Grand Rounds 5.8.24
/r1 clinical knowledge - r4 capstone - research grand rounds - the art of em - Community corner - PEM Lecture
r1 Clinical knowledge: transplant complications WITH dr. gabor
Time-sensitive peri-transplant emergencies:
Bleeding fistula- stop the bleed.
Flood syndrome- start fluids, give antibiotics, consult surgery.
Have a high suspicion for infection in transplant patients. Immunosuppression can blunt the typical immune response.
Be careful with fluid resuscitation in renal transplant patients who can be at risk for volume overload.
At most risk for opportunistic infection within 6 months from transplant as immunosuppression medications are taking effect.
Immunosuppression meds can have their own adverse side effects.
Rejection can present similarly to infection.
Usually presents consistent with failure of that organ.
r4 capstone: Death, dying, and navigating grief in residency WITH dr. kein
Learning points:
The Emergency Medicine community is amazing
Allows update the family, even if that means staying late after your shift
Your patient is also a person
Talk about code status early in the encounter, especially for the patient who you think is at risk for decompensation
Sometimes, it is ok to not offer interventions that will not alter the patient’s clinical outcome
Navigating grief in residency:
Let people care about you
Give yourself grace
Give others grace
Find a non-medicine outlet
This feeling is not permanent
Life doesn't stop for residency
Education research WITH dr. hill
Three main categories of education research
Assessment- how do we assess learners?
Development and Validation of a Lecture Assessment Tool for Emergency Medicine Residents (Hill et al.)
Developed a tool to help with assessing resident-delivered lectures.
Validity Evidence for a Team-Leading Assessment Tool in Pediatric Emergency Resuscitation Using Video Review (Hartwell et al.)
Assessed and provided feedback of pediatric resuscitations based on video review.
Approach - how do we teach learners?
Using Slack to Facilitate Virtual Small Groups for Individualized Interactive Instruction (Hill et al.)
Utility of using slack as communication tool to facilitate small-group, case-based discussions between residents led by faculty.
Environment- what is our learning environment like?
Is Boarding Compromising Our Residents’ Education? A National Survey of Emergency Medicine Program Directors (Goldflam et al.)
Most responding program directors viewed boarding in the ED as having a negative effect on resident education- such as hindering ability to handle high patient volumes.
Ways to get involved?
SAEM Education Research Interest Group
Become a peer-reviewer for AEM Education & Training
ERE (4th Thursday of every month)
Art of EM: Cincy-isms WITH dr. adan and lang
Skeletal traction pin
Benefits
May reduce pain
Improve reduction/operative outcomes
May reduce bleeding
Cons
Increased pain
Risk skin injury, infection, neuro-vascular injury
For hip fractures, data does not appear to show benefit for pain or operative outcomes, with strong evidence to back it.
For mid-shaft femur fractures, traction appears to may reduce blood loss and pulmonary complications, but the available data is very scarce.
Overall, our aim should be to first do no harm and get the patient to the OR for definitive management as soon as possible with appropriate pain control until then.
Hypertonic saline in TBI
Is it safe?
3% HTS appears to be safe for peripheral IV administration and does not require a central line.
Is it effective?
3% HTS will lower ICP about 25-30% in about 15 minutes and does not appear to be more efficacious compared to mannitol.
Of note, HTS is more effective in trauma patients because it is used as a resuscitative fluid as well.
Should it be given in the prehospital setting?
The available data does not support any benefit of administration of hyperosmolar therapy in the setting of a TBI.
Guidelines also support not administering HTS in the pre-hospital setting, yet the available data is weak.
What do we do at UC?
Recommend HTS for signs of brain herniation (not just poor GCS alone)
pupillary changes, posturing, CT evidence of midline shift, etc.
Chest x-ray
Portable one-view CXR
significant increase in portable one-view CXRs since the COVID-19 pandemic.
based on one study, one view portable films tend to miss nodules, effusions, emphysema, and PNA, compared to two-view films (Bossart, et al.).
PA versus AP views
PA films reduce heart magnification, scapula moves out of the lung fields, inspiratory effort is easer, and rotation is less likely.
AP films are more convenient to perform.
Sedating the agitated patient
One versus two agents?
combination of antipsychotic with a benzodiazepine appears superior compared to either medication administered alone (Korczak et al.).
Which agent to choose?
When administered IM, midazolam administration appears superior in terms of time to sedation (Nobay et al.).
yet also patient arouses the earliest.
One study comparing haldoperidol plus lorazepam versus droperidol plus midazolam (Thiemann et al.)
droperidol plus midazolam has higher percentage of sedated patients at 10 mins (compared to the other treatment group).
IM ketamine appears to be highly effective for the severely agitated patient (Barbic et al.)
needs to be dosed appropriately 4-5mg/kg IM.
variable rates of subsequent intubations based on available data.
community corner: issues in young women’s health WITH dr. roche
Sensitive exams in the ED:
ask permission and explain why you are asking to perform the exam.
move slowly and acknowledge discomfort.
Practice Variations in Pregnancy of Unknown Location:
Incorporate US early into your evaluation of the patient.
even if the b-HCG level is below the “discriminatory zone” but there is suspicion for an ectopic.
Establish a pre-test suspicion before ordering tests.
Vaginal bleeding in 1st trimester:
occurs in 25% of pregnancies.
accounts for 3% of ED presentations for young females.
various causes based on timing (aside from ectopic and throphoblastic disease):
10-14d: implantation bleeding
2-8 weeks: anembryonic pregnancy
8-12 weeks: subchorionic hemorrhage
when a miscarriage is identified, be an advocate for your patient.
our patients deserve options other than expectant management (consider OBGYN consult for potential medical therapy and surgical options).
Pediatric EM lecture: foreign bodies WITH dr. Lendrum
Nasal FB Removal
Mother’s kiss (blowing in mouth with opposite nostril being occluded)
about 50% effective, yet also helpful for improving FB visualization
High-Flow Oxygen into unaffected nostrils
close mouth
increase oxygen to 10-15lpm
Instrument removal
Will need afrin, local lidocaine, suction set-up
Round FB
right angle curette
Dermabond on one end of a Q-tip
Katz extractor
Soft FB
alligator forceps
rod magnet for metallic FB
Ear FB Removal
When do you need an ENT consult in the ED?
sharp objects
object touching TM
signs of trauma to ear canal (bleeding)
button batteries that can not be quickly removed
need multiple attempts (multiple attempts increase risk of complicated removal)
Techniques
irrigation (need to ensure TM is intact prior to performing irrigation)
kill insect with 2% lidocaine, alcohol, or mineral oil
suction
using Frazier suction with a soft tip
glue
dermabond at the end of a blunt wood stick
careful not to glue to external ear canal
instrument removal (need visualization of object prior to attempting)
alligator forceps
bayonet forceps
Aspirated & Ingested FB’s
Esophageal FB
usually at the thoracic inlet (60-80%)
biplane x-rays to diagnose (neck, chest, abd)
perform even if object is not expected to be seen on x-ray (look for secondary signs of ingestion and signs of injury)
further work-up depends on suspicion (esophagram and/or CT)
Emergent endoscopy (within <12h)
Esophageal
button battery
pre-removal administration of honey (10ml every 10 mins) or carafate solution
symptomatic (drooling)
sharp object
food impaction
Gastric
symptomatic button battery
sharp (glass, toothpick, razor)
multiple magnets
Urgent endoscopy (within 12-24)
Esophageal
asymptomatic coin ingestion
Gastric
asymptomatic button battery
large/long object (at or greater than 5cm)
history of IBD or previous abd surgeries
Non-urgent endoscopy
asymptomatic, small object in stomach
pointed? repeat x-ray in 48-72 hours
coins? elective removal in 3-4 weeks
Airway FB
Tracheal
acute respiratory distress, stridor
Bronchial
wheezing, cough, decreased breath sounds
Management
consider decubitus chest x-rays for diagnosis (look for hyperinflation of the unaffected lung)
rigid bronchoscopy by ENT
Other FB’s
Hair Tourniquet Syndrome
caused by more than just hair
peak incidence in 2-6 months
management
Unwind if you can grasp the thread
Depilatory Cream (Nair) leave on for 3-8 minutes, yet avoid in open skin and it may cause skin irrigation/minor burns
Incision
Fishhook
push-through technique
grab the exposed end of the fishhook with hemostats
advance the fishhook until the barbed end comes out of the skin
use the wire cutters to cut the hook/barb
back the hook out of the skin
other methods
String technique
Needle cover technique