Articles: emergency-services.
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Multicenter Study
Predictive performance of the common red flags in emergency department headache patients: a HEAD and HEAD-Colombia study.
Only a small proportion of patients presenting to an ED with headache have a serious cause. The SNNOOP10 criteria, which incorporates red and orange flags for serious causes, has been proposed but not well studied. This project aims to compare the proportion of patients with 10 commonly accepted red flag criteria (singly and in combination) between patients with and without a diagnosis of serious secondary headache in a large, multinational cohort of ED patients presenting with headache. ⋯ The sensitivity and specificity of the red flag criteria in this study were lower than previously reported. Regarding clinical practice, this suggests that red flag criteria may be useful to identify patients at higher risk of a serious secondary headache cause, but their low specificity could result in increased rates of CT scanning.
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Multicenter Study
Prompt antimicrobial therapy and source control on survival and defervescence of adults with bacteraemia in the emergency department: the faster, the better.
Bacteraemia is a critical condition that generally leads to substantial morbidity and mortality. It is unclear whether delayed antimicrobial therapy (and/or source control) has a prognostic or defervescence effect on patients with source-control-required (ScR) or unrequired (ScU) bacteraemia. ⋯ Regardless of the need for source control in cases of bacteraemia, there seems to be a significant association between the prompt administration of appropriate antimicrobials and both a favourable prognosis and rapid defervescence, particularly among critically ill patients. For ScR bacteraemia, delayed source control has been identified as a determinant of unfavourable prognosis and delayed defervescence. Moreover, this association with patient survival and the speed of defervescence appears to be augmented among critically ill patients.
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An 18-year-old male active duty US Army service member presented to the emergency department with a lower leg abscess in the region of a previously debrided methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus abscess. After initial presentation, the patient became hypotensive, exhibited signs of renal failure, and developed a diffuse erythematous rash. Streptococcus pyogenes was grown from intraoperative cultures, and he was diagnosed with Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (STSS). ⋯ Therefore, it is imperative for physicians to recognize systemic involvement of seemingly isolated extremity infections. We encourage a high index of suspicion in treating bacterial abscesses for possible complications, and close monitoring of patient status. This suspicion should be even higher during outbreaks of bacteria that can cause STSS, much like the patient presented here.
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Boarding, the period in which a patient spends in the emergency department (ED) before admission, may be hazardous to critically ill patients, particularly the elderly. This study investigated the associations of boarding with hospital course, prognosis, and medical expenditure in older patients. ⋯ Extended ED boarding for critically ill medical patients over 65 years old was associated with negative outcomes, including longer ICU/hospital stays, higher treatment costs, and hospital mortality.