J Emerg Med
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Acute pain management in the emergency department (ED) is a challenging task, more so in pain due to malignancy. Opioids have life-threatening side effects in ED patients, along with the risk of dependency. Erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is a recently described plane block technique with ease of performance and minimal side effects, making it suitable for emergency settings. ⋯ A 62-year-old male patient recently diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma presented to the ED with severe right upper abdominal pain. There was no pain relief with high doses of analgesics. ESPB was administered at T7 vertebrae level. The patient's Defense and Veteran Pain Rating Scale score reduced from 8/10 pre-procedure to 3/10 within 15 min, and 2/10 1 h after the procedure. He reported that he had an uninterrupted pain-free sleep after 4 days. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: ESPB is a novel regional analgesia that may help in management of uncontrolled severe pain not relieved with analgesics in patients with cholangiocarcinoma in the ED.
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A severe baclofen intoxication is a potentially life-threatening condition. It is associated with coma and can cause brainstem reflexes to disappear, simulating a brain death-like condition. When given intensive supportive care and time, patients can recover without residual neurological damage. ⋯ We present a case of a patient with known spastic cerebral palsy who was found unresponsive with no signs of breathing. He was brought to the Emergency Department, intubated, put on the ventilator, and hemodynamically stabilized. Brainstem reflexes were absent and he appeared brain dead. During the secondary survey, an intrathecal baclofen pump was found at his left lower abdomen, with a swelling next to it. A baclofen intoxication was suspected. He was admitted to the Intensive Care Unit, and after 72 h of supportive care complete neurological recovery was achieved. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Systemic baclofen intoxication can simulate a brain death-like condition. There is no reliable correlation between baclofen serum levels and central nervous system depression in case of an intoxication. It is important for emergency physicians to recognize a baclofen intoxication as a possible cause of coma and absent brainstem reflexes. Recuperation is spontaneous and can follow within days without residual damage. Because these patients may be brought in after a period of apnea or cardiopulmonary resuscitation, focus may be on post-hypoxic encephalopathy considerations instead of a possible baclofen intoxication.
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Paraphimosis is an acute urological emergency occurring in uncircumcised males that can lead to strangulation of the glans and painful vascular compromise. Ketamine has been used in the emergency department (ED) as an anesthetic agent for procedural sedation, and when administrated in a sub-dissociative dose (low dose) at 0.1-0.3 mg/kg, ketamine has been utilized in the ED and prehospital settings for pain control as an adjunct and as an alternative to opioid, as well as for preprocedural sedation. This report details the case of a pediatric patient who presented to our Pediatric ED with paraphimosis and had his procedural pain treated with ketamine administrated via a breath-actuated nebulizer (BAN). ⋯ This case report illustrates the potential use of ketamine via BAN to effectively achieve minimal sedation for a procedure in pediatric patients in the ED. The patient was a 15-year-old boy admitted to the Pediatric ED complaining of groin pain due to paraphimosis. The patient was given 0.75 mg/kg of nebulized ketamine via BAN, and 15 min after the medication administration the pain score was reduced from 5 to 1 on the numeric pain rating scale. The patient underwent a successful paraphimosis reduction without additional analgesic or sedative agents 20 min after the administration of nebulized ketamine. The patient was subsequently discharged home after 60 min of monitoring, with a pain score of 0. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: The use of nebulized ketamine via BAN might represent a viable, noninvasive way to provide a mild sedative and be an effective analgesic option for managing a variety of acute painful conditions and procedures in the pediatric ED.