The American journal of emergency medicine
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The study aimed to investigate whether there is a difference in the amount of adenosine per kilogram (mg/kg) between the patient groups that can and cannot be converted to sinus rhythm (SR) with adenosine therapy in patients with supraventricular tachycardia (SVT). ⋯ This study suggest that the success of terminating SVT with the first 6 mg dose of adenosine appears to be dependent on patient weight. In patients given larger doses of adenosine, determinants of PSVT termination success may be factors other than patient weight.
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ED data are an important source of surveillance data for monitoring many conditions of public health concern and are especially useful in describing trends related to new, or unusual public health events. The COVID-19 pandemic led to significant changes in emergency care seeking behavior. We described the trends in all-cause emergency department (ED) visit volumes by race, ethnicity, and age using ED data from the National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) during December 30, 2018-April 2, 2022. ⋯ ED utilization fluctuated considerably during the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall ED visits returned to within 5% of 2019 baseline during Q2 2021, however, ED visits among children did not return to the 2019 baseline until Q3 2021, then again dropped below the 2019 baseline in Q4 2021. Trends in ED visit volumes were similar among race and ethnicity groups but differed by age group. Monitoring ED data stratified by race, ethnicity and age can help understand healthcare utilization trends and overall burden on the healthcare system as well as facilitate rapid identification and response to public health threats that may disproportionately affect certain populations.
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When weighing the costs and benefits of "choosing wisely," in a healthcare climate that continues to stress cost-saving practices, it is difficult to argue with approaching low-risk patients with conservative approaches and treatments. In defense of liberal and broad approaches to patient workups, however, one must also weigh the bounce-back emergency department (ED) visit, which may represent either a failure of initial evaluation or a success of appropriate return precautions. ⋯ Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the brain and spine demonstrated extensive and multifocal areas of signal abnormalities consistent with active demyelination concerning for acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM). Additional lab workup demonstrated seropositive myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibodies, further supporting the diagnosis of ADEM, an immune-mediated disorder which can lead to rapid multifocal neurologic dysfunction.
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Observational Study
Four- and three-year emergency medicine residency graduates perform similarly in their first year of practice compared to experienced physicians.
United States emergency medicine (EM) post-graduate training programs vary in training length, either 4 or 3 years. However, it is unknown if clinical care by graduates from the two curricula differs in the early post-residency period. ⋯ In this sample, measures of clinical care and practice patterns related to efficiency, safety, and flow were largely similar between the physician groups; however, experienced new hires were more likely to prescribe opioids than new graduates. These results do not support recommending a specific length of residency training in EM.
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Observational Study
Retrospective evaluation of ketamine versus droperidol on time to restraint removal in agitated emergency department patients.
Acute agitation and violent behavior in the emergency department (ED) can lead to significant patient morbidity and contribute to the growing problem of workplace violence against health care providers. To our knowledge, there is no available literature directly comparing intramuscular ketamine to intramuscular droperidol in ED patients presenting with undifferentiated agitation. The purpose of this investigation was to compare the effectiveness and safety of these agents for acute agitation in the ED. ⋯ Intramuscular droperidol and intramuscular ketamine were associated with similar times from drug administration to restraint removal in patients presenting to the ED with undifferentiated agitation. Prospective studies are warranted to evaluate IM droperidol and IM ketamine head-to-head as first line agents for acute agitation in the ED.