J Emerg Med
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Considerable controversy persists regarding the optimal means and indications for airway management, the utility of paralytic agents to facilitate intubation, and the indications for advanced airway access techniques in the prehospital setting. To describe the use of intubation and advanced airway management in a system with extensive experience with both the use of paralytic agents and surgical airway techniques, a retrospective review was conducted of all prehospital airway procedures from January 1997 through November 1999. Data collected included demographics, airway management techniques, use of paralytic agents, and immediate outcome. ⋯ In this study, only 1.1% of patients required a surgical airway. We attribute this low rate to the use of paralytic agents. The availability of paralytic agents also allows expansion of the indications for prehospital airway control.
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Review Case Reports
Delayed splenic rupture presenting as unstable angina pectoris: case report and review of the literature.
The diagnosis of delayed rupture of the spleen can be challenging if the history of trauma is remote, or initially missed. Delayed rupture of the spleen can occur in approximately 1% of blunt force injuries to the spleen. We present a difficult case of delayed rupture of the spleen from remote, minor trauma and discuss the literature associated with this injury.
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Pulmonary artery dissections typically occur at the site of a pulmonary artery aneurysm associated with pulmonary hypertension or connective tissue disease. Dyspnea on exertion, retrosternal chest pain, central cyanosis, and sudden hemodynamic decompensation are the four main clinical signs and symptoms associated with a pulmonary artery dissection. ⋯ Surgery is curative. Emergency physicians should consider the diagnosis of pulmonary artery dissection in patients presenting with either retrosternal chest pain, dyspnea on exertion, central cyanosis, or sudden hemodynamic decompensation and who have a past medical history of pulmonary hypertension, pulmonary artery surgery, or a disease causing chronic inflammation of myocardial or vascular tissue.
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Stool cultures for bacterial pathogens are often requested for investigation of patients with infectious diarrhea, but the literature reports low yield for this diagnostic test. The identification of clinical predictors of positive stool culture will help the physician in determining the necessity for stool requests. ⋯ In multivariate analysis, the independent variables found to be associated with positive stool culture were: the month of presentation (summer season), fever, duration of abdominal pain, and requirement of IV fluid therapy. Neither bloody diarrhea nor persistent diarrhea was associated with positive stool culture.
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Cardiac memory is an uncommonly recognized entity in which T wave inversions on electrocardiogram (EKG) appear consistent with ischemia. Persistent deep T wave inversions are seen after return of normal depolarization in leads where the T waves were normal before pacing. ⋯ Although consideration of ischemia should be given priority, awareness of the benign nature of cardiac memory may allow some patients to avoid unnecessary work-up and admission. Sometimes the diagnosis cannot be confirmed definitively in the Emergency Department (ED) because many patients who have pacemakers also have coronary artery disease and only after a negative work-up for ischemia can one retrospectively presume cardiac memory as the likely etiology.