European journal of emergency medicine : official journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
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Guidelines recommend Trendelenburg position for central venous cannulation. Critically ill patients in the emergency department often do not tolerate this positioning or have contraindications. Thirty-degree dorsal elevated position with positive end-expiratory pressure by noninvasive ventilation could pose an alternative. This is the first trial to investigate the feasibility of alternative for central venous cannulation in critically ill emergency department patients. ⋯ Thirty-degree elevated positioning with positive end-expiratory pressure via noninvasive ventilation could be a safe and well-tolerated alternative for central venous cannulation, especially for critically ill patients in emergency department unable to remain in Trendelenburg position. This proof-of-concept trial enables further studies with actual central venous cannulation.
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Observational Study
Clinical impression for identification of vulnerable older patients in the emergency department.
To investigate whether the clinical impression of vulnerability and the Dutch Safety Management Program (VMS), a screening instrument on four geriatric domains (activities in daily living, falls, malnutrition, delirium) are useful predictors of 1-year mortality in older patients in the emergency department. ⋯ The clinical impression of vulnerability is a simple dichotomous question which can be used as a first step in the identification of vulnerable older emergency department patients, whereas the more time-consuming VMS-screening is more specific for detection of vulnerability. The clinical impression of vulnerability is therefore useful in a busy emergency department environment where time and resources are limited.
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In the UK, the National Early Warning Score (NEWS) is recommended as part of screening for suspicion of sepsis. Is a change in NEWS a better predictor of mortality than an isolated score when screening for suspicion of sepsis?. ⋯ Persistently elevated NEWS, from prehospital through the ED to the time of ward admission, combined with an elevated ED lactate identifies patients with suspicion of sepsis at highest risk of in-hospital mortality.