Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
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To determine the sensitivity and specificity of a new myoglobin assay for acute myocardial infarction (AMI), considering both the total amount of serum myoglobin and its percentage change over 2 hours. ⋯ Myoglobin level determinations are sensitive tests to detect AMI during the first 2 hours of a patient's stay in the ED and may complement current clinical tools.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Directional-tip endotracheal tubes for blind nasotracheal intubation.
To compare initial success rates of blind nasotracheal intubation using directional-tip endotracheal tubes vs standard endotracheal tubes. ⋯ The use of directional-tip tubes may improve the success rate of the first attempt at BNTI.
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Comparative Study
Treatment of out-of-hospital supraventricular tachycardia: adenosine vs verapamil.
To compare the use of adenosine and the use of verapamil as out-of-hospital therapy for supraventricular tachycardia (SVT). ⋯ Adenosine and verapamil were equally successful in converting out-of-hospital SVT in patients with similar etiologies responsible for the SVT. Recurrence of SVT occurred at similar rates for the 2 medications. Rhythm misidentification remains a common issue in out-of-hospital cardiac care in this emergency medical services system.
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To evaluate the safety profile of ketamine when used to facilitate surgical procedures in the less controlled setting of developing world, rural hospitals. ⋯ Death and other serious complications were rare in this survey reporting > 12,000 estimated ketamine administrations in the developing world. Although the limitations of survey data are recognized, the margin of safety with ketamine appears to be high, even when administered by non-anesthesiologists in settings lacking basic mechanical monitoring. These findings have important implications for the use of ketamine outside the controlled operating room environment in developed countries.