The American journal of emergency medicine
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Patients with acute myocardial infarction are at high risk of dying within the first hours after onset of coronary ischemia. Therefore, pharmacological intervention should be started in the prehospital setting. This study investigates the effect of the prehospital administration of bivalirudin on short-term morbidity and mortality compared to heparin plus abciximab in patients with ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). ⋯ The use of bivalirudin in the prehospital setting leads to a reduced rate of major cardiovascular events compared to a standard treatment with abciximab plus heparin. Bivalirudin is a reasonable choice of treatment in the prehospital setting for patients with STEMI.
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Postresuscitation autonomic nervous modulation after cardiac arrest resembles that of severe sepsis.
This study explored whether post-resuscitation status resembles severe sepsis in terms of autonomic nervous modulation by using heart rate variability (HRV) analysis. ⋯ The autonomic nervous modulation in the initial phase of OHCA patients resembles that of severe sepsis in that both groups of patients have decreased global HRV (TP, SD(RR), and CV(RR)), sympathovagal balance (LF% and LF/HF), and renin-angiotensin-aldosterone modulation (VLF), as compared to healthy subjects.
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Radiology plays an important role in evaluation of a trauma patient. Although chest radiography is recommended for initial evaluation of the trauma patient by the Advanced Trauma Life Support course, we hypothesized that precise physical examinations and history taking accurately identify those blunt trauma patients at low risk for chest injury, making routine radiographs unnecessary. Thus, this study was performed to investigate the role of chest radiography in initial evaluation of those trauma patients with normal physical examination. ⋯ Performing routine chest radiography in stable blunt trauma patients is of low clinical value. Thus, decision making for performing chest radiography in blunt trauma patients based on clinical findings would be efficacious and resource saving.
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To examine whether posturally induced changes in cardiac output differentiate patients presenting with dyspnea to the emergency department (ED) with acute heart failure (AHF) from other causes. ⋯ Patients with AHF have greater TFC but lower CI responses to postural changes compared to patients with asthma and COPD. Knowledge of these changes may help rapidly differentiate AHF from asthma and COPD in the ED.
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Case Reports
Initial dose effect of 5-fluorouracil: rapidly improving severe, acute toxic myopericarditis.
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) has a significant antineoplastic activity and has been used for the management of various malignant neoplasms. Cardiotoxicity of 5-FU is rare but may be life-threatening. A 55-year-old female patient was admitted to our hospital with atypical chest pain. ⋯ Transthoracic echocardiography revealed global myocardial hypokinesia with impaired left ventricular systolic function (ejection fraction, 20%). Coronary angiography revealed normal coronary arteries with no vasospasm, and therefore, she was hospitalized with the diagnosis of acute toxic myopericarditis and was treated medically. In literature, this case is the first case of acute toxic myocarditis occurring because of the first dose of 5-FU.