The American journal of emergency medicine
-
Multicenter Study Observational Study
Blood pressure variability as an indicator of sepsis severity in adult emergency department patients.
Quantify the correlation between blood pressure variability (BPV) and markers of illness severity: serum lactate (LAC) or Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores. ⋯ With the finding of a positive correlation between BPV and markers of illness severity (LAC and SOFA scores), this pilot study introduces BPV analysis as a real-time, non-invasive tool for continuous sepsis monitoring in the ED.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Comparison of intravenous dexketoprofen trometamol, fentanyl, and paracetamol in the treatment of patients admitted to the emergency department for renal colic: A randomized controlled trial.
In this study, we aimed to compare the analgesic efficacy of intravenous dexketoprofen trometamol, fentanyl, and paracetamol in patients presenting to the emergency department with renal colic. ⋯ As a Non-steroidal antiinflammatory drug dexketoprofen trometamol is superior to paracetamol and fentanyl in achieving analgesia and reducing the need for additional drugs for the treatment of renal colic.
-
Multicenter Study
Clinical decision support increases diagnostic yield of computed tomography for suspected pulmonary embolism.
Determine effects of evidence-based clinical decision support (CDS) on the use and yield of computed tomographic pulmonary angiography for suspected pulmonary embolism (CTPE) in Emergency Department (ED) patients. ⋯ Implementing evidence-based CDS in the ED was associated with an immediate, significant and sustained increase in CTPE yield without a measurable decrease in CTPE utilization. Further studies will be needed to assess whether stronger interventions could further improve appropriate use of CTPE.