July 24th, 2008 at 5:45 am by Nick
So, lots of big things were discussed today, but I’m going to focus on Dr. Judd Hollander’s talk, as it was crammed with insight on a very common problem – achieving disposition on the 8 million patients we seen annually with chest pain (this is national, not just Sinai). Of these 8 million, 3 million are sent home and so we admit 60-65% of chest pain, of which only 15% have real disease… Cardiologists hate us for this, but is there an alternative? What’s the evidence behind what we do?
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Posted in Risk Stratification, Post-Conference Letter, Arrhythmias, Radiology, ACS, Blog | No Comments »
July 9th, 2008 at 10:31 pm by Nick
There’ll be no recap of Dr. Bobrow’s excellent Grand Rounds lecture — you’ve already got the papers, the abstracts, and now you’ve got the lecture itself. We’re grateful for Dr. Bobrow’s generosity in not only coming to speak to us, but letting us post the audio from his talk online.
As for the resident and fellow presentations on central DI and general pediatric endocrine emergencies (thank Marisa and Karen, respectively), well, there’s not too much I can add, other than to check EMPeds.com for dosing information and sources like UpToDate, and online free text Pediatric Endocrinology for more background on presentation, diagnosis and treatment.
But for Dr. Jagoda’s provocative lecture on TBI and the upcoming ACEP clinical policy, see below.
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July 2nd, 2008 at 4:02 pm by Nick
We began the new year with Dr. Shearer explaining the program’s policies & procedures. You can find copies under the ‘Policies’ tab above. As for logging procedures, duty hours, presentations and evaluations, use the New Innovations link under the ‘Clinical’ tab.
Our first talk of the year was given by Ram, who lectured on penetrating chest trauma. Below are some points that merit repeating:
- - Unstable patients with stab wounds to ‘the box’ are either hypovolemic, have PTX, or tamponade. So get some blood ordered and get an ultrasound probe.
- - Pericardiocentesis is a pretty cool procedure that has almost no role in trauma at academic centers. The volume of blood that causes tamponade physiology is scant in trauma, and even if you can aspirate that blood, it will rapidly reaccumulate. For medical effusions, pericardiocentesis can be more easily done by ultrasound guidance — I refer the reader to p76 of Dr. Nelson’s ultrasound book, or to Dr. Hoffman’s website.
- - Ram pulled a great slide from Degiannis 2006 (PMID 16773259, figure 1) that lays out your options in penetrating cardiac trauma in various clinical scenarios. After PTX has been ruled out, the lifeless patient needs endotracheal intubation and ER thoracotomy. Accept it, and it will be easier to cut. Dr. Weingart has reviewed this procedure on his website, and he has also listed other indications and contraindications for thoracotomy.
Dr. Rabin delivered her core lecture on emergencies in malignancy.
- - Neutropenic fever is defined as an absolute neutrophil count below 500 and a temperature of 38.4C (or over 38C for more than an hour). Calculating ANC is easy (this calculator and others can be found under the ‘Clinical’ tab above). The admonition to avoid rectal temps in neutropenic adults is not evidence-based, though digital rectal exams remain contraindicated.
- - Work with the patient’s oncologist in deciding ABx therapy in neutropenic patients. Vancomycin should be avoided unless indicated by cultures, course or instability.
- - Be vigilant for tumor lysis syndrome: Order a uric acid and PO4 level on your chemo patients with nonspecific symptoms. Obviously you’ll get a potassium and treat hyper-K appropriately (perhaps avoiding Ca++ unless absolutely necessary) but the urate will need urine alkalinization, and high PO4 gets phosphate binders, plus insulin+glucose.
- - Hypercalcemia (stones, moans, bones, psych overtones) needs treatment if the patient is symptomatic or over 14 mEq. Correct the calcium if the patient’s hypoalbuminemic. Treat with hydration, lasix (after hydration), bisphosphonates, and dialyze if AMS or ARF.
- - Finally, be vigilant for DVT/PE, SVC, and spinal cord mets (said to manifest with back pain that’s worse upon lying down).
Dan presented the first (and second) M+M of the year. He gave a nice introduction to the various kinds of error we are prone to, and how cheese is the answer.
- - Dan also took us through the crash airway, difficulty airway, and failed airway algorithms (you should have a copy of Ron Walls’ book, and parts are freely available online).
- - Like our reluctance with thoracotomy, cricothyroidotomy is something we have to expect, so that it’s easier to cut when we have to. Here’s the NEJM cricothyroidotomy video. Youtube has other videos. And for the hardcore among you, here’s a keychain cric kit I once blogged about.
- - While we can recognize the importance of neuro status checks for our colleagues in neurosurgery, sedating intubated patients is crucial, especially with more planned trips to the CT scanner. The agent of choice? Propofol (the milk of oblivion — rapid on, rapid off, and recommended by the BTF for ICP control). And if propofol is lowering the BP, well, this is one time where pressors in trauma makes sense.
If you want to address some of the topics above, or other aspects from conference, please comment below.
Posted in Sedation, Trauma, Post-Conference Letter, Ultrasound, Procedures, Residency, Oncology, Blog | 1 Comment »
June 29th, 2008 at 12:17 pm by Nick
Hello everyone,
Thank you to those of you who passed up Ponte Vedra or new jobs to come to conference this week. Many thanks to our resident speakers, Matt, Shefali and Bing, and to our faculty presenters — Dr. Spina and Dr. Nassisi. Also thanks to the neurology department for their participation in our joint conference.
Below are some topics from conference that for which I found more resources, or that I just thought warranted repeating. Feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments section.
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Posted in Stroke / TIA, Post-Conference Letter, Risk Stratification, Useful Links, Sepsis, Infectious Disease, Blog | No Comments »
June 18th, 2008 at 10:31 pm by Nick
Hello everyone,
We had an enjoyable conference this week. Thank you to our resident speakers, Sheler and Shawn, and to our faculty presenters — Dr. Ginsburg, Dr. Strayer, Dr. Weingart and Dr. Andrus. Also thanks to the cardiology department for their participation in Sheler’s joint conference, and to Sohan, our graduating conference chief, who was on hand to lend his expertise with AV and other issues.
Below are some topics from conference that I wanted to touch upon — stuff that struck my fancy, really. Feel free to add your own in the comments section below.
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Posted in Post-Conference Letter, Monitoring, Arrhythmias, Blog | No Comments »