The American journal of emergency medicine
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In 2009, Florida initiated a statewide prescription drug-monitoring program (PDMP) to encourage safer prescribing of controlled substances and reduce drug abuse and diversion. Data supporting the utility of such programs in the emergency department (ED) is scarce. This study sought to determine the effect of PDMP data on controlled substance prescribing from the ED. ⋯ Although the results did not demonstrate a change in the average number of controlled substances prescribed when prescribers were provided with PDMP data, results from the survey indicate that prescribers felt the data altered their prescribing of controlled substances, and thus were more contented prescribing controlled substances.
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A 44-year-old man who drove a motorcycle experienced a collision with the side of another motorcycle. Because he had sustained a high-energy injury to the spinal cord, he was transferred to our hospital. His circulation was unstable, and received tracheal intubation in addition to thoracostomy for the hemothorax. ⋯ On a repeat CT examination, the left atrium was found to be compressed by a posterior mediastinal hematoma induced by the fracture of the thoracic spine, and a diagnosis of shock induced by multiple factors, including hemorrhagic, neurogenic, and obstructive mechanisms, was made. After obtaining stable circulation and respirations, internal fixation of the extremities and extubation were performed on the 12th hospital day. Chest CT performed on the 27th day showed the disappearance of compression of the left atrium by the hematoma.
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For patients with early intrauterine pregnancy (IUP), the sonographic signs of the gestation may be below the resolution of transabdominal ultrasound (TAU); however, it may be identified by transvaginal ultrasound (TVU). We sought to determine how often TVU performed in the emergency department (ED) reveals a viable IUP after a nondiagnostic ED TAU and the impact of ED TVU on patient length of stay (LOS). ⋯ When an ED TVU was performed, a viable IUP was detected 49.6% of the time. Emergency department LOS was significantly shorter for women who received ED TVU after indeterminate ED TAU compared with those sent to RAD for TVU, with more marked time savings among those with live IUP diagnosed on ED TVU. For patients who do not receive a definitive diagnosis of IUP on ED TVU, this approach does not result in increased LOS.
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Case Reports
A case of the vacuum phenomenon as a mechanism of gas production in the abdominal wall.
A 40-year-old man experienced a collision with a car while driving a motorcycle in which the car was in the opposite lane and made a right turn. The patient was thrown approximately 10 m from the point of collision and, as he exhibited a consciousness disturbance, was transferred to our department. He had a score of 13 on the Glasgow Coma Scale with sinus tachycardia on arrival. ⋯ As representative mimics of free air were not observed during surgery in the present case, we believe that the traumatic impact to the patient's abdomen as a result of the collision caused the accumulation of gas in the abdominal wall due to vacuum phenomenon. Physicians should be aware of this clinical entity to accurately recognize the mechanism of gas formation in patients showing negative laparotomy findings for gas in the abdomen. This unique case adds additional information regarding the documented etiologies of mimics of pneumoperitoneum.
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A debate has emerged regarding the safety profile of direct anticoagulants, which are increasingly prescribed for the prevention of thromboembolic events. Despite favorable safety data derived from controlled clinical trials, the absence of specific antidotes for the management of hemorrhagic complications represents a major challenge for emergency physicians. ⋯ Prothrombin complex concentrates were administered before surgery, and both patients had a favorable postsurgical course without bleeding or thromboembolic complications. Further studies are needed, but this approach seems to be suitable for the emergency management of apixaban-associated intracranial hemorrhage.