Emergency medicine journal : EMJ
-
Paramedic-delivered prehospital critical care is an established concept in a number of emergency medical services around the world and, more recently, has been introduced to the UK. This review identifies and describes the available evidence relating to paramedics who routinely provide prehospital critical care as primary scene response (critical care paramedics, or CCP). ⋯ There is limited evidence to support the concept of paramedic-delivered prehospital critical care. The best available evidence suggests a benefit from prehospital RSI carried out by CCPs in patients with severe traumatic brain injury, but the impact of CCPs remains unclear for many conditions. Further high-quality research in this area would be welcome.
-
Review Case Reports
BET 2: transtracheal ultrasound to confirm tracheal intubation in cardiopulmonary arrest.
A shortcut review was carried out to establish whether transtracheal ultrasonography can reliably identify tracheal placement of and endotracheal tube during cardiac arrest. Using the reported searches, 260 papers were found of which one presented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. ⋯ It is concluded that transtracheal ultrasonography may be a supplementary tool for establishing the correct tracheal tube placement in cardiac arrest. Further work is needed.
-
Review Case Reports
BET 1: ultrasound for the diagnosis and drainage of suspected peritonsillar abscess.
A shortcut review was carried out to establish whether intraoral ultrasound increased the accuracy of diagnosis and the success of aspiration in adults with suspected peritonsillar abscess (quinsy). Using the reported searches, one paper presented the best evidence to answer the clinical question. The author, date and country of publication, patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes, results and study weaknesses of this best paper are tabulated. It is concluded that emergency physician-performed intraoral ultrasound can reliably diagnose peritonsillar abscess and leads to greater success at aspiration when compared with the traditional landmark technique.