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Has your patient used cocaine? Not knowing the answer to this question could be life-threatening for your patient because the wrong medications might be given, says a new report on management of cocaine-associated chest pain and myocardial infarction.
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"Undiagnosed or new-onset seizure in infants is always a critical emergency, mostly because we need to figure out the underlying cause and treat it before it worsens," says Jennifer Anders, MD, an ED physician at Johns Hopkins Children's Center in Baltimore.
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If a patient complains of chest pain, you probably suspect a myocardial infarction (MI) and obtain an immediate electrocardiogram (EKG). But it doesn't show any signs of a heart attack. What do you do next?
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Once a patient with violence-related traumatic injuries is stable and about to be discharged, you have to consider something equally important: Will he or she be safe after they leave your ED?
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A simple fall in a healthy person shouldn't result in multiple facial injuries, except if the patient was intoxicated, says Regina Curry, RN, an ED nurse at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia. Instead, patients might break their wrist or skin their knees and hands from trying to break the fall, she says.
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Randomized studies of neuroprotective agents for ischemic stroke have resulted in a series of failures, as multiple agents, promising in animal models, have failed when applied to human subjects. By contrast, intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) has been somewhat a "neglected stepsister" when compared to ischemic stroke; it has been studied minimally, despite its high morbidity and mortality.
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Baxter Bioscience has developed a whole-virus, two dose vaccine against avian flu; warning label now on antipsychotics regarding an increased risk of mortality in elderly patients treated for dementia-related psychosis; vitamin D for men with heart disease on horizon? A new oral anticoagulant may soon be available for prevention of thrombotic complications of hip or knee surgery; FDA Actions
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Epidemiologic data have recently become available in the U.S. for myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), chronic myeloproliferative disorders (CMD) and chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML) after registries began including these conditions in 2001.
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