Resuscitation
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Occult pneumothorax (OPTX) is defined as a pneumothorax seen on computed tomography but not apparent on supine plain radiography. Though increasingly common, the acute management of OPTX after trauma remains controversial. This evidence-based review evaluates the existing evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of observation as compared to tube thoracostomy (TT) for management of OPTX in emergency department trauma patients. ⋯ The existing evidence leads to the conclusion that observation is at least as safe and effective as tube thoracostomy for management of occult pneumothorax.
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Review
Scientific, legal, and ethical challenges of end-of-life organ procurement in emergency medicine.
We review (1) scientific evidence questioning the validity of declaring death and procuring organs in heart-beating (i.e., neurological standard of death) and non-heart-beating (i.e., circulatory-respiratory standard of death) donation; (2) consequences of collaborative programs realigning hospital policies to maximize access of procurement coordinators to critically and terminally ill patients as potential donors on arrival in emergency departments; and (3) ethical and legal ramifications of current practices of organ procurement on patients and their families. ⋯ Policies enforcing end-of-life organ procurement can have unintended consequences: (1) erosion of care in the patient's best interests, (2) lack of transparency, and (3) ethical and legal ramifications of flawed standards of declaring death.