential sources References: Alpert JN. (1978). Downbeat nystagmus due to anticonvulsant toxicity. ​Annals of Neurology.​ 4(5):471-3. Rosenberg, ML. (1987) Reversible downbeat nystagmu...

Apr 13, 20182 min

Podcast #317: Elbow Dislocation

Author: John Winkler, M.D. Educational Pearls: ● Lower mechanisms of injury have a lower chance of an associated fracture or major ligament injury ● One major concern is having a fracture fragment in the joint (can lead to chronic arthritic pain) ● Evaluation should involve checking the neurovascular status of the arm and reduce the fracture as soon as possible. Immobilize arm in a sling and consult orthopedics if there is intra-articular involvement. References: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/di...

Apr 11, 20183 min

Podcast #316: Abnormalities in Alcohol Intoxication

Author: Michael Hunt, M.D. Educational Pearls: 1% of patients presenting to ED with alcohol intoxication end up going to the ICU Most common critical illnesses were acute hypoxic respiratory failure, sepsis, and intracranial hemorrhage Predictive markers: Vital abnormalities (hypoxia, tachycardic, tachypneic, hypothermic, hyperthermia, hypoglycemia) and patients receiving parenteral sedatives had higher incidence of ICU admission References: Klein, LR; et al. (2018). Unsuspected Critical Illness...

Apr 09, 20184 min

Podcast #315: Retropharyngeal Infections in Pediatrics

Author: Dr. Karen Woolf, MD Educational Pearls: Anatomy : base of skull to posterior mediastinum, anteriorly bounded by middle layer of deep cervical fascia and posteriorly by the deep layer, communicates to lateral pharyngeal space bounded by carotid sheath. Lymph node chains draining nasopharynx, sinuses, middle ear, etc. run through it. Epidemiology & Microbiology: most common kids 2-4, (neonates too). Polymicrobial (GAS, MSSA, MRSA, respiratory anaerobes). Signs and symptoms can include phar...

Apr 06, 20186 min

Podcast #314: Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES)

Author: Gretchen Hinson, M.D. Educational Pearls: PNES vs. epilepsy: postictal state is diagnostic of an epileptic seizure (sonorous respirations and/or confusion, lasting typically 20-30 minutes); Epileptiform seizures show decrease in convulsion frequency, but increase in convulsion amplitude while PNES convulsions demonstrate episodic convulsion amplitudes; and epileptiform seizures usually do not pause. PNES is a form of conversion disorder and can be associated with underlying personality d...

Apr 04, 20185 min

Podcast #313: Flu Screening

Author: Dr. Peter Bakes Educational Pearls: High risk patients: underlying lung disease, immunocompromised, extremes of age ( 65), underlying cardiac/renal/neurologic disease, and pregnant women Testing: RT-PCR (RNA based test that is both sensitive and specific) Workup: comorbidities dictate whether or not they are screened ; CXR indicated in high risk patients with respiratory symptoms Morbidity from flu comes from secondary pneumonia, sepsis, and septic shock Treatment options are Tamiflu and...

Apr 02, 20187 min

Podcast #312: SCIWORA

Author: Sam Killian, M.D. Educational Pearls: Spinal cord injury without radiographic abnormality (SCIWORA) is a diagnosis defined as traumatic injury to spine with clinical sx of traumatic myelopathy (paraplegia, paresthesias, FND) without radiographic abnormalities. Term was established in 1970’s before MRI and accounted for about 15% of injuries at the time (mainly children). Today SCIWORA accounts for about 10% of spinal injuries. Belief is that injury causes subtle movement of the spinal co...

Mar 30, 20185 min

Podcast #311: Recurrence of Seizures in Pediatrics

Author: Aaron Lessen, M.D. Educational Pearls: Recurrence rate for first time unprovoked seizures - 5% after 48 hours, 14% at 2 weeks , 30% after 4 months. Higher risk for recurrence: age under 3; patients with multiple seizures at initial presentation, focal neurologic findings on initial presentation. Useful for counseling patients and recommending follow up. References: Shinnar S, Berg AT, Moshé SL, et al. Risk of seizure recurrence following a first unprovoked seizure in childhood: a prospec...

Mar 28, 20182 min

Podcast #310: Bicarb in DKA

Author: Gretchen Hinson, M.D. Educational Pearls: Controversial topic. Pathophysiology - acidosis leads to an extracellular potassium shift. Patients in DKA will be intracellularly potassium deplete, but will have a falsely normal/elevated serum potassium. 3 risk of giving bicarb in DKA - alkalosis will drive potassium intracellularly but can overshoot (hypokalemia) and increase risk of arrhythmias; bicarb slows clearance of ketones and will transiently increase their precursors; bicarb can caus...

Mar 26, 20185 min

Podcast #309: Return Visits to the ED for UTI

Author: Alicia Oberle, MD Educational Pearls: Recent study has shown risk factors for return included patients at high risk for resistance (nursing home, obstructive uropathy), patient where diagnogsis of pyelonephritis was missed, but the biggest risk factor was the existence of bug-drug mismatches. Cephalexin (Keflex) was associated with highest rate of return, while nitrofurantoin (Macrobid) was associated with lowest return rate. Recommendation is to continue to detect between pyelonephritis...

Mar 23, 20182 min

Podcast #308: Ultrasound in Cardiac Arrest

Author: Aaron Lessen, M.D. Educational Pearls: There is currently debate within the medical community about what constitutes cardiac activity on ultrasound in the setting of cardiac arrest. A recent study has shown there providers looking at the same clips from an echo will disagree about what constitutes cardiac activity. Some of the confusion stems from movement that is not cardiac in etiology. For example, some alvular movement can be due to IV fluids and some cardiac motion can be due to the...

Mar 21, 20183 min

Podcast #307: Guillain-Barre Syndrome

Author: Peter Bakes, M.D. Educational Pearls: Rare disease with 1-2 patients out of 100,000. About 60% of patients report a preceding diarrheal illness and classically presents with an ascending motor weakness. Pathophysiology is likely due to molecular mimicry where the immune system creates antibodies against a pathogen ( C. jejuni ) which appears similar to the myelin of peripheral nerves resulting in autoimmune demyelination. Diagnosis is made by clinical presentation +/- a spinal tap with a...

Mar 19, 20185 min

Podcast #306: Tramadol Drama

Author: Nick Hatch, M.D. Educational Pearls Tramadol acts at multiple receptors and is a partial agonist at the mu opioid receptor, but also blocks reuptake of serotonin and norepinephrine throughout the body among others. One major side effect to be aware of is that it lowers the seizure threshold. Useful in setting of pain control in patients with contraindications to NSAIDs who are poor opioid candidates. Use with caution as it potential for abuse. References Hennies HH, Friderichs E, Schneid...

Mar 16, 20183 min

Podcast #305: Stuffers vs. Packers : Drug-Packet Ingestion

Author: Aaron Lessen, M.D. Educational Pearls A “stuffer” is a term for someone who hastily and conceals a bag of drugs orally/rectally/vaginally in an unplanned situation. A “packer” is someone who is planning to smuggle drugs, and does so in a similar manner. “Stuffers”are more likely to have the drug container open up in their system, while packers tend to have more reliable containment, but typically have larger quantities on-board. Be on look out for symptoms associated with the drug’s expo...

Mar 14, 20183 min

Podcast #304: Nostalgia

Author: Dylan Luyten, MD Educational Pearls Johannes Hoffer coined term Nostalgia in 1688 in his medical dissertation. Nostalgia was a formal medical diagnosis, and one that dates back to 17th century when soldiers had longing for home and melancholy with a constellation of symptoms including lethargy, sadness, disturbed sleep, heart palpitations, GI complaints, and/or skin findings for which the only cure was to return home. In the civil war, over 5000 soldiers were given medical leave for nost...

Mar 12, 20185 min

Podcast #303: Lazarus Effect

Author: Dylan Luyten, M.D. Educational Pearls The Lazarus phenomenon is the delayed return of spontaneous circulation after cessation of CPR. A prospective study in Finland found 5 out of 840 patients where CPR was attempted in the setting of cardiac arrest experienced the Lazarus effect (about 0.6%). 3 of these patients died on scene, and the other 2 died in the hospital at 1.5 and 26 hours respectively. Ultimately, the Lazarus effect is rare, but it does occur and providers and family members ...

Mar 09, 20184 min

Podcast #302: Flu

Author: Jared Scott, M.D. Educational Pearls Flu is widespread throughout the US (through Jan 20 th 2018). All age groups have seen surge in hospitalizations, but 65 + age group has seen the largest surge in hospitalizations due to flu. New recommendations for treating with Tamiflu! Treat the following high-risk groups at any stage of illness: Children under age 2, Adults 65 and older, patients with comorbidities such as chronic lung disease, heart disease, blood disorders, kidney disorders, liv...

Mar 07, 20183 min

Podcast #301: Biliary Pathology

Author: Don Stader, M.D. Educational Pearls Common pathologies include cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, and in concerningly ascending cholangitis. Cholecystitis is obstruction at the cystic duct leading to inflammation of gallbladder wall, while choledocholithiasis is a distal obstruction of the biliary tree, and ascending cholangitis is an ascending infection of the biliary tree secondary to obstruction. Risk factors for Cholecystitis are the 5 F’s (Fat, Forty, Female, Fertile, Family Hx). C...

Mar 05, 20184 min

Dreamland in Denver Part VI: "Dreamland"

Sam Quinones, American journalist and author of the critically acclaimed book, Dreamland: The True Tale of America's Opiate Epidemic , shares the story of how he discovered the truth about the Opiate Epidemic.

Feb 16, 201843 min

Podcast #300: Probiotics

Author: Peter Bakes, M.D. Educational Pearls Probiotics are living bacteria that are taken as an oral supplement. Most of the data to support their use is in the prevention of antibiotic-related diarrhea and the reduction of the symptoms of ulcerative colitis (UC). Some studies have some a reduction of the incidence of antibiotic-related diarrhea in children of up to 12% with the use of probiotics. There may be a reduction of up to 60% in the incidence of antibiotic-related C. diff infection in ...

Feb 07, 20187 min

Podcast #299: Black Death, Lice, Math, and Pottery

Author: Chris Holmes, M.D. Educational Pearls It’s estimated that about 25 million people died during the Black Plaque. Researchers have confirmed this number by assessing how much old, broken pottery was buried in front of homes and churches from that time period. Traditional thinking has been that the Black Plague was spread primarily by flea bites. However, using mathematical modeling, researchers have theorized that person-to-person spread was more common. References: https://www.washingtonp...

Feb 06, 20184 min

Podcast #298: Seizures

Author: Sam Killian, M.D. Educational Pearls The availability of antiepileptic treatment has changed in the last 30 years. A recent study in JAMA followed 18,000 pts with epilepsy for 30 years to assess the effectiveness of looked at seizure control. The study found that although there have been new drugs introduced over the last 30 years, there has not been much of an improvement in seizure control. Side effect profiles and medicine compliance may have improved in this time period, but the main...

Feb 02, 20183 min

Podcast #297: Truvada

Educational Pearls Truvada (Emtricitabine/tenofovir) is a combination nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitor that can be used as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV. It has been shown to dramatically reduce the risk of contracting HIV. It is used in high-risk patients, like the MSM community or those who are in a relationship with someone with HIV. Side effects include nausea, vomiting, headache, and liver damage. HIV testing should be performed every 3 months while taking it, since it i...

Jan 31, 20184 min
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