The American journal of emergency medicine
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Multicenter Study
Optimal temperature in targeted temperature management without automated devices using a feedback system: A multicenter study.
Targeted temperature management (TTM) at 32 °C-36 °C improves patient outcomes following out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). TTM using automated temperature management devices with feedback systems (TFDs) is recommended, but the equipment is often unavailable. This study aimed to investigate therapeutic relations between targeted temperatures and TFDs on the outcomes of OHCA patients with TTM. ⋯ In OHCA patients receiving TTM without TFDs, the adjusted predicted probability of survival and good neurological outcomes at hospital discharge was greater for TTM at 36 °C than that at 33 °C. This suggests that a TTM of 36 °C rather than 33 °C is associated with more favorable clinical outcomes if TFDs are unavailable.
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Comment Letter Randomized Controlled Trial
Appraisal of intravenous magnesium sulfate vs. morphine sulfate in relieving renal colic: A randomized clinical trial.
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An artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm has been developed to detect the electrocardiographic signature of atrial fibrillation (AF) present on an electrocardiogram (ECG) obtained during normal sinus rhythm. We evaluated the ability of this algorithm to predict incident AF in an emergency department (ED) cohort of patients presenting with palpitations without concurrent AF. ⋯ We found this AI-ECG AF algorithm to maintain statistical significance in predicting incident AF, with clinical utility for screening purposes limited in this ED population with a low incidence of AF.
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To analyze trends in admission rates and the proportion of admissions via the ED at rural hospitals in Pennsylvania and to identify factors that may impact admission rates. ⋯ Emergency departments are the gatekeepers of admissions at rural acute care hospitals in Pennsylvania. Many hospitals in rural Pennsylvania, including CAHs, are admitting most of their patients through the ED, concomitant with a significant decline in admissions and admission rates. This highlights the need to strengthen primary care practices serving rural Pennsylvania as well as the need to improve rural emergency and trauma systems. In the short to medium term, policy makers should explore innovative ways to fund smaller hospitals, especially CAHs, to develop level IV trauma center capabilities.