J Emerg Med
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Sepsis fluid resuscitation is controversial, especially for patients with volume overload risk. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign recommends a 30-mL/kg crystalloid fluid bolus for patients with sepsis-induced hypoperfusion. Criticism of this approach includes excessive fluid resuscitation in certain patients. ⋯ Receipt of a 30-mL/kg fluid bolus did not affect outcomes in a cohort of patients with mixed types of HF and sepsis-induced hypoperfusion.
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The use of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) is considered an important quality indicator for older adults seen in the ambulatory care setting. ⋯ We found that younger age and lower immediacy were associated with increased prescriptions of PIMs for older adults seen, while dementia and Northeastern rural region was associated with reduced use of PIMs seen and discharged from EDs in United States.
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A 49-year-old male with history of intravenous drug use presented to the Emergency Department with localized right arm swelling that has been slowly growing for months. On physical exam, there was a golf ball sized mass in the right antecubital fossa without overlying skin changes and no neurovascular deficits in the distal extremity. Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) was performed utilizing a water bath with visualization of bidirectional swirling in a round cavity adjacent to the brachial artery. ⋯ On color doppler ultrasound, pseudoaneurysm is characterized by the pathognomonic "yin-yang" sign. In the case of the 49-year-old male with a right antecubital mass and history of IVDU, the proposed mechanism of injury was trauma to the arterial wall secondary to auto-injection. POCUS has been found to improve identification of abscesses and its incorporation in patient evaluation can guide clinical management, prevent unwanted iatrogenic exsanguination, and determine whether there is a need for urgent vascular surgery intervention, particularly in high-risk patients.
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Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a painful, chronic inflammatory skin condition. Patients experience exacerbations, leading them to present to the emergency department (ED) for incision and drainage. Direct injection of local anesthetic into these lesions is extremely painful and seldom provides adequate anesthesia. A modified method of the PECS II block can provide anesthesia to the skin of the axilla, making management of HS much less painful for the patient. We performed a bilateral modified PECS II block on a patient requiring incision and drainage of HS lesions in both axillae. She subsequently required no local anesthetic for the procedure. ⋯ A modified technique of the PECS II block, in which only the second injection is performed, is a potentially effective method for anesthetizing the axilla of patients with HS prior to incision and drainage.