The American journal of emergency medicine
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Observational Study
Addition of a lateral view improves adequate visualization of the abdominal aorta during clinician performed ultrasound.
Full visualization of the abdominal aorta using the standard midline view is often inadequate for the detection of abdominal aortic aneurysm. We evaluated whether the addition of a lateral midaxillary right upper quadrant view could improve visualization of the abdominal aorta. ⋯ Combining a lateral view to the standard midline approach improves adequate visualization of the abdominal aorta by approximately 28%. Further study is required to determine if the lateral view is equivalent for detecting abdominal aortic aneurysm.
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The use of Emergency Medical Services (EMS) for low-acuity pediatric problems is well documented. Attempts have been made to curb potentially unnecessary transports, including using EMS dispatch protocols, shown to predict acuity and needs of adults. However, there are limited data about this in children. The primary objective of this study is to determine the pediatric emergency department (PED) resource utilization (surrogate of acuity level) for pediatric patients categorized as "low-acuity" by initial EMS protocols. ⋯ While this EMS system did not well predict overall resource utilization, it safely identified most low-acuity patients, with a low under-triage rate. This study identifies subgroups of patients that could be managed without emergent transport and can be used to further refine current protocols or establish secondary triage systems.
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Glyphosate-surfactant herbicide is promoted by the manufacturer as having no risks to human health. Glyphosate surfactant has recently been used with increasing frequency in suicide attempts, so clinical toxicologists occasionally encounter cases of severe systemic toxicity. The purpose of this study was to identify the early predictive factors of patients at risk for mortality and the usefulness of the corrected QT interval (QTc interval) for predicting mortality from glyphosate-surfactant intoxication. ⋯ Prolonged QTc interval seems to be a useful prognostic factor for mortality in patients intoxicated with glyphosate-surfactant herbicide.
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This report presents a 16-year-old adolescent boy with intentional ingestion of a 6-cm-length iron nail in detention center 6 hours ago. There was no symptom and sign of acute abdominal pain. Abdominal computed tomographic scan was performed, and an iron nail was found in the left upper quadrant abdomen. ⋯ No painkiller was used after the surgery. The patient was discharged on postoperative day 3 without any complication. To our knowledge, it is the first report on removal of ingested foreign body located in jejunum using single-incision laparoscopic surgery technique.
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Case Reports
Rapid spontaneous recovery after development of a spinal epidural hematoma: a case report.
Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma is a very rare clinical emergency. A permanent neurological deficit or even death may result if diagnosis and treatment are delayed. Many cases can be diagnosed upon detailed neurological examination and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. ⋯ A 46-year-old male patient was admitted to our emergency department because of rapidly evolving severe paraplegia following development of sudden-onset neck pain. Spinal MR imaging detected an epidural hematoma compressing the spinal cord at the C5–T1 level. Clinical and radiological follow-up showed that the patient recovered spontaneously in 48 hours without any need for surgical treatment.