Platypnea-orthodeoxia syndrome
Platypnea-orthodeoxia (P-O) syndrome is an under-diagnosed condition characterized by dyspnea and deoxygenation when changing from a recumbent to an upright position
Platypnea-orthodeoxia (P-O) syndrome is an under-diagnosed condition characterized by dyspnea and deoxygenation when changing from a recumbent to an upright position
Animal and laboratory studies form the lowest level of evidence for informing clinical decisions
Funtabulously Frivolous Friday Five 142 - Just when you thought your brain could unwind on a Friday, some medical trivia FFFF.
Outline the relative advantages and disadvantages of thoracic epidural analgesia compared to systemic opioid analgesia via a PCA (Patient Controlled Analgesia) for her pain management.
Patient safety is defined as the “absence of adverse events” and often extended to include the activities involved in preventing adverse events, including adherence to quality standards and access to healthcare services
A 30 year-old female is brought into the ED by her husband. The couple had a heated argument which ended with the patient swallowing ~2mg/kg warfarin.
26 year-old female who claims to have ingested 40 x citalopram hydrobromide tablets (40mg each) about 3 hours ago - what do you do next?
A 40 year-old man presents to the 'fast-track' area of your emergency department. He has a ulcerating sore on his right arm. He says its been getting worse over the past 2 weeks.
A 34 year-old female with a past medical history of Hashimoto's thyroiditis (currently taking thyroxine 200 mcg daily) who took an overdose of 60 x 200 mcg thyroxine 6 hours ago
A 25 year-old woman with a history of depression was found by her flatmate. An empty 200mL bottle of chloral hydrate was present at the scene. She arrived at your emergency department with the following vital signs...
A 70 year-old man has presented to your emergency department to get his INR checked. It is markedly elevated - how should you manage this?
A 25 year-old male (70 kg) is brought in by ambulance 30 to 60 minutes after ingesting 70 x 50mg amitriptyline. He is tachycardic (HR 120) with an otherwise 'normal' ECG (QRS 95 ms) but is becoming drowsy. You are called to the resuscitation room to assess him.