Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
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Extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is the reference rewarming technique of accidental deep hypothermic cardiac arrest (DHCA). This study was designed to examine the impact of different rewarming blood flow rates and temperature setting of ECLS on cardiopulmonary lesions after DHCA in a porcine model of accidental hypothermia. ⋯ We developed a porcine model of DHCA treated by ECLS. Our data suggest that cardiac output tended to improve with a high-flow-rate rewarming strategy while a high-temperature delta between core temperature and ECLS increased the RAGE markers of lung injury.
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
High single-dose vancomycin loading is not associated with increased nephrotoxicity in emergency department sepsis patients.
Vancomycin loading doses are recommended; however, the risk of nephrotoxicity with these doses is unknown. The primary objective of this study was to compare nephrotoxicity in emergency department (ED) sepsis patients who received vancomycin at high doses (>20 mg/kg) versus lower doses (≤20 mg/kg). ⋯ Initial dosing of vancomycin > 20 mg/kg was not associated with an increased rate of nephrotoxicity compared with lower doses. Findings from this study support compliance with initial weight-based vancomycin loading doses.
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We aimed to evaluate the association between patient chief complaint and the time interval between patient rooming and resident physician self-assignment ("pickup time"). We hypothesized that significant variation in pickup time would exist based on chief complaint, thereby uncovering resident preferences in patient presentations. ⋯ A consistent variation in resident pickup time exists for common chief complaints. We suspect that this reflects residents preferentially choosing patients with simpler workups and less perceived diagnostic ambiguity. This work introduces pickup time as a metric that may be useful in the future to uncover and address potential physician bias. Further work is necessary to establish whether practice patterns in this study are carried beyond residency and persist among attendings in the community and how these patterns are shaped by the information presented via the EHR.