Articles Tagged With:
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Chest Pain in Young Adults
Chest pain is one of the most common reasons that patients present to the emergency department. The underlying disease processes can range from benign to life-threatening. The purpose of this article is to discuss the diagnosis, treatment, and management of the common causes of chest pain that can present in a young adult.
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Generating Health Benefits and Cost Savings Through Sodium Reduction
Research supports FDA’s call to voluntarily decrease sodium levels in food.
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APIC, SHEA: IC Critical to Antibiotic Stewardship
The nation’s leading infection control associations have reaffirmed their contention that infection preventionists and healthcare epidemiologists are critical to the success of antibiotic stewardship efforts. -
Dialysis: Overcoming Resistance and Reducing Infections
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates some 40,000 central line-associated bloodstream infections occur annually in U.S. hemodialysis patients. -
IPs Respond to CMS Legionella Directive
Primarily caused by Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1, Legionnaires' Disease outbreaks in healthcare are typically traced to the waterborne bug becoming aerosolized and inhaled in shower mist. -
CDC Detects 221 Bugs with Unusual Drug Resistance
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is using its nationwide Antibiotic Resistance Lab Network to detect these virtually untreatable bugs, which can be resistant to whole classes of drugs. -
CDC to CRE: You Cannot Pass
A national containment strategy using powerful lab detection techniques and rapid intervention with infection control measures is blunting the emergence of pan-resistant pathogens, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports. -
Real-world Study of Left Atrial Appendage Occluder Devices Raises New Concerns
A large observational study from France of two devices used commonly for occlusion of the left atrial appendage in patients with atrial fibrillation showed that device-related thrombus was not uncommon and was associated with subsequent stroke.
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The Pulmonary Embolism Rule-out Criteria in Low-risk Patients
A cluster randomized trial of the pulmonary embolism rule-out criteria (PERC) compared to usual care for patients estimated to be at low risk of pulmonary embolus (PE) in EDs showed that PERC was non-inferior to usual care at identifying patients who would be free of symptomatic PE at three months, resulting in less use of healthcare resources.
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Risk of Endocarditis Revisited
The authors of a population-wide study of hospitalizations and deaths from infective endocarditis (IE) in England confirmed the high risk of IE in certain cardiac conditions, but showed that other conditions thought to be low risk also are at higher risk and found new higher-risk categories not previously identified. Investigators suggested these data should be considered when the antibiotic prophylaxis guidelines are revised.