American journal of therapeutics
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Three issues related to the management of acute musculoskeletal pain in the ambulatory care setting deserve more attention than they currently receive: pain assessment, the degree of diagnostic specificity needed to select treatment, and gaps in the care that clinicians need to consider. This article describes several pain assessment instruments and explains why they are appropriate in the acute care setting. ⋯ Therefore, categorizing the pain as mechanical or secondary to underlying causes is sufficient to select and institute treatment. Gaps in care, such as the need for increased patient education, accurate information to dispel misconceptions about therapy, and additional safety and efficacy data about drugs used to treat acute musculoskeletal pain, are also addressed.
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Case Reports
Preliminary experience with dexmedetomidine for monitored anesthesia care during ENT surgical procedures.
Dexmedetomidine is an alpha2-adrenergic agonist that produces anxiolysis, amnesia, sedation, potentiation of opioid analgesia, and sympatholysis. It is currently approved by the U. S. ⋯ The authors present their experience using dexmedetomidine for monitored anesthesia care (MAC) during "awake" ENT procedures such as thyroplasty, a procedure requiring a patient to verbalize when requested but to otherwise remain immobile to allow for completion of the procedure, and in a patient with post-polio syndrome with poor pulmonary reserve requiring esophagoscopy with dilation and botulinum toxin injection for cricopharyngeal dysfunction. Our preliminary experience suggests that dexmedetomidine provides effective sedation as the primary agent for MAC during such procedures in adult patients. The end-organ effects of dexmedetomidine and previous reports of its use during MAC are reviewed.
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Cocaine is the most common illicit drug used in patients presenting with chest pain to emergency departments. Data on beta-blockers in cocaine-related chest pain syndrome are sparse. We sought out to study the causal and detrimental effects of beta-blockers in cocaine-related chest pain in a large inner city cohort of patients. ⋯ MN as reflected by elevation of cardiac biomarkers is uncommon in patients presenting with cocaine-related chest pain. Preexisting use of beta-blockers seems to render a higher risk of myocardial injury in patients presenting with cocaine-related chest pain. In addition initiation or continuation of beta-blockers during hospitalization should be discouraged.
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Despite literature outlining suggested initial therapy for pediatric patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), our impression has been that there may be variations from these recommendations during the initial therapy of pediatric patients with DKA. In order to improve education initiatives, an understanding of the deviations from current practice is required. ⋯ Major issues with the prehospital care of children and adolescents with DKA included lack of appropriate laboratory evaluation, excessive insulin dosing (both bolus doses and infusion rates), lack of fluid resuscitation, use of inappropriate fluids for resuscitation, and the use of sodium bicarbonate.