The American journal of emergency medicine
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To investigate characteristics and outcome among patients suffering in-hospital cardiac arrest (IHCA) with the emphasis on gender and age. ⋯ When adjusting for various confounders, it was found that men had a 10% lower chance than women of surviving to 30days after in-hospital cardiac arrest. Older individuals were managed less aggressively than younger patients, despite a lower chance of survival. Higher age was, however, not associated with poorer cerebral function among survivors.
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Observational Study
The Revised Trauma Score plus serum albumin level improves the prediction of mortality in trauma patients.
The Revised Trauma Score (RTS) is used worldwide in prehospital practice and in the emergency department (ED) settings to triage trauma patients. The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the value of the RTS plus serum albumin (RTS-A) and to compare it with other existing trauma scores as well as to compare the predictive performance of the Trauma and Injury Severity Score with the RTS-A (TRISS-A) with the original TRISS. ⋯ The value of the RTS-A predicts the in-hospital mortality of trauma patients better than the RTS, and the TRISS-A is a better mortality predictor compared to the original TRISS in patients with blunt trauma.
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Case Reports
Post-cardiac injury syndrome: an atypical case following percutaneous coronary intervention.
Post-cardiac injury syndrome (PCIS) is a syndrome characterized by pericardial and/or pleural effusion, triggered by a cardiac injury, usually a myocardial infarction or cardiac surgery, rarely a minor cardiovascular percutaneous procedure. Nowadays, the post-cardiac injury syndrome, is regaining importance and interest as an emerging cause of pericarditis, especially in developed countries, due to a great and continuous increase in the number and complexity of percutaneous cardiologic procedures. ⋯ The clinical features of our case are consistent with the diagnostic criteria of PCIS: prior injury of the pericardium and/or myocardium, fever, leucocytosis, elevated inflammatory markers, remarkable steroid responsiveness and latency period. Only one element does not fit with this diagnosis and does not find any further explanation: the air accompanying the pleural effusion, determining a hydro-pneumothorax and requiring a pleural drainage catheter positioning.
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Pulmonary embolism is a relatively common clinical presentation of venous thromboembolism, which develops in relation to acute pulmonary arterial occlusion mostly caused by thrombi of the lower limbs. ⋯ We know that exogenous estrogen increase the risk of venous thromboembolism in therapeutic use. It should be kept in mind that even single ingestion of a single high-dose exogenous estrogen intake may induce pulmonary thromboembolism.
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Case Reports
Acute intractable headache and oculomotor nerve palsy associated with nicorandil: A case report.
Acute non-traumatic headaches with neurological deficits alarm emergency department (ED) physicians. Typically, a sudden headache with oculomotor nerve palsy involving a pupil indicates the possibility of a subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) due to an aneurysm originating from the posterior communicating artery. For the ED physician, thinking beyond the possibility of an SAH can be crucial. ⋯ Cerebrospinal fluid analysis was also unremarkable. The patient's headache and oculomotor nerve palsy improved completely after discontinuation of nicorandil for 3 days. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report on side effects of nicorandil presenting as a severe headache with reversible oculomotor nerve palsy involving a pupil, symptoms which mimicked a possible SAH due to aneurysm.