J Emerg Med
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In the province of Quebec (Canada), paramedics use the esophageal tracheal Combitube (ETC) for prehospital airway management. ⋯ Proportions of successful ventilation and ETC first-pass success are lower than those reported in the literature with supraglottic airway devices. The reasons explaining these lower rates and their impact on patient-centered outcomes need to be studied.
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Hydroxychloroquine overdose is rare but potentially lethal. Hydroxychloroquine overdose symptoms are characterized by central nervous system toxicity, cardiac toxicity, and hypokalemia. Recommended treatment consists of epinephrine, high-dose diazepam, and careful potassium repletion. Few pediatric hydroxychloroquine overdoses have been reported. ⋯ We describe a 14-year-old girl who ingested 10 g (172 mg/kg) of hydroxychloroquine. She developed tachycardia, hypotension, and hypokalemia. She was intubated and treated with diazepam and epinephrine infusions and potassium supplementation. Her serum hydroxychloroquine concentration obtained 10 h after ingestion was 13,000 ng/mL (reference range 500-2000 ng/mL). The patient made a full medical recovery. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: Pediatric hydroxychloroquine overdoses are reported rarely, and the toxic and lethal doses of hydroxychloroquine ingestion have not been established. This case of a teenaged patient who ingested 10 g of hydroxychloroquine and survived provides additional information that may be used to help establish toxic and lethal doses of ingestion.
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The role of thrombolytic treatment in patients with intermediate high-risk pulmonary embolism (IHR-PE) remains controversial. ⋯ Thrombolysis was associated with a significant reduction of the combined endpoint of hemodynamic decompensation and death during hospitalization and lower all-cause mortality after 1 year in an unselected group of patients with IHR-PE. Further studies are required to improve the therapy of IHR-PE and to identify the subgroup of patients that might benefit from thrombolytic therapy.
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Emergency physicians must choose whether patients with asthma are admitted to a hospital ward or a higher level of care, such as an intermediate care unit (IMC) or intensive care unit (ICU). ⋯ Combinations of predictor variables, available early in a patient's stay, stratify risk of admission to an IMC/ICU bed.
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Acute pain management in the emergency department (ED) is a challenging task, more so in pain due to malignancy. Opioids have life-threatening side effects in ED patients, along with the risk of dependency. Erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is a recently described plane block technique with ease of performance and minimal side effects, making it suitable for emergency settings. ⋯ A 62-year-old male patient recently diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma presented to the ED with severe right upper abdominal pain. There was no pain relief with high doses of analgesics. ESPB was administered at T7 vertebrae level. The patient's Defense and Veteran Pain Rating Scale score reduced from 8/10 pre-procedure to 3/10 within 15 min, and 2/10 1 h after the procedure. He reported that he had an uninterrupted pain-free sleep after 4 days. WHY SHOULD AN EMERGENCY PHYSICIAN BE AWARE OF THIS?: ESPB is a novel regional analgesia that may help in management of uncontrolled severe pain not relieved with analgesics in patients with cholangiocarcinoma in the ED.