The American journal of emergency medicine
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Although Kocher criteria can distinguish a septic hip from an aseptic cause, they may not apply to a septic knee. We aimed to identify predictors to discriminate septic and aseptic causes of acute knee monoarthritis in children who underwent arthrocentesis. ⋯ Based on these findings, we propose an algorithm to identify low, intermediate and high-risk patients for knee septic arthritis. Our proposed two-step algorithm incorporating major (age, WBC, CRP) and minor (fever, ESR, non-weight bearing) criteria can serve as a simple decision-support tool to justify arthrocentesis in children with suspected knee septic arthritis.
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Delayed neurological sequelae (DNS) are a severe complication of carbon monoxide poisoning (COP) and high predisposing rates of disability and mortality, yet the relationship between exposure factors and DNS remains unknown. The aim was to investigate the association between domestic sources of COP and DNS. ⋯ This study indicates that domestic COP caused by charcoal burning is more likely to trigger DNS than gas-emitting heaters.
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Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PreP) reduces the rate of HIV transmission in high-risk groups. Emergency departments (EDs) frequently encounter patients at risk for HIV acquisition who are eligible for PrEP. ED HIV screening programs have prioritized testing and linkage to care for patients who test positive, but fail to refer HIV-negative patients to PrEP clinicians. Our objective was to estimate referral acceptance to a PrEP clinician among a sample of at-risk ED patients. ⋯ Approximately one third of PrEP-eligible ED patients accepted PrEP referral during their ED encounter, demonstrating an opportunity for increased PrEP education and intentional referral for eligible patients. Variability in PrEP acceptability by demographic and risk subgroup may be an important consideration in efforts to expand PrEP utilization.
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Case Reports
Resistant lactic acidemia due to accidental cheese starter culture ingestion: A case report.
Lactic acid is the end-product of anaerobic glycolysis. It is generally believed that elevated blood lactate levels are associated with poor patient outcomes. Literature reports that lactic acidosis can be related to supplementary food intake in the pediatric age group however, in adult patients, it is not common to see lactic acidosis due to oral ingestion unless the patient has a history of short bowel syndrome or jejunoileal bypass surgery. With the current case presentation, we report an accidental cheese starter culture intake that resulted in resistant lactic acidosis with no signs of critical illnesses.