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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 # 463: Buproprion Overdose

Author: Erik Verzemnieks, MD Educational Pearls: Buproprion is used as an antidepressant and for smoking cessation Severe buproprion overdoses can cause seizures and lead to cardiac dysrhythmias Benzodiazepines are treatment of choice for seizures Bicarbonate and Interlipid are also possible treatment options with less evidence References Stall N, Godwin J, Juurlink D. Bupropion abuse and overdose. CMAJ. 2014 Sep 16;186(13):1015. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.131534. Epub 2014 Apr 28. PubMed PMID: 24778361;...

Apr 30, 20192 min

Podcast # 462: Death after OD

Author: Don Stader, MD Educational Pearls: 10% of patients seen in the emergency department for opioid overdose patients will die within a year Half of these overdoses will occur in the next month This mortality rate is higher than patients with STEMI, of which 7% will die within one year Take-home naloxone, as well as medication assisted treatment like buprenorphine can save lives References Olfson M, Crystal S, Wall M, Wang S, Liu SM, Blanco C. Causes of Death After Nonfatal Opioid Overdose. J...

Apr 27, 20193 min

Podcast # 461: Breath Stacking

Author: Gretchen Hinson, MD Educational Pearls: Breath stacking occurs when a patient is unable to expire fully before another inspiration In intubated/ventilated patients, this is because adequate time has not passed before exhalation Asthmatics are susceptible due to the prolonged expiratory phase Complications can include reduction in cardiac preload and cardiovascular collapse Pursed-lip breathing can help in the spontaneously breathing patient Intubation may be required when patients presen...

Apr 24, 20196 min

Podcast # 460: Hunting for PE in Syncope

Author: Michael Hunt, MD Educational Pearls: Most causes of syncope are benign Pulmonary embolism can result in syncope and is life threatening A recent study of Canadian and US ED patients with syncope showed that 0.4% of patients had a PE at 30 day follow-up PE should always be considered in cases of syncope but overall is a rare cause Editor’s note: this study puts to rest a previous study from 2016 that reported a rate of PE in syncope as high as 1 in 6 in patients admitted to syncope - whic...

Apr 22, 20193 min

Podcast # 459 Clonidine Ingestion

Author: Julian Orenstein, MD Educational Pearls: Severe clonidine ingestion can present as a fluctuating mental status between typically accompanied by changes in vital signs (hypotension/bradycardia) Respiratory depression requiring intubation is not uncommon References Isbister GK, Heppell SP, Page CB, Ryan NM. Adult clonidine overdose: prolonged bradycardia and central nervous system depression, but not severe toxicity. Clin Toxicol (Phila). 2017 Mar;55(3):187-192. doi: 10.1080/15563650.2016....

Apr 20, 20193 min

Podcast # 458: A Tylenol a Day Keeps the Delirium Away?

Author: Nick Hatch, MD Educational Pearls: A recent study investigated the effect of scheduled IV acetaminophen on the incidence of delirium in post-CABG patients in the ICU The use of scheduled IV acetaminophen reduced the rate of delirium in these patients compared to placebo This may be due to the analgesic effect of acetaminophen and/or less requirement on other deliriogenic medications (opiates) References Subramaniam B, Shankar P, Shaefi S, Mueller A, O'Gara B, Banner-Goodspeed V, Gallaghe...

Apr 17, 20193 min

Podcast # 457: Stroke Scores

Author: Jared Scott, MD Educational Pearls: Modified Rankin Score: measure of disability often used to qualify outcomes following stroke = no disability, 6=dead, 0-1 indicate good outcome) 0-6 Scale 0-1 indicative of good outcome ASPECT score: uses CT to quantify the extent of changes in the brain due to ischemia 0-10 Scale 10 areas are assessed on non-contrast CT to assess for early stroke changes -1 for each area with these findings 8-10 is indicative of better outcomes References Aviv RI, Man...

Apr 15, 20194 min

Podcast # 456 Hypoglycemia: Not feeling so sweet

Author: Jared Scott, MD Educational Pearls: Beta-blockers can mask the effects of hypoglycemia Prolonged/refractory hypoglycemia should raise a suspicion for sulfonylurea (or other oral hypoglycemic) overdose Interventions to reverse hypoglycemia include feeding the patient, IV dextrose, glucagon Octreotide can be used as an antidote with sulfonylurea ingestion Editor’s note: Here is an interesting case report on using steroids for severe hypogylcemia caused by insulin overdose. Perhaps another ...

Apr 12, 20194 min

Podcast # 455: Hunting for PeeCP

Author: Michael Hunt, MD Educational Pearls: Like all tests, urine toxicology (utox) screens can have false positives Prescription medications such as demerol, antipsychotics, ketamine, and tramadol can all produce a false positive utox for PCP Over-the-counter medication such as dextromethorphan also mimic PCP on utox References Doyon S. (January 2014). False Positive Urine Screens for Phencyclidine. ToxTidbits . Retrieved from https://www.mdpoison.com/media/SOP/mdpoisoncom/ToxTidbits/2014/Janu...

Apr 11, 20194 min

Podcast # 454: Tylenol Overdose

Educational Pearls: Acetaminophen overdose can also present in patients taking too much over the course of days to weeks - not just intentional ingestions If acute overdose is suspected, refer to the Rumak-Matthew nomogram to guide treatment based on time of ingestion and the time of level In chronic overdose, Tylenol levels will not guide treatment NAPQI is the toxic metabolite of acetaminophen N-acetylcysteine (NAC) can be effective treatment in both acute and chronic overdoses 7.5 g is the da...

Apr 09, 20195 min

Podcast # 453:  Headache Triggers

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Headache is a common complaint in the ED. It’s plausible that headaches could be correlated with environmental factors A 2015 study ED visits for headache found that temperature was associated with an increase visits, while higher humidity led to fewer A retrospective study looking over a 10-year period for headache found that there was an increase headache presentations during days with high air pollution References: Yilmaz M, Gurger M, Atescelik M, Y...

Apr 04, 20193 min

Podcast # 452: CADASIL

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) occurs in 1:100000 individuals The disease is caused by a defect in the NOTCH3 gene on chromosome 19 It is an important cause of stroke in young patients Features include ischemia, cognitive deficits, migraines, psychiatric disease, coma, and seizure, all of which is worse with pregnancy Migraine with aura is often the first presenting symptom with onse...

Apr 01, 20194 min

Podcast # 451: NSAIDs

Author: Don Stader, MD Educational Pearls: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are effective pain relievers but come with important side effects NSAIDs inhibit COX-1 and/or COX-2, which decreases the production of prostaglandins, which reduce pain and inflammation Side effects of NSAIDS include increased rates myocardial infarction, stroke, and gastrointestinal bleeding, CVA Effective pain reliever doses of many NSAIDs are lower than typically prescribed (i.e. ibuprofen 400 mg is as e...

Mar 29, 20194 min

Podcast # 450: Probiotics in Gastroenteritis

Author: Sam Killian, MD Educational Pearls: Viral gastroenteritis alters the gut microbiome and it is theorized that probiotics may help reduce the duration and severity of the disease. Double-blind randomized controlled trial involving almost 900 children with viral gastroenteritis compared 5 days of probiotics to a control group. There was no difference in the rates of severe gastroenteritis between the two groups Probiotics are likely unhelpful for kid with viral gastroenteritis References: F...

Mar 27, 20192 min

Podcast #449:  Banana Bags

Author: Dylan Luyten, MD Educational Pearls: A “banana bag” is a bag of IV fluid that contains various vitamins and minerals including folate and thiamine IV fluids do not alter intoxicated patients recovery in the emergency department Folate deficiency is rare in the intoxicated patient Some intoxicated patients may be thiamine deficient, and those that would benefit the most need significantly more daily thiamine supplementation than provided in a banana bag References: Perez SR, Keijzers G, S...

Mar 25, 20196 min

Podcast #448:  Chronic Salicylate Toxicity

Author: Ryan Circh, MD Educational Pearls: Chronic salicylate (ASA) toxicity can present in elderly patients as altered mental status Consider chronic toxicity in patients with an unexplained anion gap acidosis Treatment for chronic ingestion typically includes IV fluids and urine alkalinization References: O'Malley GF. Emergency department management of the salicylate-poisoned patient. Emerg Med Clin North Am. 2007 May;25(2):333-46; abstract viii. Review. PubMed PMID: 17482023. Durnas C, Cusack...

Mar 23, 20193 min

Podcast #447:  IV Tylenol

Author: Dylan Luyten, MD Educational Pearls: Recent randomized controlled trial compared intravenous to oral acetaminophen in emergency department patients There was no difference in pain relief between the groups While the actual acquisition cost of these drugs are not significant, the cost multipliers that are passed onto patients lead to real dollars With the significant cost of IV acetaminophen, it may not be the best choice given the lack of superiority to other formulations References: Fur...

Mar 20, 20193 min

Podcast #446:  Retinal Detachment

Author: Dylan Luyten, MD Educational Pearls: 1:500 patients will experience a retinal detachment Consider stroke on your differential (central retinal arterial occlusion) Flashes and floaters are a common complaint with retinal detachments Though patients may report fields of vision loss, visual acuity is often spared Ocular ultrasound is an effective way to diagnosis retinal detachment in the ED These require urgent ophthalmologic consultation for surgical repair References: https://www.aliem.c...

Mar 19, 20196 min

Podcast #445: Hunting for the endotracheal tube

Author: Michael Hunt, MD Educational Pearls: Bedside transtracheal ultrasound to confirm proper endotracheal intubation is simple and effective Review of 17 studies showed transtracheal ultrasound was was 98.7% sensitive and 97.1% specific Curvilinear probe may be preferable as it provides a larger field of view Editor’s Note: rather than explain what you’re looking for… just go here References: Gottlieb M, Holladay D, Peksa GD. Ultrasonography for the Confirmation of Endotracheal Tube Intubatio...

Mar 08, 20193 min

Podcast #444: Dyspnea in the intubated patient

Author: Aaron Lessen, MD Educational Pearls: Dyspnea can occur in up to 50% of intubated patients Dyspnea is associated with prolonged mechanical intubation Often goes undiagnosed as these patients have difficulty communicating Expert opinion on reducing sensation of dyspnea Reduce stimulation of respiratory drive like fever and acidosis Give bronchodilators for patients with wheezing Optimize the ventilator settings Use medications for comfort (i.e. opioids, benzodiazepines) References: Decavèl...

Mar 06, 20192 min

Podcast #443: Measles - a timely revisit

Author: Sue Chilton, MD Educational Pearls: Measles is highly contagious Typically patients just look sick Remember 4 & 4, 14, and 4-C’s: Contagious 4 days before and after onset of rash 14 days for rash to appear Cough, coryza, conjunctivitis (non-purulent), and Koplik’s spots Under 2 and over 20 are highest risk groups 1 in 1000 will die Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis is one of the most feared, degenerative, 100% fatal complications that can occur up to two decades after initial infection...

Mar 04, 20194 min

Podcast #442: When a severe man cold isn’t

Author: Jared Scott, MD Educational Pearls: CXR is 40-90% sensitive for detecting pneumonia when compared to CT Patients with a high degree of suspicion for pneumonia may still warrant treatment despite a negative CXR References: Self WH, Courtney DM, McNaughton CD, Wunderink RG, Kline JA. High discordance of chest x-ray and computed tomography for detection of pulmonary opacities in ED patients: implications for diagnosing pneumonia. Am J Emerg Med. 2013 Feb;31(2):401-5. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.201...

Mar 02, 20195 min

Podcast #441: Is Heparin Worthless for ACS?

Author: Don Stader, MD Educational Pearls: Recent study demonstrated patients with non-STEMI treated with heparin had no difference in survival, but had an increased risk of major bleeding Heparin may be an outdated medication in the era of dual anti-platelet therapy and PCI Heparin may fall to the wayside like other former treatments for ACS such as morphine, oxygen and nitroglycerin as far as mortality benefit References: Chen JY, He PC, Liu YH, Wei XB, Jiang L, Guo W, Duan CY, Guo YS, Yu XP, ...

Feb 27, 20193 min

Podcast # 440 : Carbon Monoxide Poisoning

Author: Katie Sprinkle, MD Educational Pearl: Carbon monoxide (CO) is the leading cause of death from poison world-wide CO forms from the combustion of any carbon based product Patients often present with non specific symptom like headache, vomiting, and malaise Consider this diagnosis with multiple people presenting with similar symptoms from a single location Treatment is with high flow oxygen (i.e. non-rebreather) Hyperbaric therapy is controversial and up for debate - discussion with local c...

Feb 25, 20195 min
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