The American journal of emergency medicine
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Traditionally, ST segment depression has been associated with acute coronary syndromes; this electrocardiographic pattern may also be found in patients with nonischemic events, such as left bundle branch block (LBBB), left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), and those with therapeutic digitalis levels. Using the ECG as an adjunct in distinguishing those patients with acute coronary syndromes from those with more "benign," nonacute causes of STSD will obviously lead to divergent treatment and management plans. The following cases illustrate the use the ECG in patients presenting with chest pain and electrocardiographic ST segment depression attributable to an ACS, LVH, LBBB, or digitalis.
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The objective of the study was to evaluate how often intravenous (IV) fosphenytoin is used when oral phenytoin loading is possible. The methods included a retrospective chart review of all patients receiving IV fosphenytoin in the emergency department. We prospectively derived criteria that identify patients with seizures who could receive oral phosphenytoin loading (awake on arrival, alert, no emesis, and lack of endotracheal intubation, repeated seizures, or status epilepticus after arrival). ⋯ The remaining 25 (45%, 95% confidence interval 32%-59%) patients could have been loaded orally with phenytoin. In a single institution, fosphenytoin administration is inappropriate almost half the time. Oral phenytoin loading is less expensive and safe.