Can J Emerg Med
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A previously healthy 73-year-old woman presented to hospital with acute atrial fibrillation. After intravenous procainamide failed to restore sinus rhythm, she was treated with 300 mg of oral propafenone and discharged with a prescription for propafenone and propranolol. Six hours later she took 150 mg of propafenone as prescribed. ⋯ Hypertonic sodium bicarbonate (HCO3) was administered and, shortly thereafter, her blood pressure increased, her QRS duration normalized and her clinical status improved dramatically. In this case of severe refractory propafenone-related cardiac toxicity, intravenous HCO3 led to a profound clinical improvement. Emergency physicians should be familiar with the syndrome of sodium-channel blocker poisoning and recognize the potentially important role of bicarbonate in its treatment.
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Non-urgent visits comprise a significant proportion of visits to most emergency departments (EDs). Given the severe overcrowding issues faced by many EDs, the use of the Canadian Emergency Department Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) to identify patients who could be managed elsewhere seems to be an obvious way to reduce the pressure on the ED and "solve" the overcrowding problem. ⋯ Non-urgent patients consume a small fraction of the ED stretchers and acute-care resources; therefore, strategies aimed at diverting non-urgent patients are unlikely to improve access for more urgent patients. Using the CTAS to identify patients for diversion away from the ED is measurably unsafe and will lead to inappropriate refusal of care for many patients requiring hospital treatment.
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It may be appropriate for nurse practitioners (NPs) to provide care for a subset of emergency department (ED) patients with non-urgent problems. Our objective was to determine the attitude of ED patients with minor problems to being treated by an NP. ⋯ A majority of ED patients with minor problems accepted being treated by an NP, often without additional physician assessment. Several factors, including impact on ED staffing and patient flow, logistics, cost and quality of care should be evaluated before implementing such strategies.
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The Emergency Severity Index (ESI) is an initial measure of patient assessment in the emergency department (ED). It rates patients based on acuity and predicted resource intensity from Level 1 (most ill) to Level 5 (least resource intensive). Already implemented and evaluated in several US hospitals, ESI has yet to be evaluated in a Canadian setting or compared with the five-level Canadian Emergency Department Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS). ⋯ After 3 hours of training, experienced triage nurses were able to perform triage assessments using ESI v.3 with the same inter-observer reliability as those with experience and refresher training in using the CTAS.
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Acute compartment syndrome (ACS) is a limb-threatening condition often first diagnosed by emergency physicians. Little is known about the rapidity with which permanent damage may occur. Our objective was to estimate the time to muscle necrosis in patients with ACS. ⋯ This is the largest cohort of ACS and the first clinical estimation of time to muscle necrosis ever published. Ischemia from ACS can cause muscle necrosis before the 3-hour period post-trauma that is traditionally considered safe. Further research to identify risk factors associated with the development of early necrosis is necessary.