ABEM: LLSA 2004: 1. new TB: mid- lower lobe inf, hilar nodes 2. adjunct for hyoglycemia: ocreotide 3. triathelete: diamox 4. 52 DM cough and fever, 92% sat: social circumstances, NH resident. 5. lactic acidosis from metformin (Glucophage): decreases liver production and intestinal glucose absorption, enhances insulin sensitivity. 6. beta agonist, mild to moderate asthma: albuterol inhaler. 7. heatstroke: monitor K+ 8. knee: MCL gone, what else? PCL: posterior cruciate. With foot planted, tibia posterior against femur: 9: most adverse: meds 10: 23 F ingestion Benadryl ingestion: charcoal. 11: Status after TB meds: pyridoxine for INH 12: 30 YO LBP from bending: NSAIDs 13: 68 R knee: fel, weeks, medial meniscus 14: AMS: ataxia 15: Subraglottic FB, needs ventilation: jet 16: Hep vaccine for non-highrisk exposure 17: Radiation burns: delayed. 18: Severe acute asthma: oral prednisone 19: 30 YO F sickle cell: good paper: acute chest syndrome, best is blood for oxygenation 20: 35 F 2 gray of whole body: intestinal most susceptible 21: most likely cocaine EKG: nonspecific changes! 6% rulein rate. 22: best indication of distracting injury: clinical judgment. 23: in EM, most successful: RSI. 24: viral hepatitis: hep B vaccine safe for pregnant women 25: 24-hour onsite attending for residents: avoiding tech error. 26: acute chest syndrome organisms: Chlamydia instead of pneumococcal. 27: which of the following inccreases insulin secration: sulfonylureas 28: best for internal radiation: KI 29: PE presentation: CT 30: 10 YO with ITP with petechiae definitive treatment: splenectomy. Target 50,000, prednisone if needed. 31: Pneumonia Specific Severity Index: severity of illness. 32: Mite: scrub typhus 33: predictor in chest syndrome: thrombocytopenia 34: common complication for GI decontamination: aspiration 35: false negative D-dimer: more than 7 days. 36: IV/IM malaria drugs: > 4% of RBCs with falciparum 37: which fracture: Salter III 38: NH pneumonia: FQ + antipseudomonal (NB: COPD) 39: swolen knee, no end joint with Lachman: ACL 40: most serious from ITP, Plats < 20K: ICH. LLSA 2005: - Decadron for bacterial meningitis: give BEFORE giving antibiotics; only works in sick (GCS <=11) and with pneumococcal meningitis; no reduction in hearing loss. May lower penetration of vanco into CSF. - CT head before LP in adults with suspected meningitis: ? if clinical features to tell who needs CT. Focal and Mass effect; CT before LP if > 60, immunocompromised, history of CNS disease, stroke within a week, or focal signs on neuro exam. Only 3% of those with no hi-risk findings had abnormal CT. Give antibiotics, get CT, get LP... in that order. - Treatment of acute ischemic stroke: glucose is fuel for lactic acidosis. Ischemic peneumbra. BP dependent, electrically silent, may last for 6-8 hours. Streptokinas no good. ECASS: tPA for stroke. Minimal difference at 6 hours. NINDS: functional 11>13% increase (24-25% relative) function back to normal. Mortality changes not significant. tPA > 3 hours no benefit. ASA: benefit. No benefit from hperain, LMWH, neuroprotective. Intra-arterial: shows benefit; can go up to 6-8 hours. 5% have seizures, 30% will have headache. Maximal at onset. NIH Stroke Scale. 0-1 normal, near normal 1-4: minor (except global aphasia 5-15:L moderate 15-20: moderately severe > 20: severe Differential: wide. TIA? 80 gone in 7-10 minutes, 30% 5-year risk of CVA. 2-25% risk of cardiovascular complications within 5 years. CVA sensitivity of CT: 3 hrs - 30%, 24 hours 60%, 7 days 100% effacement of sulci, effacement of gray-white border, mass effect, hypodensitiy (hypodensity of >33%, Hyperdense MCA, predictive of acute CVA). AHA: treat if SBP > 220, or MAP > 130 tPA: get to 180/115 at time of thrombolysis (not ineligible, just control BP!) Don't give ASA, but having had ASA prehospital or at home not contraindication. - Minor pediatric head injury: low-risk criteria include alerg, no extenuating history. Obtain CT if GCS < 1, focal neuro deficit, depressed or basilar skull fracture. Consider CT if LOC, seizure, amensia, HA, persistent vomiting, irribatilyut or behavior change. If < 2 years, any sx get CT, scalp hematomas nonfrontal=CT. < 3 months if MOT more thantrivial or scalp hematoma. Skull radiographs only in alert infants with scalp hematoma. - Febrile seizures: most common cause of seizures in child < 5 years old, is febrile, no hx of prior seizure. 2-4%; FH of febrile sz important. Same with twins. Certain viral infections and vaccinations more likely. Recurrence: more if younger, lower temp at presentation, short duration, complex seizure. Slightly increased reisk of epilepsy slightly higher. Prehosp: check glucose. Treat if > 5 minutes. In ED: look for trauma, child abuse, serious bacterial illness: same incidence of SBI as those without a sz and with a fever. ? partially treated meningitis. ? developmental delay > likely epilepsy. Testing: 2YO with febrile seizure and obvious URI, no testing (per article/test). If doesn't perk up, may need SBI workup. Do LP if < 18 months and look sick. CT not routine: consider if ^ ICP, trauma. EEG not routine, not predictive of going on to epilepsy, only if focal sz or developmental delay. Dispo: home, guidance, recurrenc risk, ? if fever control helps. Followup with PCP. If complex, maybe admit, at least outpatient workup. Prophylaxis works but more side effects, not worthwhile: don't. - Pharm of pain and conscious sedation: opiods: no ceiling. Agonist-antagonists: Don't get tolerant to constipation. Fentanyl: give 1/3 dose to infants. COX-2 inhibitors. N2O: N/V 15%. Can distend any air pockets, balloon tip catheters Other agents: Steroids: for some inflammation TCAs: for neuropathic Anticonvulsants: for neuropathics Caffeine: maybe Calcitonin: helps with compression fractures. (Miacalcin): helps pain. Sedation: depressed LOC, airway reflexes intact. Recent food OK, short acting. not chloral hydrate or DPT. Midazolam: pregnancy Cat D, may cause hypotension, Methohexital (brevital): drops BP, myocardial depression, vasodilation Ketamine: emergence more common in adults. Myoclonus. 1.5-2 mg/kb IV, 4-5 IM. Propofol: fast, goes away fast, drops BP. Slight apneic. Not analgesic. - Fomepizol for methanol: osmolal gap. Formic acid is the bad stuff. Blocks alcohol dehydrogenase. Less erratic than alcohol. Hemodialysis if high levels to avoid long admit. If any visual symptoms, or if levels not dropping. Study didn't compare with ethanol. - Ethanol abuse: CAGE questionnaire: list of questions for chronic alcohol abuse. Withdrawal: stop the substance, treat withdrawal with subsitute. May DC from hospital if CIWA scale OK. Dilantin doesn't help. EtPH peaks 2-3 days, benzos 7-10 days. Use slow benzos as lower chance of abuse. Can use phenobarb, haldol, beta blockers, clonidine, depakote, tegretol, Tegretol has less relapse, more sx. Opiate: 36-72 hours. Piloerection. Clnidine: .1-.2 Q4H, taper in 3 days. Stimulant withdrawal: treat as dpressed. Amantadine, Ritalin (methylphenidate). - GHB: gorked, resp depression, vomiting. Schedule I: for narcolepsy. Raves, date rape. Body building. Anecodotal physostigmine: no, just supportive care. GBL and other prodrugs: not illegal. Can get GHB withdrawal if using all the time. - Ingestion of toxics by kids: Medications:cocaine, TCAs, iron. Ipecac in first hour if tox call, no contraindications; not in ED. Lavage: no benefit. Charcoal: 1 g/kg, NG if needed. multiple doses for theo, pehonbarb, tegretol. No cathartics. Whole bowel irrigation: iron, lithium maybe. May observe if mild or hours since ingestion. - Vertigo and dizziness. Peripheral: worse,sudden, intense, worse with motion, fatigues, +/- hearing loss, no CNS signs; lateral nystagmus. Central constand, not motional, vertical nystagmus. BPPV: Women in 50's. Perilymph fistula: infection, trauma: puff of air makes worse. Vestibular neuronitis: post-viral, Suddenly, days: if hearing loss too, call it labyrinthitis. Drugs cause ototoxicity. Usually bilateral, oscillopsia: can't mantain visual fixation when moving. Benzos can make chronic worse. 8th nerver lesion, Cerebellopontine area lesions: peripheral. Post-traumatic vertigo: immediately after injury, lasts for weeks. Not post-concussive. Central: CVA, bleed, Wallenbert: lateral medullary infarct: ipsilateral facial finding. VB insufficienc: rotating head worsens. Basilar migraine: occipital HA siwht >= 2 of laundry list. of finding. - Syncope: vagal most common, 34% unknown. arrhythmia 14%. IF have structural disease, admit: CAD, IHSS, CHF, valvular HD, congenital HD, or abnormal EKG. Predictive for death. Can diagnose 45% of time. EKG diagnose 5%. Ambulatory monitoring: no benefit for 72 hours. EP study: if has EKG changes or structural HD, 21% VT. If structural disease uncertain OR exercise-related, needs stress and echo. No SD or EKG findings: neurally mediated. If recurrent, may need carotid massage, tilt table. Single episode, normal EKG, no structural HD: stop workup, send home. If sturcural HD, other symptoms, abnormal EKG: admit. - Angioplasty: Transfer vs. tPA? All three endpoints reduced by angioplasty. Results depend on number of PTCAs done by center. - Natrecor study: nesiritide: AHA says only use if everything else fails. Recombinant BNP: venodilator, decreases preload, afterload, increases GFR. Study with decompensated CHF by Swan. Compared to NTG, had more effect on PCWP than NTG. But people the same, overall function, same with both agents. Hypotension lasts longer with Natrecor. - EKG in MI: Inferior MI: RV infarct: 1 mm elevation in V4R with upright T wave. LAD: if aVL elevation: proximal LAD lesion. LBBB: if concordance with QRS, conclude acute MI: Best marker for resolution of acute infarct is STs go down. Rescue angioplasty for failed tPA. -WNV: mostly asymptomatic. Less than 1% get severe disease: flaccidity, CN palsies, sz, fatalaty rate 4-18%, worse with age. Comorbidity with DM, immunocompromised, MS. May get permanent neuro. CT an dMRI usually normal. Detection of IgM ab in serum or CSF by serum test. Supportive. No vacccine. - Community-acquired peds pneumonia: WHO: clinical signs and RR. This: fever or URI and infiltrate. 35% of RSV culture out pneumococcus, but they don't need treatment. Immunization works, H. Flu gone now. Rhinorrhea, ill contacts, myalgias: no difference. Mycoplasma has variable infiltrates. patchy scattered are viral and loba are bacteral. CRP and absolute neutrophils maybe useful. Age, epidem, CXR. 3wks-3months: C. traromatak, Brodatella PErtussis. 3 months-3 years: sicker, nonretrosternal chest pain > more likely bacterial. Wheezing: viral Conj < 3 months: chlamydia. 0-3 weeks: amp + gent. +/- claforan. 3 wks-3 onths: macrolide, +/- clagoran 4 mo-40 years; hidose amox for home, inpatient: viral, none 5-15: macrolide + if lobar: - Ottowa knee rule in kids: 100 in adults, _isolated_ pateller tender nonisolated head of fibula tender can't flex more than 90 degrees can't walk 4 steps home AND in ED Don't use if distracting painful injury, o imperfecta, Should not use < 5, > 55 - Lacerations, US: LLSA 2007: 1. Appendicitis: - appy most common emergency surgery - CBC and temp unreliable - higher mortality if have appy with normal appendix - WBC: +LR 1.59, -LR 0.46, ROC .72 - Temp: worse. +LR 1.3, -LR 0.82 ROC .59 2. Clinical Decision Making - Pattern Recognition - Rule Using: must be on right pathway - Hypothetico-deductive - Naturalistic: ATLS approach - Medical Inquiry errors: - attitudinal error: missing bad stuff in frequent flyer - anchoring 3. Adverse Drug Reactions in the Elderly - Unintended consequences in appropriate use e.g. opioids > somnolence