The American journal of emergency medicine
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We sought to determine the impact of the presence of a pharmacist on medication and patient related outcomes during the emergency management of critically ill patients requiring resuscitation or medical emergency response team care in a hospital setting. ⋯ The results of this systematic review provide support for a beneficial impact of a pharmacist presence and intervention during resuscitation or medical emergency response team care, with significant improvements in outcomes such as time to initiation of time-critical medications, medication appropriateness and guideline compliance. However, studies were predominantly small and retrospective and were not powered to detect differences in patient related measures such as length of stay and mortality. Future research should investigate the clinical impacts of the pharmacist in ED resuscitation settings in controlled, prospective studies with robust sampling methods.
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We sought to determine the impact of the presence of a pharmacist on medication and patient related outcomes during the emergency management of critically ill patients requiring resuscitation or medical emergency response team care in a hospital setting. ⋯ The results of this systematic review provide support for a beneficial impact of a pharmacist presence and intervention during resuscitation or medical emergency response team care, with significant improvements in outcomes such as time to initiation of time-critical medications, medication appropriateness and guideline compliance. However, studies were predominantly small and retrospective and were not powered to detect differences in patient related measures such as length of stay and mortality. Future research should investigate the clinical impacts of the pharmacist in ED resuscitation settings in controlled, prospective studies with robust sampling methods.
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Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) is a rare but serious condition that carries with it a high rate of morbidity and mortality. ⋯ An understanding of GBS can assist emergency clinicians in diagnosing and managing this potentially deadly disease.
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Review Observational Study
The long and the short of pediatric emergency department antibiotic prescribing: A retrospective observational study.
Most antibiotics prescribed to children are provided in the outpatient and emergency department (ED) settings, yet these prescribers are seldom engaged by antibiotic stewardship programs. We reviewed ED antibiotic prescriptions for three common infections to describe current prescribing practices. ⋯ While guideline-concordant antibiotic prescribing was generally high, auditing antibiotic prescriptions identified shifting prescribing towards the minimally recommended duration as a potential opportunity to reduce antibiotic use among children for these infections.
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Review Case Reports
Ramen noodle neuropathy: an atypical case of partial paralysis from malnutrition.
Due to a COVID-related job loss resulting in financial and food insecurity, a 28-year-old woman initiated a diet consisting solely of one cup of ramen noodles daily for twenty-two months, leading to 27 kg of weight loss. Ramen noodles are low in calories and lack key nutrients, including potassium, chloride, and vitamin B12. ⋯ After stroke, spinal injury, multiple sclerosis, and the most common focal mononeuropathies were ruled out, the clinical focus turned to nutritional deficiencies, the most significant of which was hypokalemia. Prior research has shown that severe hypokalemia can lead to weakness. It has also shown that chronically insufficient dietary intake is a common cause of hypokalemia. This case, with its partial paralysis of a unilateral upper extremity, may add to the known clinical manifestations of hypokalemia. We review the role of hypokalemia and hypochloremia in acid-base dynamics. Etiologies and clinical manifestations of cobalamin, thiamine, pyridoxine, and copper deficiencies, along with lead toxicity, are also discussed. Diagnostic clarity of mononeuropathies in the context of malnutrition and hypokalemia can be aided by urine potassium levels prior to repletion, neuroimaging that includes the cervical spine, and follow-up electromyography.