Podcasts about emergency medicine clinics

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Best podcasts about emergency medicine clinics

Latest podcast episodes about emergency medicine clinics

Doktor Blund
19 – Luftvägshantering vid trauma

Doktor Blund

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2019 27:11


Äntligen(?) är Doktor Blund tillbaka. Idag med en presentation om luftvägshantering vid trauma. Jag testar att infoga presentationsbilderna här nedan om någon vill titta. Referenser: Kovacs, G., & Sowers, N. (2018). Airway Management in Trauma. Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emc.2017.08.006

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Pediatric Emergency Medicine

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the May 2018 issue on Pediatric Emergency Medicine. Guest editors, Drs. Sean M. Fox and Dale P. Woolridge, dissect the articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

drs sean m pediatric emergency medicine emergency medicine clinics
Curbside to Bedside
Acute Pulmonary Edema

Curbside to Bedside

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2018 22:07


What is SCAPE? For this podcast, we're discussing the acute pulmonary edema presentation. This patient is hypertensive (SBP >140mmHg), severely dyspneic, with diffuse rales and clearly anxious. The "no-shitter, drowning-before-your-very-eyes" type of pulmonary edema.  This is the SCAPE patient. SCAPE = Sympathetic Crashing Acute Pulmonary Edema. Patho Quick Hits The core causative factor in the SCAPE patient is an acute increase in left ventricular filling pressure. There are a myriad of causes for a sudden increase in LV pressure, but the end result is a redistribution of fluid into the lungs. 1) Acute increase in LV filling pressure. 2) Fluid redistribution into the lungs and alveolar space. 3) Hypoxia ensues. 4) Catecholamine production and increase in SVR. 5) Activation of the RAAS. It's important to remember that the majority of these patients are not volume overloaded. This is a fluid distribution problem due to increased LV pressure. As the RV continues to pump fluid into the pulmonary circulation, the LV cannot move that fluid forward because of the increased afterload. This creates a pressure gradient that transmits that pressure back into the pulmonary capillaries. 5 Major Causes of SCAPE - Exacerbation of chronic LV failure - Acute myocardial ischemia or infarction involving 25% or more of the myocardial mass - Severe systemic hypertension - Left sided valvular disorders - Acute tachydysrhythmias and bradysrhythmias Treatment In the out of hospital realm, the core treatments are Non Invasive Positive Pressure Ventilation (NIPPV) via CPAP or BiPAP, coupled with nitroglycerine as a first-line medication. For the "regular guy" toolbox, the treatment pathway looks a little like this: 1) Treating the underlying cause if evident. 2) NIPPV 3) NTG 4) More NTG 5) More NTG 6) More NTG  Do not delay NIPPV to see if other therapies (like a NRB) will work first. In the awake patient maintaining their own airway presenting with SCAPE, have a low threshold to apply your NIPPV mode of choice. These patients need PEEP: they generally have an oxygenation problem, and not a ventilation problem. To that point, most prehospital disposable CPAP systems do not deliver 100% FiO2. The O_two and Pulmodyne O2-MAX systems we generally use are either fixed FiO2 or provide a titration of FiO2 based on oxygen flow. The O_two system will provide between 59% and 77% FiO2 at oxygen flow rates between 8L/min and 25 L/min respectively. The Pulmodyne O2-MAX system provides 30% FiO2 regardless of PEEP, or with an additional adapter may provide 30%, 60%, or 90% FiO2 independent of the set PEEP. Nitrogylcerin If sublingual NTG is all you have, give it. Often, too. Lifting up the CPAP mask for 20 seconds is highly unlikely to cause clinically relevant harm. If you have the option of IV NTG, that should be your go-to. Standard dosing strategies for IV NTG of 5-40mcg/min are likely ineffective, and there is literature to support higher dosing strategies. Consider that we bolus 400mcg of SL NTG, and that the bioequivalence of SL NTG is comparable to around an IV NTG dose of 60-80mcg/min, so rapid titration of IV NTG even up to 100mcg/min is not entirely unreasonable and largely supported by current literature. Bibliography Dec, G. W. (2007). Management of Acute Decompensated Heart Failure. Current Problems in Cardiology, 32(6), 321–366. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpcardiol.2007.02.002 Mosesso, V. N. J., Dunford, J., Blackwell, T., & Griswell, J. K. (2003). Prehospital therapy for acute congestive heart failure: state of the art. Prehospital Emergency Care : Official Journal of the National Association of EMS Physicians and the National Association of State EMS Directors, 7(1), 13–23. Retrieved from http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&PAGE=reference&D=med4&NEWS=N&AN=12540139 Aguilar, S., Lee, J., Castillo, E., Lam, B., Choy, J., Patel, E., … Serra, J. (2013). Assessment of the addition of prehospital continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) to an urban emergency medical services (EMS) system in persons with severe respiratory distress. The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 45(2), 210–9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jemermed.2013.01.044 Levy, P., Compton, S., Welch, R., Delgado, G., Jennett, A., Penugonda, N., … Zalenski, R. (2007). Treatment of Severe Decompensated Heart Failure With High-Dose Intravenous Nitroglycerin: A Feasibility and Outcome Analysis. Annals of Emergency Medicine, 50(2), 144–152. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2007.02.022 Mebazaa, A., Gheorghiade, M., Piña, I. L., Harjola, V.-P., Hollenberg, S. M., Follath, F., … Filippatos, G. (2008). Practical recommendations for prehospital and early in-hospital management of patients presenting with acute heart failure syndromes. Critical Care Medicine, 36(Suppl), S129–S139. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.CCM.0000296274.51933.4C Agrawal, N., Kumar, A., Aggarwal, P., & Jamshed, N. (2016). Sympathetic crashing acute pulmonary edema. Indian Journal of Critical Care Medicine, 20(12), 719. https://doi.org/10.4103/0972-5229.195710 Mattu, A., Martinez, J. P., & Kelly, B. S. (2005). Modern management of cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emc.2005.07.005 Scott Weingart. EMCrit Podcast 1 – Sympathetic Crashing Acute Pulmonary Edema (SCAPE). EMCrit Blog. Published on April 25, 2009. Accessed on September 11th 2018. Available at [https://emcrit.org/emcrit/scape/ ].

MCHD Paramedic Podcast
Episode 17 - One Pill Killers

MCHD Paramedic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2018 21:34


Join Dr. Patrick for a discussion of common drugs, both OTC and prescription, that can be deadly to our pediatric patients in doses as small as a single pill. This knowledge will allow us to properly educate families and know when to expect a potential crashing kid. References: Michael J.B., Sztajnkrycer M.D. Deadly pediatric poisons: Nine common agents that kill at low doses. (2004). Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 22, 1019-1050.

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Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Damage Control: Advances in Trauma Resuscitation

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2018


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the February 2018 issue on Damage Control: Advances in Trauma Resuscitation. Guest editors, Drs. Christopher Hicks and Andrew Petrosoniak, dissect the articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

trauma drs advances damage control resuscitation andrew petrosoniak emergency medicine clinics
Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Severe Sepsis Care in the Emergency Department

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2018


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the February 2017 issue on Severe Sepsis Care in the Emergency Department. Guest editor, Dr. Michael Winters, from the University of Maryland, dissects the articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

university care maryland emergency departments severe sepsis michael winters emergency medicine clinics
Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the November 2016 issue on Neurologic Emergencies. Guest editor, Dr. Jonathan Edlow, from Harvard Medical School, dissect the articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Emergencies

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the May 2016 issue on Abdominal and Gastrointestinal Emergencies. Guest editors, Drs. Joseph Martinez and Autumn Graham, dissect the articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

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Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Emergency Medicine Clinics Special Edition

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2016


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on a special article on the Zika Virus. Author Jon Mark Hirshon discusses the article he co-wrote with Siri Shastry and Kristi L. Koenig.

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Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Psychiatric and Behavioral Emergencies

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2016


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the November 2015 issue on Psychiatric and Behavioral Emergencies. Authors Nidal Moukaddam and Nathan Allen dissect their articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

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Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Cardiovascular Emergencies

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2015


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the August 2015 issue on Cardiovascular Emergencies, guest edited by Drs. Semhar Tewelde and Joshua Reynolds. Article authors Drs. Laura Bontempo, Ashley Strobel, Michael Scott, Michael Winters, Michael Allison, and Haney Mallemat dissect their articles and offer key points and issue highlights.

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Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the May 2015 issue on Orthopedic Emergencies. Guest editors, Drs. David Della-Giustina and Katja Goldflam, dissect the articles and offer key points and issue highlights

drs emergencies orthopedics emergency medicine clinics
Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)
Management of Hazardous Materials Emergencies

Emergency Medicine Clinics (Elsevier)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2015


This edition of the Emergency Medicine Clinics podcast features discussion on the February 2015 issue on Management of Hazardous Materials Emergencies. Guest editors, Drs. Stephen Borron and Ziad Kazzi, dissect the articles along with Consulting Editor, Amal Mattu