J Emerg Med
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Case Reports
Incidental Diagnosis of Left Pneumothorax Using a New Variant of the Lung Point Sign During Cardiac Ultrasound.
Pneumothorax is a common issue in the intensive care unit and emergency department, often diagnosed using lung ultrasound. The absence of lung sliding and the presence of the lung point sign are characteristic findings for pneumothorax. We describe a case of left pneumothorax diagnosed incidentally while performing a cardiac ultrasound through a new variant of the lung point sign. ⋯ A 60-year-old patient with a medical history of diabetes, stroke, and right colon cancer underwent urgent surgical treatment for intestinal sub-occlusion. In the intensive care unit, the patient required mechanical ventilation due to shock unresponsive to fluid administration, and hemodynamic monitoring was performed using echocardiography. During systole in an apical four-chamber view, the abrupt vanishing of the heart was observed. When evaluating the tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) using M-mode, the interposition of the stratosphere sign during mid-systole prevented the visualization of the TAPSE peak. Lung ultrasound revealed the absence of lung sliding and the presence of the lung point sign on the left side of the thorax, confirming the diagnosis of pneumothorax. A chest x-ray study further confirmed the diagnosis, and urgent drainage was performed. The patient showed improvement in hemodynamic and respiratory conditions and was successfully weaned from mechanical ventilation, and eventually discharged home. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: By incorporating the lung ultrasound findings, including this new variant of the lung point sign, into their diagnostic approach to pneumothorax, emergency physicians can promptly initiate appropriate intervention, such as chest tube insertion, leading to improved patient outcomes.
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Egypt plays a pivotal role in North Africa and the Middle East, and has the largest population of any Arab country and serves as a regional cultural hub. Emergency medicine as a field of study was first initiated at Alexandria University in 1978, but it was only formally recognized as a medical specialty in 2002. Since then, the prehospital system and practice of emergency medicine has evolved and grown. ⋯ Egypt has made great strides with respect to the delivery of emergency services, physician education and certification within the specialty of emergency medicine. Learning about these developments in Egypt will provide the reader with a compelling example of how an emergency system is developed in an advancing national setting.
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Procedural sedation is commonly practiced by emergency physicians to facilitate patient care in the emergency department (ED). Although various guidelines have modernized our approach to procedural sedation, many procedural sedation guidelines and practices still often require that patients be discharged into the care of a responsible adult. ⋯ There is no pharmacodynamic or pharmacokinetic basis to require discharge in the care of a responsible adult after procedural sedation. Thoughtful medication selection and the use of evidence-based pre- and postprocedure protocols in the ED can help circumvent this requirement, which likely disproportionally impacts patients who are of low socioeconomic status or undomiciled.
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Tick-borne illnesses and methemoglobinemia have not been known to occur together in humans. Few cases have been documented in various animals of methemoglobinemia secondary to tick-borne infections. ⋯ A 49-year-old man with no significant medical history presented to the emergency department from an urgent care with hypoxia saturating in the mid 80s. He also reported a pruritic rash on his back and right shoulder as well as both of his lower extremities. The rash had been present for 4 days. The patient was tachycardic and hypoxic at 90% but denied shortness of breath. He had cyanosis of the lips and fingertips and multiple erythematous, raised, ovoid lesions on the right shoulder and left lower extremity. Methemoglobin levels were elevated at 26%. He was treated with methylene blue, supplemental oxygen, and empiric doxycycline with improvement in his oxygenation. A tick-borne illness panel later tested positive for Babesia microti infection. His skin lesions resolved with the above described treatment. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Both tick-borne illnesses and methemoglobinemia are typically easily treatable with proper antimicrobial coverage and methylene blue, respectively. The current literature is bare regarding concurrent tick-borne illnesses, specifically babesiosis, and methemoglobinemia. Without knowledge and documentation of a potential link between the two conditions, hypoxia, if found to be due to methemoglobinemia, may be treated adequately, but a potentially life-threatening tick-borne illness may continue to cause damage and disease to the patient if not tested for, identified, and treated.
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Cardiac arrest occurs in approximately 350,000 patients outside the hospital and approximately 30,000 patients in the emergency department (ED) annually in the United States. When return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) is achieved, hypotension is a common complication. However, optimal dosing of vasopressors is not clear. ⋯ Initial vasopressor dosing was not found to be associated with risk of cardiac re-arrest or, conversely, risk of adverse events.