The American journal of emergency medicine
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Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA) is most commonly used to manage non-compressible torso hemorrhage. It is also emerging as a promising treatment for non-traumatic refractory cardiac arrest. ⋯ We present a case of non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in which REBOA was placed in the emergency department with subsequent ROSC. Transesophageal echocardiography was used to guide post-ROSC REBOA management and balloon deflation.
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We present the first report, to our knowledge, of an Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) witnessed during a remote international video meeting. We report an emergency system activation and OHCA resuscitation initiated after an OHCA in a 41-year-old otherwise healthy female in Houston, Texas witnessed by a co-worker in Australia during a 1-on-1 Zoom video call. Remotely witnessed emergencies such as OHCA present unique challenges to successful cardiac resuscitation and will likely become significantly more common in the future as remote video calls increase.
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Case Reports
Massive MCA stroke requiring alteplase followed by thrombectomy in a 34-year-old female with alport syndrome.
34-year-old-female with a medical history significant for Alport's syndrome, chronic kidney disease on dialysis, and hypertension, was brought to the emergency department for sudden onset aphasia and facial droop that began 30 min prior to arrival. She denied a history of prior strokes, recent illness, or fever. The vital signs on arrival as follows: blood pressure 151/71 mmHg, temperature of 98.4F, pulse of 77 beats/min, and respirations of 16 breaths/min. ⋯ The patient underwent MRI that showed a large left MCA distribution acute infarction with focal reperfusion hemorrhage and parenchymal hematoma measuring approximately 3 cm in each dimension (Fig. 3). This finding prompted emergent decompression and hemicraniectomy on day 2 of hospitalization. The patient was discharged on hospital day 17 to a rehab center.
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Pulmonary edema and anasarca are both common findings in patients presenting to emergency departments (ED). The differential diagnosis for these conditions is very wide and requires an initially broad approach that considers multiple organ systems. Insulin edema has been previously described in multiple case reports as a likely cause of acutely developing edema in mostly type I diabetics either initiating or increasing the intensity of their insulin regimens. ⋯ Her clinical presentation was notable for hypoxia requiring supplemental oxygen, bilateral lower extremity pitting edema, weight gain of 30 kg since discharge 9 days ago, a chest Xray displaying bilateral pulmonary edema and a work-up otherwise unrevealing for cardiac, renal, or liver etiologies. She was then admitted to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) on supplemental oxygen where through further evaluation she was determined to have insulin edema. This case details an unlikely etiology of anasarca and pulmonary edema, however diagnosing this condition highlights the broad diagnostic process that must be considered for any patient without known significant cardiac, renal, or liver history presenting with respiratory distress and anasarca especially on initial presentation to an emergency department.