Friday, December 28, 2007

Lit Bits: December 28, 2007

From the recent medical literature...

1. ACC and AHA Update STEMI Guidelines

The American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association have updated their 2004 guidelines for managing ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction.

The update, released online in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, offers charts listing how recommendations have changed.

The latest guidelines emphasize adding clopidogrel to aspirin and the need for speedy thrombolysis when patients cannot get timely percutaneous coronary intervention. STEMI patients arriving at a hospital without PCI capability should receive fibrinolytic therapy within 30 minutes unless they can be transferred to a PCI center and receive treatment within 90 minutes of their first medical contact.

Journal of the American College of Cardiology article (Free): http://content.onlinejacc.org/cgi/content/full/j.jacc.2007.10.001v1

Related interests: New PCI guidelines: http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/reprint/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.188208

2. Hospitalist Care Associated With Shorter Length of Stay for Common Diagnoses

Patients seen by hospitalists have slightly shorter lengths of stay — but similar mortality and readmission rates — compared with those treated by internists or family physicians, according to an article in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"The hospitalist model is rapidly altering the landscape for inpatient care in the United States, yet evidence about the clinical and economic outcomes of care by hospitalists is derived from a small number of single-hospital studies examining the practices of a few physicians," write Peter K. Lindenauer, MD, from the Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, Massachusetts, and colleagues. "As compared with traditional inpatient care, the hospitalist model offers many potential advantages.... At the same time, the hospitalist model introduces handoffs at the time of admission and at discharge, transitions during which the risk of errors and adverse events is high."

Researchers retrospectively reviewed data on nearly 77,000 adults admitted to 45 hospitals nationwide; diagnoses included pneumonia, heart failure, chest pain, ischemic stroke, UTI, COPD exacerbation, and MI. Among the findings from multivariable-adjusted analyses:

  • Length of stay was nearly half a day shorter among patients seen by hospitalists than among those treated by internists or family physicians.
  • Rates of death and 14-day readmission did not differ among the three physician groups.
  • Cost per patient was nearly $270 less with hospitalist care than with internist care; costs did not differ significantly between hospitalists and family physicians.

The authors conclude: "There remains a need to understand how hospitalist systems should be structured in order to improve the quality and outcomes of care."

N Engl J Med. 2007;357:2589-2600 (Free): http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/25/2589

NEJM editorial (Free): http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/25/2627

3. Origins of magic: review of genetic and epigenetic effects

Ramagopalan SV, et al. BMJ 2007;335:1299-1301

Objective: To assess the evidence for a genetic basis to magic.
Design: Literature review.
Setting: Harry Potter novels of J K Rowling.
Participants: Muggles, witches, wizards, and squibs.
Interventions: Limited.

Main outcome measures: Family and twin studies, magical ability, and specific magical skills.

Results: Magic shows strong evidence of heritability, with familial aggregation and concordance in twins. Evidence suggests magical ability to be a quantitative trait. Specific magical skills, notably being able to speak to snakes, predict the future, and change hair colour, all seem heritable.

Conclusions: A multilocus model with a dominant gene for magic might exist, controlled epistatically by one or more loci, possibly recessive in nature. Magical enhancers regulating gene expressionmay be involved, combined with mutations at specific genes implicated in speech and hair colour such as FOXP2 and MCR1.

4. New Statement on Safety of MRI with CV Devices

Lisa Nainggolan. from Heartwire — a professional news service of WebMD. December 4, 2007 — The American Heart Association has published a scientific statement on the safety of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with cardiovascular devices, which has also been endorsed by the American College of Cardiology, the North American Society for Cardiac Imaging, and the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance [1]. The document states that for most devices, if there is a good clinical indication for an MRI scan, then the benefits probably outweigh the risks.

Lead author Dr Glenn N Levine (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX) told heartwire: "This is the first document that specifically addresses these issues." He explained that, over the years, decisions have been made about when it is safe to do an MRI scan with a particular device, but these have not been based for the most part on any good evidence. "When coronary stents first came out, for example, it was decided that you had to wait a minimum of six weeks before doing an MRI scan, but that was not based on any firm data. And there are still people out there who won't do an MRI ever in a patient with a stent, and that is absurd. We wanted to make recommendations that are in line with actual data and expert opinion."

The exceptions to this are pacemakers and implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs). "Whether one can safely MRI-scan a patient with a pacemaker and/or ICD has been controversial," Levine explained. "However, we didn't want to make a blanket statement that you shouldn't scan, because in certain cases MRI is the best imaging modality to resolve a clinical question. But we also wanted to be careful to stress that MRI should be done in these patients only at very experienced centers, with expertise in MRI physics, MRI safety, and electrophysiology," he noted.

For most devices, MRI is generally safe. Levine said that when his group was trying to put together this guidance, "one of the things I encouraged in our conference calls was that I did not just want to regurgitate what was on the approved labeling but rather state what the experts in the country felt and what they should be telling people."

With regard to the majority of devices, which Levine says are either nonferromagnetic or weakly ferromagnetic, "we decided our overriding principle would be that if there is a good clinical indication to scan anytime after implantation of the device—even if only one day afterward—then one should generally go ahead and perform the scan."

If, however, the MRI is completely elective, "while it may be safe to perform the scan at that time, it is prudent in some cases to wait six weeks after implantation before scanning," he says. Such cases include the following devices: all commonly implanted coronary stents, many peripheral stents, many embolization coils, many inferior vena cava (IVC) filters, many aortic stent grafts, all prosthetic heart valves and annuloplasty rings, certain cardiac closure and occluder devices, and loop recorders.

"Here's the general thing," he says. "For most of these devices, it's probably safe to scan the patient anytime, but let's say someone has had knee pain for five years and needs an MRI but has just had a device implanted two days ago. They've waited five years so they might as well wait another few weeks. But if they are admitted to the hospital after being hit by a car, and now they are having acute knee pain and the surgeons want to do an MRI, then there's a good clinical indication to do the procedure at that time."

Levine GN, et al. Circulation 2007;116:2878-2891. Full text: http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/full/116/24/2878

5. Volumetric Bladder US performed by trained Nurses increases Cath success in Kids

Baumann BM, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2008;26:18-23.

Objective
The objective of the study was to determine whether the use of volumetric ultrasound by trained pediatric emergency department (ED) nurses improves first-attempt urine collection success rates.

Methods
This randomized controlled trial was conducted in children aged ≤36 months requiring diagnostic urine samples. Children were randomized to either the conventional (nonimaged) or the ultrasound arm. Demographics, number of catheterizations required for success, postponements, and collection times were recorded.

Results
Forty-five children were assigned to the conventional and 48 to the ultrasound arm (n = 93). First-attempt success rates were higher in the ultrasound arm: 67% (conventional) vs 92% (ultrasound) (P = .003). Both urinalysis and culture were less likely to be completed on conventional group specimens (91% vs 100%; P = .04). However, mean conventional group urine collection time was less than the ultrasound group's collection time (12 vs 28 minutes; P less than .001).

Conclusions
Although there is a time delay, urine collection in the ultrasound arm generated a significant improvement over conventional catheterization in obtaining an adequate urine sample.

6. ED Procedural Sedation with Propofol: It Really Is Safe!

J Emerg Med. 2007;33:355-361.

Propofol is a sedative agent gaining popularity for Emergency Department Procedural Sedation (EDPS). However, some institutions across the country continue to restrict the use of propofol secondary to safety concerns. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the complication rate of EDPS with propofol.

We conducted a prospective, observational, multi-center study of EDPS patients aged ≥ 18 years, consenting to procedural sedation with propofol. Eighty-two patients from two Level I trauma centers were enrolled between August 1, 2002 and January 31, 2003.

Transient hypoxemia was the only noted sedation complication. Nine patients (11%) had brief hypoxemia. The combined average hypoxemia time was 1.2 min (SD 0.4), and in all instances responded to simple airway maneuvers or increased oxygen concentration. No patient required advanced airway maneuvers such as intubation or even positive pressure ventilation. EDPS with propofol seems to be safe in our population.

7. U.S. ED Visits by Seniors Rising

By Lisa Baertlein. LOS ANGELES (Reuters) Dec 06 - The rate of visits to U.S. hospital emergency rooms by senior citizens grew faster than that of any other age group between 1993 and 2003, straining the country's already overcrowded emergency care system, according to a study published on Wednesday. The research from George Washington University also found the rate of emergency room visits by older blacks was rising at an alarming rate.

The reasons behind seniors' accelerated visit rates were not immediately clear. Researchers said the trend could have been driven by health-care advances that have resulted in people living longer with chronic medical issues. It could also have been related to difficulty finding timely primary care, they said.

"Seniors are using the emergency department more and more frequently, and given the needs of this population and the nature of their medical problems, the current state of overcrowding is likely to continue to escalate dramatically," said Dr. Mary Pat McKay, a study co-author from the George Washington University Medical Center in Washington.

The researchers, who published their findings in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, said a review of hospital data from 1993 to 2003 showed a 34% increase in emergency room visits by people aged 65 to 74. By comparison, there was little change in visit rates among people younger than the age of 21 from 1993 to 2003. The rate of visits was up 19% for individuals aged 22 to 49 and 16% for people aged 50 to 64.

The authors said seniors' additional emergency room visits did not appear to be driven by frivolous complaints.

Dr. McKay said she was surprised the data showed a widening gap between the rates of black and white seniors seeking emergency care. Emergency visits by black patients aged 65 to 74 rose by the greatest rate, nearly doubling during the 11-year study period to 77 visits per 100 persons. In comparison, the visit rate among whites of the same age group was up 26% to 36 visits per 100 persons.

"That there is a racial disparity didn't surprise me. What surprised me is that it's getting worse," she said. The study's authors said more research was needed to pinpoint the reasons driving the differences. They said the higher prevalence of diabetes and hypertension in the black community may be a factor. They also noted that nearly twice as many young blacks lack health insurance -- a problem that worsens among the poor.

People who were uninsured before becoming eligible for the U.S. government's Medicare health coverage at age 65 are more likely to have serious health problems if they could not afford to get needed care for chronic illnesses.

Whatever the cause, the study's authors estimated that visits by people aged 65 to 74 could nearly double to 11.7 million by 2013 from 6.4 million in 2003 if the trend in emergency room visit rates continues.

"The system is broken and the point of the study is that it's going to get worse," said Dr. McKay.

8. False-Positives in the PCI Era: Roughly 1 in 10 Patients Sent to Cath Lab Unnecessarily

Shelley Wood. from Heartwire — a professional news service of WebMD. December 21, 2007 — Having emergency-room physicians diagnose ST-segment-elevation MI (STEMI) and "activate" cardiac cath labs directly — cutting out the delay associated with seeing a cardiologist — is a key recommendation for efforts to trim door-to-balloon times for patients with STEMI. But a new analysis suggests that this strategy may lead to false-positive activation of cath labs anywhere from 9% to 14% of the time.

Writing in the December 19, 2007 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr David M Larson (Ridgeview Medical Center, Waconia, MN) and colleagues point out that hospitals planning and budgeting for strategies to cut door-to-balloon times will need to take into account this relatively common and unavoidable consequence of direct cath-lab activation [1].

To heartwire, Larson, an emergency room (ER) physician, commented that he thinks a false-positive rate somewhere in the region of what they found is appropriate. In the thrombolytic era, he notes, the false-positive rate of patients who received lytics and later were found not to have a myocardial infarction (MI; by cardiac biomarkers) was about 10%; false-positive rates in the percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) era have not previously been reported, with or without door-to-balloon time-saving strategies. Larson also thinks that while hospitals should always strive to reduce the rates of patients being sent to the cath lab unnecessarily, there needs to be a balance.

"There are a lot of cases that are in the gray zone," he said. "If you're more specific, and you decrease the rate of false positives, you're probably going to increase your rate of false negatives. It's a trade-off."

Larson et al reviewed all cases of suspected STEMI patients presenting to the Minneapolis Heart Institute or transferred from one of 30 community hospitals — a total of 1345 patients between March 2003 and November 2006. In all cases, emergency-department staff, on the basis of electrocardiogram (ECG) results, activated the cath lab at the tertiary hospital before transferring patients for angiography. In the authors' subsequent review, however, 14% of patients were found to have no culprit coronary artery and 9.5% had no significant coronary artery disease. Of those with no coronary artery disease (CAD), 38% had positive cardiac biomarkers, pointing to myocarditis (31%), stress cardiomyopathy (31%), or STEMI confirmed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) — in some of these patients, angiography did not pave the way for PCI but was at least an appropriate diagnostic test. In all, just 9.2% of patients had both negative cardiac biomarkers and no culprit artery, which the authors say believe is likely the "true measure" of unnecessary cath-lab activation in this study.

Sometimes you do need to slow down

In an accompanying editorial, Dr Frederick A Masoudi (Denver Health Medical Center, CO) points out that the push in recent years to reduce door-to-balloon times may have the unintended consequence of increasing false-positive rates [2]. "In the case of primary PCI, the view of quality should extend beyond the time to treatment to include patient selection and ultimately to outcomes," he writes. To reduce the number of false positives that arise from overly zealous efforts to shorten door-to-balloon times, false-positive rates could, like door-to-balloon times, be a measure in the overall assessment of hospital performance.

Larson agrees: "There's so much emphasis on door-to-balloon time and time to reperfusion; I think sometimes we have to realize that there are cases where we need to slow down and maybe get another ECG or an echocardiogram and not penalize people for slower door-to-balloon times in those cases. When you're looking at quality, it's not just the process measures like time to treatment, it's patient selection as well. If one hospital has a false-positive rate of 25% and the standard in the community is 10%, you have to take a closer look at that."

But Larson also believes there is "always room for improvement." In his study, roughly 2% of electrocardiograms were "overread," resulting in patients heading to the cath lab unnecessarily. Better education would help reduce this problem, and centers with higher rates of false positives could perhaps be targeted for this kind of education, Larson suggests. He also notes that many patients who undergo an urgent diagnostic catheterization and are not found to have occlusive disease are patients who would likely have ended up undergoing angiography at a later date anyhow and, in some cases, may at least be less at risk from an invasive catheterization than if they underwent unnecessary fibrinolytic therapy: for example, patients having a dissection or who have pericarditis.

Larson also emphasized that the results should not be interpreted to mean that a cardiologist should see each and every patient with presumed STEMI in the emergency room—bypassing the cardiologist has proved key to improving door-to-balloon times. "There should always be the opportunity, on questionable cases, to get more data, get help from a cardiologist if necessary, have someone else look at the ECG, without penalizing somebody for having a slower door-to-balloon time. But I don't think we should change the whole system: most of the cases — 90% — are clear-cut. You don't want to hurt the whole system because of the remaining 10% of patients."

Know your rates

Also commenting on the study for heartwire, senior author and cardiologist Dr Timothy Henry (Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis, MN) noted that this study "sets a benchmark."

"Everyone talks about false positives, but no one knows what their rates are or what the rates should be," he said. "If your false-positive rate is 2% or 5%, you're doing something wrong and you're missing patients. But if your false-positive rate is 25%, you need to be talking to people about what you could do differently. . . . The most important thing is that everyone should know what their own rate is. We've been so focused on reducing door-to-balloon times that we've forgotten about some of these other things."

Sources:
[1] Larson, DM, Menssen KM, Sharkey SW, et al. "False-positive" cardiac catheterization laboratory activation among patients with suspected ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. JAMA. 2007;298:2754-2760. Abstract: http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/298/23/2754
[2] Masoudi FA. Measuring the quality of primary PCI for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction. Time for balance. JAMA. 2007;298:2790-2791.

9. Adjuvant Dexamethasone Ineffective in ED Treatment of Migraine

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Dec 07 - For patients presenting to the emergency department with acute migraine, adding intravenous dexamethasone to standard treatment provides little added benefit, although it might be useful for patients with migraine lasting longer than 72 hours.

These are the findings of a study conducted by Dr. Benjamin W. Friedman of the department of emergency medicine at Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York, and colleagues and published in the November 27 issue of Neurology.

In the study, 205 patients presenting to the emergency department with acute migraine were randomized in a double-blind fashion to dexamethasone 10 mg IV or placebo. All were given 20 mg metoclopramide and 25 mg diphenhydramine IV, plus other analgesic medications as needed.

According to Dr. Friedman and colleagues, there were no significant between-group differences in the percentage of patients who achieved the primary outcome -- headache-free state in the emergency department and for 24 hours and no headache-related functional impairment after emergency department discharge.

The persistent pain-free outcome was achieved in 25% of dexamethasone-treated patients and 19% of placebo-treated patients (p = 0.34). The "no functional impairment" outcome was achieved in 67% and 59%, respectively (p = 0.20).

In the small subgroup of 45 patients with migraine lasting more than 72 hours, 38% randomized to dexamethasone were persistently pain free at 24 hours compared with 13% randomized to placebo (p = 0.06). "While not quite significant, these data suggest that dexamethasone merits further study in this subgroup," Dr. W. J. Becker from the University of Calgary in Alberta, Canada, and Dr. R. J. Kryscio of the University of Kentucky in Lexington write in an editorial accompanying the study.

Neurology 2007;69:2034-2035,2038-2044.

10. ED Visits for Adverse Drug Events in Elders Hinge on Commonly Prescribed Drugs

Drugs commonly prescribed to the elderly cause more serious adverse effects than drugs identified as "always potentially inappropriate" for them, according to an Annals of Internal Medicine study.

Federal researchers examined 2 years of nationally representative data on emergency room visits for adverse drug effects and compared the implicated drugs with their prescribing frequencies in databases detailing outpatient visits.

Drugs considered "always potentially inappropriate" for the elderly (according to the Beers criteria) accounted for roughly 4% of the ER visits for adverse drug events. The risk for ER visits due to the most commonly implicated drugs — warfarin, insulin, and digoxin (not "always potentially inappropriate") — was some 35 times higher than that for drugs rated always potentially inappropriate.

The authors conclude their findings "suggest that there may be considerable opportunity to reduce [these adverse effects] through interventions that improve the use of anticoagulants, antidiabetic agents, and narrow therapeutic index medications."

Annals of Internal Medicine article (Free): http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/147/11/755

List of Beers criteria drugs (Free): http://www.dcri.duke.edu/ccge/curtis/beers.html

11. CT Pulmonary Angiography and V/Q Lung Scans Similarly Accurate for Excluding PE

Computed tomographic pulmonary angiography (CTPA) rules out pulmonary embolism as accurately as ventilation-perfusion (V/Q) lung scanning, JAMA reports.

In a multicenter, noninferiority trial, some 1400 adults (mostly outpatients) with a high likelihood of pulmonary embolism based on clinical criteria and D-dimer testing were randomized to CTPA or V/Q scanning. More CTPA patients than V/Q patients were diagnosed with venous thromboembolism (19% vs. 14%) and subsequently received anticoagulation therapy. The rest of the patients, in whom pulmonary embolism was considered excluded, did not receive treatment.

During 3 months' follow-up, the primary outcome — the proportion of patients who developed symptomatic pulmonary embolism or proximal deep venous thrombosis after pulmonary embolism was initially excluded — did not differ significantly between the groups (CTPA, 0.4%; V/Q, 1.0%).

The authors note that some of the excess emboli initially found with CTPA could be clinically unimportant, possibly leading to unnecessary anticoagulation.

JAMA article (Free): http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/298/23/2743

12. FDA Approves Voluven for Loss of Blood Volume Related to Surgery

The FDA has approved the blood volume expander Voluven, an isotonic saline solution containing a synthetic starch. In clinical trials, Voluven was comparable to other approved volume expanders, including the starch solution hetastarch (Hespan) during orthopedic surgery and an albumin-based product during pediatric surgery.

Jesse L. Goodman, director of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, says the approval offers "an alternative blood volume product that is safe and effective in a wide range of age groups."

FDA alert (Free): http://www.fda.gov/bbs/topics/NEWS/2007/NEW01765.html

13. Excuse me! The etiquette of sneezing in surgical masks

Granville-Chapman J, et al. BMJ 2007;335:1293

Sneezing etiquette and the efficacy of masks in the operating theatre remain a subject of debate. Standard teaching dictates that one must face the wound when sneezing, so that droplets escape backwards, via the sides of the mask. A literature search found no clear demonstration of this principle.

We therefore tested the hypothesis that one should face the wound when sneezing into a surgical mask in theatre.

Method: A surgeon wearing a surgical mask (Kimberley Clark Healthcare) was encouraged to sneeze by inhaling finely ground pepper. A small reservoir of water was held in the floor of the mouth to improve the appearance of the droplets on the photographs. All photographs were taken by the medical photography department in a dark room with a dark background, using a Kodak DCS Pro SLR camera (ISO 160, 13.5MP resolution, RAW format) and a Nikon Micro-Nikkor 55mm F2.8 lens. A Sony HVL56AM flashgun was strobed (1/32 power, 2 sec, 10Hz). Images were converted into TIFF files and then sharpened slightly on Adobe Photoshop.

Results (see article for images: http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/short/335/7633/1293):
Fig 1 shows the droplet spray from a sneeze without a mask. Fig 2 shows slight droplet spray escaping from the sides of the mask. Fig 3 shows there is also little spray escaping anteriorly. On close inspection, however, a few droplets can be seen escaping inferiorly on to the surgeon’s upper chest. None of our photographs showed substantial numbers of droplets passing behind the head of the surgeon.

Discussion: The doctrine of facing the wound when sneezing seems logical. Our study does not, however, support this hypothesis. A few droplets of spray escaped sideways, but no substantial numbers passed behind the surgeon’s head. Our photographs show that the most important visible escape of spray comes from below the mask on to the surgeon’s chest. We therefore recommend that surgeons should follow their instincts when sneezing during operations.

14. Strategies Reduce Return ED Visits for Asthma

By Will Boggs, MD. NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Dec 24 - Preprinted order sheets and access to a pediatrician are among strategies that can reduce the rate of return visits to the emergency department for children with asthma, according to a report in the December issue of Pediatrics.

"Standard order sets are an effective and inexpensive way to 1) ensure that all children with asthma receive timely and evidence-based care for asthma in emergency departments, and 2) reduce 'bouncebacks' to the Emergency Department," Dr. Astrid Guttmann from the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Ontario, Canada told Reuters Health.

Dr. Guttmann and colleagues describe current asthma management strategies for children used by emergency departments in the province of Ontario, and which strategies have an impact on 72-hour return visits by children.

Asthma management strategies were distributed across all hospital types, the authors report, but small community hospitals generally had lower adoption rates of all strategies than did large community hospitals and academic hospitals.

Two strategies -- the availability of a pediatrician for consultation and the use of a standard, preprinted order sheet -- were associated with significantly reduced return visits. Employing both these strategies was associated with a 36% reduction in return-visit rates, the report indicates.

"This study cannot identify the specific components of these order sheets that account for their effectiveness," the investigators say, "but the timely use of evidence-based medications is likely to be an important component, given its consistent appearance in all of them."

"We think the evidence is compelling enough to move ahead with implementing asthma order sets for emergency departments, but we are considering studying order sets for other common conditions seen in emergency departments in a trial and collecting data about what processes are improved," Dr. Guttmann said.

Pediatrics 2007;120:e1402-e1409.

15. What Do Non-ischemic Transient Neurologic Attacks Portend?

Sudden attacks of neurologic dysfunction that do not qualify as transient ischemic attacks are not harmless, according to a JAMA study.

Dutch researchers followed some 6000 subjects aged 55 or older for over 10 years. By the end of follow-up, those who'd suffered a TIA (also called a focal transient neurologic attack) and those who'd suffered a nonfocal attack (i.e., one not attributable to the dysfunction of a single arterial territory of the brain) had roughly similar clinical courses. Relative to those subjects without any neurologic attacks, the hazard ratio for subsequent stroke among those with TIAs was 2.14; among those with nonfocal attacks, the HR was 1.56; and among those with attacks showing both focal and nonfocal characteristics, the HR was 2.48 (but these patients were rare).

The authors say their results "challenge the strong but unfounded conviction that nonfocal [transient attacks] are harmless." An editorialist recommends applying the same diagnostic and treatment regimens, short of hospitalization, in both focal and nonfocal attacks.

JAMA Abstract: http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/298/24/2877

16. Hypertension Poorly Controlled in Patients with Cardiovascular Comorbidities

Blood pressure control rates among patients with comorbid cardiovascular conditions, such as heart failure, dyslipidemia, and diabetes, are "disappointing," according to a study and editorial in Archives of Internal Medicine.

Using federal health and nutrition survey data, researchers estimated that roughly one-third of U.S. adults suffer from hypertension, and among those with cardiovascular comorbidities, that proportion approaches three-quarters. Despite higher treatment rates among patients with comorbid conditions, their hypertension — particularly systolic hypertension — remains less controlled than that among patients without comorbidities. The authors say their results suggest "an urgent need for intensified efforts at improved treatment and control."

An editorialist writes that physicians may simply be unaware of the importance of following guideline recommendations, may find them too onerous in terms of the time and expense needed for compliance, or may simply be skeptical that recommendations will hold up over time.

Archives of Internal Medicine article (Free abstract; full text requires subscription): http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/167/22/2431

Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC 7 Express) (Free PDF): http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/hypertension/express.pdf

17. “Pimp my slang.” A guide to some medical neologisms

Keeley PW. BMJ 2007;335:1295

Struggling to understand what your colleagues are saying?

One of the principal virtues of English is its malleability and easy incorporation of new words, and new meanings for old ones. The language has been constantly changing, enriched by each wave of immigration and by exposure to other languages, most notably during the days of the British Empire.[1]

The rate of change has accelerated recently with the advent of electronic media. Coupled with this has been the development of urban slang, tracked by online publications such as the Urban Dictionary[2] New terms can be derived from existing words or from popular culture (especially film, television, and the internet). Just as doctors need to familiarise themselves with new words arising from new concepts and technologies they need to keep up with changing usages and slang.

But it can be hard,[3] particularly for those who don’t recognise the references. Here is a small selection of new terms in current use. I would be delighted to hear of more. (No personal inventions, please.)

404 moment
The point in a ward round when-despite all efforts to look through the notes or access electronic systems-a particular result cannot be located. (From the world wide web error message "404 document not found.")

Adminosphere
The pleasantly decorated and furnished palatial offices of trust management or the dean.

Administrivia
The flurry of pointless emails and paperwork that emanate from the adminosphere.

Agnostication
The (usually vain) attempt to answer the question, "How long have I got, doc?"

Blamestorming
A session of mutual recrimination during which a multidisciplinary team attempts to apportion blame for some particularly egregious error.

Disco biscuits
E, ecstasy, or methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) - a class A drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971. Commonly used as a recreational drug by clubbers. An emergency doctor might say: "The man in cubicle 3 looks like he’s taken one too many disco biscuits."

Gerifix
A combination of broad spectrum antibiotics, thiazide diuretics, and nebulised bronchodilators (with or without corticosteroids) prescribed to elderly patients admitted to UK hospitals between October and March.

Hasselhoff
A patient presenting to accident and emergency with an injury with a bizarre explanation. (After the former Baywatch actor David Hasselhoff, who suffered a freak injury when he hit his head on a chandelier while shaving. The broken glass severed four tendons as well as an artery in his right arm, which required immediate surgery.[4])

It’s like . . .
The opening words of every medical or nursing student sentence. Just ignore.

Jack Bauer
A doctor still up and working after 24 hours on the job—now something of a rarity but will be recognised by older clinicians. Usually a bit tetchy:

Colleague: Going for lunch, Jack?

JB: (shouts) "THERE ISN’T TIME!" (From the lead character in the television series 24.)]

MacTilt
The lateral movement of the head to an angle of 45° to the vertical by a palliative care nurse specialist. It is intended to convey sympathy and understanding. (Mac from Macmillan nurse—a specialist palliative care nurse—and tilt.)

Mini me
A trainee or medical student who emulates their senior colleague a little too much but doesn’t say a lot. Can be very annoying. (From the character in the Austin Powers films.)

Ringo
Expendable member of a team. (After Ringo Starr, drummer with the Beatles. John, Paul, and George went on to successful solo careers. Ringo did the voiceover for Thomas the Tank Engine.)

Search and rescue
The medical middle grader allocated to look after the patients dotted in non-medical wards.

Testiculation
The holding forth with expressive hand gestures by a consultant on a subject on which he or she has little knowledge. (Concatenation of testicle and gesticulate.)

Ward 101
The source of referrals that fills the recipient with dread. (From room 101, which contained all the deepest fears of the protagonist in George Orwell’s novel 1984.)

[1] Bragg M. The adventure of English. London: Sceptre, 2004.
[2] Urban dictionary. www.urbandictionary.com/
[3] Fox AT, Fertleman M, Cahill P, Palmer RD. Medical slang in British hospitals. Ethics Behav 2003;13:173-89.
[4] Hasselhoff in chandelier accident. BBC News Online 2006 Jun 30. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/5135030.stm

18. More Support for Chest-Compression-Only Resuscitation for Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Steve Stiles. from Heartwire — a professional news service of WebMD. December 18, 2007 — Two observational studies published online December 10, 2007 in Circulation concluded that the conventional method of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) that calls for mouth-to-mouth assisted ventilation is no more effective than a chest-compression-only approach [1,2]. The findings support a good deal of international research supporting use of the latter method, which is less complicated and may be more appealing to potential bystander rescuers.

In their retrospective analysis of almost 10,000 cases of bystander resuscitation for cardiac arrest in which one or the other method was used [1], Katarina Bohm (Karolinska Institute, South General Hospital Stockholm, Sweden) and colleagues saw no significant difference in the odds that the victim would survive to be hospitalized or in one-month survival.

The findings support the use of the "simpler version of CPR," which can be especially useful "in dispatcher-assisted CPR and in cases involving elderly bystanders, in which the simplest algorithm is probably also the best," the group writes.

They point to "two large, independent, prospective, randomized trials" comparing the two methods that are ongoing in the US, Finland, and Sweden. "We therefore suggest waiting for the results of these randomized trials before starting any new discussion to change guidelines."

In the longer-term prospective study of about 4900 cases of witnessed out-of-hospital arrests by Dr Taku Iwami (National Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Japan) and associates [2], the chances of one-year survival with "favorable" neurologic outcomes was similarly increased with either method, compared with no bystander resuscitation — by 72% using the compression-only or "cardiac-only" technique, and by 57% with standard CPR.

"If cardiac-only resuscitation is simply as effective as conventional CPR, is there any reason to change lay CPR programs to focus on cardiac-only resuscitation? Perhaps," the group writes.

"Conventional CPR is a complex psychomotor task, and it typically is provided for less than 25% of out-of-hospital arrests," observe Iwami et al. "Specific educational campaigns to teach cardiac-only resuscitation may increase the rate of bystander CPR and improve the quality of cardiac-only resuscitation, thereby improving survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Dr Gordon A Ewy (University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson), a longtime advocate of chest-compression-only resuscitation [3], who wasn't associated with either study, said that no randomized trial is needed for the technique to be recommended.

He pointed out to heartwire that the most current guidelines, published in 2005 [4], had updated the conventional-CPR recommended ratio from 15 chest compressions to two ventilations to 30 chest compressions to two ventilations. Whether 15 or 30 compressions, he said, the guidelines were based on consensus, not data.

But Ewy's group recently published data in a pig model suggesting that the continuous-compression technique, which he calls "cardiocerebral resuscitation," yields better outcomes than 30:2 CPR [5]. That, combined with the abundant supporting observational data, he said, showed that bystander CPR improves survival, and survival is better using the compression-only method.

"There's no question in my mind that the guidelines need to change, and they need to change now," Ewy said.

In Bohm et al's analysis of 8902 cases of out-of-hospital standard CPR and 1145 cases of compression-only resuscitation, 19.6% and 20% of patients, respectively, made it to the hospital alive; the adjusted odds ratio (OR) for CPR vs chest-compression-only was 1.03 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.86 - 1.23). The one-month survival rates were 7.2% for standard CPR and 6.7% for the simpler technique (adjusted OR, 1.18 [95% CI, 0.89 - 1.56]).

In the prospective, population-based study of 4902 witnessed cardiac arrests in Japan, there were 783 cases in which bystanders performed conventional CPR and 544 in which only chest compressions were used; there were no bystander attempts in the remainder. Excluding arrests lasting greater than 15 minutes, the one-year rate of survival with favorable neurologic outcomes was 4.1% for standard CPR, 2.5% for no resuscitation (OR 1.57 [95% CI, 0.95 - 2.60]), and 4.3% for compression only (OR 1.72 [95% CI, 1.01 - 2.95]).

Ewy, like Iwami et al, observes that regardless of inherent efficacy, the compression-only method is likely to save more lives than standard CPR, if only because it's more likely to be carried out. "People are afraid of getting an infection, or they just don't like doing mouth-to-mouth on a stranger, or they don't know how or are afraid they'll do harm. For whatever reason, it's being done in only one out of five cases in certain societies, and two out of five in others," according to Ewy. "And if you just call 911 and don't do anything until the paramedics get there, you might as well sign the patient's death certificate."

The Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture, Japan, and the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare, Japan, supported the study by Iwami and colleagues. The study authors have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Sources
[1] Bohm K, Rosenqvist M, Herlitz J, et al. Survival is similar after standard treatment and chest compression only in out-of-hospital bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Circulation. Published online before print December 10, 2007.
[2] Iwami T, Kawamura T, Hiraide A, et al. Effectiveness of bystander-initiated cardiac-only resuscitation for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Circulation. Published online before print December 10, 2007.
[3] Be a lifesaver with continuous chest compression CPR tutorial. University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center. Available at http://www.heart.arizona.edu/publiced/lifesaver.htm.
[4] ECC Committee, Subcommittees and Task Forces of the American Heart Association. 2005 American Heart Association guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and emergency cardiovascular care. Circulation 2005; 112:IV1-IV203.
[5] Ewy GA, Zuercher M, Hilwig RW, et al. Improved neurological outcome with continuous chest compressions compared with 30:2 compressions-to-ventilations cardiopulmonary resuscitation in a realistic swine model of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Circulation 2007; 116:2525-2530.

19. What Initial Dose of Aspirin Is Right for STEMI Patients?

from Heartwire — a professional news service of WebMD. December 20, 2007 (Durham, NC) – An initial dose of 162-mg aspirin may be as effective as and perhaps safer than 325 mg for the acute treatment of ST-elevation MI (STEMI), a new study suggests [1].

The study, published online in Circulation on December 17, 2007, was conducted by a group led by Dr Jeffrey Berger (Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, NC). They explain that aspirin therapy is a cornerstone in the immediate treatment of STEMI and that much of the data supporting its use comes from the ISIS-2 trial, which showed that a 162.5-mg dose reduced five-week vascular mortality by 23%, which led to an ACC/AHA class 1, level of evidence A, recommendation for this dose. In contrast, use of a 325-mg dose of aspirin has a class 1, level of evidence C, recommendation, due to a paucity of data on this dose.

Berger et al point out that despite these recommendations, the most common initial dose of aspirin in the US has been 325 mg. They note that there has been only a single randomized trial that compared initial aspirin doses among those receiving fibrinolytic therapy, but that trial stopped early after enrolling only 162 patients. They therefore conducted a retrospective analysis of two large STEMI fibrinolytic trials, GUSTO I and GUSTO III, with a combined database of 56 080 STEMI patients, to assess immediate aspirin dose (162 vs 325 mg) and short-term outcomes after STEMI.

Results showed that 24.4% of patients (11 828) received an initial aspirin dose of 325 mg, and 75.6% (36 594) received 162 mg. There was no significant difference between the two doses in terms of mortality or other cardiac events at 24 hours or at seven and 30 days.

But the 325-mg dose was associated with a significant increase in the risk of moderate or severe bleeding compared with the 162-mg dose (OR 1.14; 95% CI 1.05–1.24; p less than 0.003).

Berger et al write: "Our data are consistent with prior aspirin studies that have shown similar efficacy and increased bleeding risk with a higher aspirin dose. The present study extends these findings and demonstrates that even the initial dose of aspirin may have clinical implications and therefore should not be overlooked. Our study raises the hypothesis that lowering the initial dose of aspirin from 325 to 162 mg may substantially lower the risk of bleeding without loss of efficacy."

The authors acknowledge that there are several limitations to this study, including the fact that it was a post hoc analysis of prospectively collected data from two clinical trials in which the dose of aspirin was not randomized or stipulated in the study protocol. Despite this, they say that the data do suggest that for the first dose of aspirin, 162 mg may be as effective as and safer than 325 mg for the acute treatment of STEMI. "This higher associated bleeding risk reinforces the importance of finding the lowest effective aspirin dose as an important goal in each clinical setting," they conclude.

Berger JS, Stebbins A, Granger CB, et al. Initial aspirin dose and outcome among ST-elevation myocardial infarction patients treated with fibrinolytic therapy. Circulation 2007;
http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.729558v1

20. US has highest dissatisfaction with health care

Bob Roehr, Washington, DC (from BMJ 2007;335:956). The United States is the nation most dissatisfied with its healthcare system, while the Dutch are the most satisfied, an international survey has found.

The study, of 12,000 adults in seven industrialised countries (Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States), was conducted by the US health policy charity the Commonwealth Fund. The results were released last month at a news conference in Washington, DC, that involved a panel of health ministers and other representatives from several of the countries.

Just 16% of respondents in the US said that minor changes in health care are needed, while 34% said the system needed to be rebuilt completely. Among Dutch respondents 42% said that minor changes in health care are needed and only 9% thought that the system needed to be rebuilt completely. About a quarter of respondents in the four British Commonwealth countries thought their systems needed only minor tinkering; large majorities thought they needed fundamental changes or complete rebuilding. In the UK 26% said that the healthcare system needed only minor changes, 57% said fundamental changes were needed, and 15% said the system needed complete rebuilding.

"On out of pocket costs, the US is again an outlier, with almost a third reporting paying $1000 or more each year," said Cathy Schoen, one of the authors of the study. Americans with health insurance often have a high deductible threshold before coverage begins, or they must make a co-payment for visits to doctors or for prescriptions.

Ms Schoen said that, across all the countries, participants who had a "medical home" (a family doctor they use regularly) were the "least likely to report problems of coordination of care." The study found that in all the countries about a third of the patients reported that information arising from their visits to emergency departments or from stays in hospital was not reported back to the medical home.

Health Affairs 2007;26:w717-w734; Abstract: http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/26/6/w717

21. Comparison of energy expenditure in adolescents when playing new generation and sedentary computer games: cross sectional study

Graves L, et al. BMJ 2007;335:1282-1284

Objective: To compare the energy expenditure of adolescents when playing sedentary and new generation active computer games.

Design: Cross sectional comparison of four computer games.

Setting: Research laboratories.

Participants: Six boys and five girls aged 13-15 years.

Procedure: Participants were fitted with a monitoring device validated to predict energy expenditure. They played four computer games for 15 minutes each. One of the games was sedentary (XBOX 360) and the other three were active (Wii Sports).

Main outcome measure: Predicted energy expenditure, compared using repeated measures analysis of variance.

Results: Mean (standard deviation) predicted energy expenditure when playing Wii Sports bowling (190.6 (22.2) kJ/kg/min), tennis (202.5 (31.5) kJ/kg/min), and boxing (198.1 (33.9) kJ/kg/min) was significantly greater than when playing sedentary games (125.5 (13.7) kJ/kg/min) (P less than 0.001). Predicted energy expenditure was at least 65.1 (95% confidence interval 47.3 to 82.9) kJ/kg/min greater when playing active rather than sedentary games.

Conclusions: Playing new generation active computer games uses significantly more energy than playing sedentary computer games but not as much energy as playing the sport itself. The energy used when playing active Wii Sports games was not of high enough intensity to contribute towards the recommended daily amount of exercise in children.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Lit Bits: December 6, 2007

From the recent medical literature...

1. Statewide System for Coronary Reperfusion May Improve MI Care

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Nov 27 - A statewide system that promotes expeditious coronary reperfusion may improve the quality of care for ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), according to a report in the Journal of the American Medical Association for November 28.

Whether this translates into improved clinical outcomes, however, is unclear.

The system focuses on improving treatment in four areas: emergency medical systems, emergency department, catheterization laboratory, and interhospital transfer. Under the system, hospitals with percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) facilities will agree to provide single-call catheterization laboratory activation by emergency personnel, accept patients even if no beds exist, and improve STEMI care for the whole region regardless of hospital affiliation.

In the current study, Dr. Christopher B. Granger, from Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, North Carolina, and colleagues examined the outcomes of 579 STEMI patients who were treated before and 585 treated after the statewide coronary reperfusion system was implemented. The outcomes of 925 STEMI patients treated at non-PCI hospitals were also evaluated.

Implementation of the statewide program was associated with significant improvements in reperfusion times. For instance, the program significantly reduced the time from the initial emergency medical response to receipt of fibrinolytic therapy or PCI. Moreover, it appeared to hasten the transfer of patients from non-PCI to PCI hospitals.

Nonreperfusion rates fell from 23% to 11% in the PCI hospitals, while no change occurred in non-PCI hospitals. Despite these apparent improvements, implementation of the statewide program did not significantly reduce the occurrence of death, cardiac arrest, or cardiogenic shock.

"Further research is needed to ensure that this and other programs that demonstrate improvement in application of reperfusion therapies lead to reduced mortality and morbidity from acute myocardial infarction," the researchers conclude.

JAMA 2007;298:2371-2379. Full-text (Free): http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/298.20.joc70124

2. Risks for MI, Stroke Elevated in the Month After Respiratory Infection

Risks for myocardial infarction and stroke are elevated in the month after respiratory infection, according to a case-control analysis in the European Heart Journal.

Using a large general practice database, U.K. researchers identified some 11,200 adults with first MIs and 9200 with first strokes, as well as matching controls, over a 10-year period. They also gathered data on respiratory infection diagnoses in the year before MI or stroke.

Overall, risks for MI and stroke were significantly increased within the month after respiratory infection. In adjusted analyses, the risk for either endpoint was approximately doubled within 1 week after infection, with risk being highest in the first 3 days (odds ratios: 3.8 for MI, 4.1 for stroke).

Given the findings, the authors conclude: "The benefits of reducing respiratory infection either through immunisation or treating or preventing infection may be substantial."

European Heart Journal article (Free): http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/ehm516v1

3. ACEP survey suggests rise in ED crowding

Modern Physician (10/10, Zigmond) reports, "In a survey of nearly 1,500 practicing emergency physicians," which was conducted last month at the American College of Emergency Physicians' (ACEP) conference in Seattle, "more than 80 percent said crowded conditions in their emergency departments had increased either slightly (40.2 percent) or significantly (42.4 percent) in the past year." Over two-thirds (67 percent) of the survey's respondents "cited 'not enough staffing and/or resources' as their leading concern about patient care." The respondents were also concerned about "decreased throughput in the emergency department because of boarding patients (65.4 percent) and long wait times (65.3 percent)." Almost half (47 percent) of the physicians "said they had experienced a patient suffering as a result of crowded emergency rooms." Furthermore, 200 respondents said that "at some point" they "had experienced a patient death" due to crowded emergency department conditions.

The NBC Nightly News (10/9, story 8, 2:20, Curry) also covered the story, and interviewed Dr. Linda Lawrence, ACEP president, who said, "We knew patients were suffering. We watch it each and every day as they've lost their privacy and dignity lying in our hallways." HealthDay (10/10) reprises the story in its Health Highlights section.

Abid Mogannam & Brian Potts MD, MBA, Managing Editors, CAL/AAEM News Service. University of California, Irvine

4. Diclofenac or Spinal Manipulative Therapy Not Helpful for Acute Low Back Pain

Laurie Barclay, MD. November 13, 2007 — Patients with acute low back pain receiving recommended first-line care did not recover more quickly with the addition of diclofenac or spinal manipulative therapy, according to the results of a randomized controlled trial in the November 8 issue of The Lancet.

"Present treatment guidelines for acute low back pain recommend that general practitioners should give advice (remain active, avoid bed rest, and reassurance of favourable prognosis) and paracetamol [a.k.a. acetaminophen] as the first line of care," write Mark J. Hancock, MAppSc, from the University of Sydney in Australia, and colleagues. "Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and spinal manipulative therapy are recommended as second-line management options for patients who have slow recovery. We do not know whether NSAIDs or spinal manipulative therapy, or both, in addition to advice and paracetamol as initial treatment results in quicker recovery for such patients."

In this community-based study, 240 patients with acute low back pain who had been given advice and paracetamol by their general practitioner were randomized to receive diclofenac 50 mg twice daily and placebo manipulative therapy (n = 60), spinal manipulative therapy and placebo drug (n = 60), diclofenac 50 mg twice daily and spinal manipulative therapy (n = 60), or double placebo (n = 60). The main endpoint was days to recovery from pain, evaluated with survival curves in an intent-to-treat analysis.

Compared with placebo drug or placebo manipulative therapy, neither diclofenac nor spinal manipulative therapy significantly decreased the number of days until recovery (diclofenac hazard ratio [HR], 1.09; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.84 - 1.42; P = .516; spinal manipulative therapy HR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.77 - 1.31; P = .955). By 12 weeks after randomization, 237 (99%) patients had either recovered or were censored. Secondary analyses showed no significant effects on pain, disability, or global perceived effect at 1, 2, 4, or 12 weeks, when diclofenac or spinal manipulative therapy, or both, was added to baseline care.

Possible adverse reactions occurred in 22 patients; these included gastrointestinal tract disturbances, dizziness, and heart palpitations. Half of these patients were in the active diclofenac group, and the other half were taking placebo. One patient taking active diclofenac stopped treatment because of a suspected hypersensitivity reaction.

"Neither diclofenac nor spinal manipulative therapy gave clinically useful effects on the primary outcome of time to recovery," the study authors write. "We can reasonably assume that when quality baseline care is provided, previously effective treatments might no longer provide additional benefit." Limitations of the study include cointerventions during the study period in 28 patients and imperfect compliance rates.

"These results are important because both diclofenac and spinal manipulative therapy have potential risks and additional cost for patients," the study authors conclude. "If patients have high rates of recovery with baseline care and no clinically worthwhile benefit from the addition of diclofenac or spinal manipulative therapy, then GPs [general practitioners] can manage patients confidently without exposing them to increased risks and costs associated with NSAIDs or spinal manipulative therapy."

Lancet. 2007;370:1638-1643.

5. Predicting Adverse Outcomes in Syncope

Grossman SA, et al. J Emerg Med. 2007;33:233-239.

Syncope is a common presentation to the Emergency Department (ED); however, appropriate management and indications for hospitalization remain an ongoing challenge. The objective of this study was to determine if a predefined decision rule could accurately identify patients with syncope likely to have an adverse outcome or critical intervention.

A prospective, observational, cohort study was conducted of consecutive ED patients aged 18 years or older presenting with syncope. A clinical decision rule was developed a priori to identify patients at risk if they met any of the following 8 criteria: 1) Signs and symptoms of acute coronary syndrome; 2) Signs of conduction disease; 3) Worrisome cardiac history; 4) Valvular heart disease by history or physical examination; 5) Family history of sudden death; 6) Persistent abnormal vital signs in the ED; 7) Volume depletion; 8) Primary central nervous system event. The primary outcome was either a critical intervention or an adverse outcome within 30 days.

Among 362 patients enrolled with syncope, 293 (81%) patients completed their 30-day follow-up. Of these, 201 (69%) were admitted. There were 68 patients (23%) who had either a critical intervention or adverse outcome. The rule identified 66/68 patients who met the outcome for a sensitivity of 97% (95% confidence interval 93–100%) and specificity of 62% (56–69%). This pathway may be useful in identifying patients with syncope who are likely to have adverse outcome or critical interventions. Implementation and multicenter validation is needed before widespread application.

6. Patent Foramen Ovale Linked to Cryptogenic Stroke in Old and Young

Patent foramen ovale (PFO) is associated with cryptogenic stroke in both older and younger patients, reports the New England Journal of Medicine.

Some 500 adults admitted with stroke underwent routine diagnostic testing (CT and/or MRI, carotid ultrasound, transthoracic echocardiography, and EKG). A known cause was identified in 55% of cases, while the rest were classified as cryptogenic strokes. All patients then had transesophageal echocardiography to determine the presence of PFO.

PFO was significantly more common in patients with cryptogenic stroke than in those with stroke of known cause, both in patients aged 55 or older (44% vs. 14%) and younger patients (28% vs. 12%). Associations between PFO and stroke were particularly strong among patients who also had atrial septal aneurysm.

The authors say their findings indicate that PFO plus atrial septal aneurysm is a "high-risk characteristic," although they note the lack of guidelines for therapy in affected patients.

NEJM abstract: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/357/22/2262

7. The increasing use of chest CT for trauma: is it being overutilized?

Plurad D, et al. J Trauma 2007;62:631-5.

OBJECTIVE: Chest computerized tomography (CCT) has gained popularity in trauma evaluation, but it is expensive, increases exposure to radiation, and leads to findings of debatable clinical significance. The objective of this study was to determine the change in usage of CCT over time and the number of injuries missed on plain chest radiograph (CXR) with normal findings that required therapy.

METHODS: Data on all patients evaluated with a screening CXR during a 7-year period were extracted from a Level I center trauma registry. The incidence of CCT utilization during the duration of the study was identified. Patients who had CCT done after the initial CXR were analyzed separately for the presence of occult injuries. The association of these findings with demographic and injury data were examined.

RESULTS: There were 2,326 CCT performed, and 1,873 (80.5%) of them were after negative CXRs. The percentage of patients studied with CCT increased incrementally from 2.7% to 28.7% for blunt and from 0.4% to 2.9% for penetrating injury. The identification of occult pneumothorax, hemothorax, rib fractures, and lung contusions significantly increased during the study period with the increased frequency of CCT use. There were 102 occult pneumothoraces and/or hemothoraces identified, but only 12 patients underwent tube thoracostomy during the 7-year period. There were 43 patients with blunt aortic injury (BAI) and 6 (13.9%) of these patients had normal CXR findings. There was no trend in increased BAI diagnosed during the study period, although the utilization of CCT was increased.

CONCLUSIONS: There has been a 10-fold increase in use of CCT for trauma evaluation. Although occult findings increased, the number of patients who needed treatment was small. The excess utilization of CCT after negative CXR needs continued refinement to identify the small number of potentially lethal injuries while reducing the number of trivial findings.

8. ED US in the Diagnosis of DVT

Crisp JG, et al. J Emerg Med. 2007;33: 328

Background: Portable vascular ultrasound machines are already used in many hospitals for vascular access, are less expensive than conventional machines, and have never been studied for the detection of deep vein thrombosis (DVT). Compression ultrasound(CUS) of the lower extremity is a rapid method of detecting DVT, yet few studies have directly compared this technique to formal doppler ultrasound by the Department of Radiology (DOR).

Objective: To measure the accuracy of CUS with a portable vascular ultrasound machine for the detection of lower extremity DVT.

Methods: This was an observational, prospective trial in which emergency department (ED) physicians performed portable vascular compression ultrasound (PV-CUS) with the Bard Site-Rite IV ultrasound on patients suspected of having a lower extremity DVT. All ED physicians had a 15-minute training session before enrolling patients. PV-CUS evaluation involved identification of the femoral and popliteal vessels with subsequent compression of the femoral and popliteal veins. The study was considered positive for DVT if either vein was not compressible or a thrombus was visualized. PV-CUS occurred before doppler ultrasound by the DOR, and was compared to the board-certified radiologist reading of the DOR ultrasound. Results: A total of 146 patients, enrolled by 44 physicians, had bedside PV-CUS in the ED followed by DOR evaluation. Mean exam per physician was 3.3 (range 1-28). There were 31 DVTs seen on DOR evaluation: all correctly identified by PV-CUS. One patient with a negative DOR ultrasound had decreased compression of the popliteal vein in the ED, giving a single false positive result. The 115 patients without DVTs all had negative PV-CUS. The sensitivity and specificity of PV-CUS for DVT were 100% (CI 86.2-100%) and 99.1% (CI 94.5-99.9%), respectively.

Conclusion: Portable vascular compression ultrasound can accurately detect DVT of the lower extremities. This approach is less expensive than conventional US, is widely available, and may improve patient care and efficiency in the ED.

9. Antibiotic, Nasal Steroid Not Effective for Treating Acute Sinusitis

Amoxicillin or budesonide, either alone or in combination, doesn't improve symptoms of acute sinusitis, according to a randomized, double-blind trial in JAMA.

The study included some 200 patients over age 15, from 58 family practices in the U.K., who met clinical criteria for acute sinusitis (at least two of the following: unilateral or bilateral purulent nasal discharge, unilateral pain, and intranasal pus). The patients were assigned to receive the antibiotic amoxicillin, the topical nasal steroid budesonide, both, or placebos. Patients with recurrent sinusitis were excluded.

The proportion of patients with symptoms lasting 10 days or more did not differ among the four groups. Overall, 40% of patients were cured at 1 week, with no differences among groups.

An editorialist notes that certain subgroups of patients may benefit from antibiotics or topical steroids, but until such subgroups are identified, "cautious use of antibiotics in the general practice setting for patients with sinusitis is warranted."

JAMA article (Free): http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/298/21/2487

10. Patient sex and quality of ED care for patients with AMI

Vinson DR, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2007;25:996-1003.

Objective
The aim of the study was to assess the quality of care between male and female emergency department (ED) patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI).

Methods
A 2-year retrospective cohort study of 2215 patients with AMI presenting immediately to 5 EDs from July 1, 2000, through June 30, 2002 was conducted. Data on patient characteristics, clinical presentation, and ED processes of care were obtained from chart and electrocardiogram reviews. Multivariable regression models were used to assess the independent association between sex and the ED administration of aspirin, β-blockers, and reperfusion therapy to eligible patients with AMI.

Results
There were 849 women and 1366 men in the study. Female patients were older than male patients (74.3 years for women vs 66.8 years for men, P less than .001). Among ideal patients, women were less likely than men to receive aspirin (76.3% of women vs 81.3% of men, P less than .01), β-blockers (51.7% of women vs 61.4% of men, P less than .01), and reperfusion therapy (64.0% of women vs 72.8% of men, P less than .05). However, after adjustment for age, there was no longer a significant relationship between sex and the use of aspirin (odds ratio [OR], 0.99; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.95-1.03), β-blockers (OR, 0.94; 95% CI, 0.82-1.04), or reperfusion therapy (OR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.89-1.09). In models adjusting for additional demographic, clinical, and hospital characteristics, there remained no association between sex and the processes of care.

Conclusion
Women with AMI treated in the ED have a lower likelihood of receiving aspirin, β-blocker, and reperfusion therapy. However, this association appears to be explained by the age difference between men and women with AMI. Although there are no apparent sex disparities in care, ED AMI management remains suboptimal for both sexes.

11. Survival Outcomes with the Introduction of Intravenous Epinephrine in the Management of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Ong MEH, et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;50:635-642.
Editor’s Summary: There are few human data supporting the current use of intravenous epinephrine for patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Does the introduction of a single dose of 1 mg intravenous epinephrine improve outcomes from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in a system that previously did not use this drug? Only 44% of eligible subjects received epinephrine in this 1,296-patient before-after trial in Singapore. No benefit in initial survival or other common short-term resuscitation metrics occurred. Given the study’s limitations, the role of epinephrine remains unclear. This study highlights the difficulties in establishing the value of standard EMS resuscitative care.

Abstract: http://www.annemergmed.com/article/PIIS0196064407003897/abstract

12. FDA Ponders Psychiatric Warning for Common Flu Drugs

An FDA staff report recommends adding label warnings about possible neuropsychiatric side effects in individuals taking the influenza drugs oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir (Relenza).

The report was prepared for a meeting of the Pediatric Advisory Committee to take place this week. The FDA found 596 cases of neuropsychiatric events associated with oseltamivir and 115 with zanamivir. The cases, mostly in people age 21 or younger and mostly from Japan, included delirium, hallucinations, and impulsive behavior, including a desire to jump. Five fatalities were associated with oseltamivir use while none were associated with zanamvir.

The agency cautioned it could not rule out the possibility that the behavior was due to the illness rather than the treatment. However, the reports "raise the question" of whether the events result from the neuraminidase inhibitor class. It said "it seems prudent" for both drugs to carry label warnings of hallucinations, delirium, and abnormal behavior.

Glaxo and Roche, which make the two drugs, said label updates are unnecessary, because the events could have resulted from flu symptoms.

FDA staff report (Free PDF): http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac/07/briefing/2007-4325b_02_04_Tamiflu%20Adverse%20Event%20Review%202007.pdf

13. Pet-Related Infections: A Review

A review on pet-related infections, including prevention and treatment, appears in the November issue of American Family Physician.

The article includes:
· a helpful table outlining the various types of infections, with specific information about signs and symptoms, diagnostic tests, and primary treatment;
· CDC recommendations on safe pet handling, including guidelines for high-risk individuals (pregnant women, young children, older adults, and immunocompromised patients);
· a list of resources for more information on pet-related infections.

American Family Physician article (Free): http://www.aafp.org/afp/20071101/1314.html

14. Cricoid Pressure in ED Rapid Sequence Tracheal Intubations: A Risk-Benefit Analysis (Review Article)

Ellis DY, et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;50: 653-665.

Summary: Cricoid pressure is considered an integral part of patient safety in rapid sequence tracheal intubation and emergency airway management. Cricoid pressure is applied to prevent the regurgitation of gastric contents into the pharynx and subsequent aspiration into the pulmonary tree. We analyze the published evidence supporting cricoid pressure, along with potential problems, including increased difficulty with tracheal intubation and ventilation.

Conclusions: Cricoid pressure entered medical practice on a limited evidence base but with common sense supporting its use. Given that the risks of cricoid pressure worsening laryngeal view and reducing airway patency have been well described, we recommend that the removal of cricoid pressure be an immediate consideration if there is any difficulty either intubating or ventilating the ED patient.

Full-text (subscription required): http://www.annemergmed.com/article/PIIS0196064407006038/fulltext

15. Intravenous Magnesium Safe Adjunctive Treatment for Atrial Fibrillation

By Will Boggs, MD. NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Nov 23 - Intravenous magnesium may be safely used as an adjunct to digoxin in patients with acute onset atrial fibrillation (AF), according to a report in the November issue of Heart.

"Magnesium is a relatively safe drug to use to control rapid ventricular response in acute onset AF and should be considered as an adjunct to other antiarrhythmics (e.g., amiodarone or digoxin) in patients with AF and in rapid ventricular response," Dr. Kwok M. Ho from Royal Perth Hospital, Western Australia, told Reuters Health. "Nevertheless, its effect on achieving rhythm control is not as great, especially in patients with a normal serum magnesium concentration."

Dr. Ho and colleagues performed a meta-analysis of 10 randomized controlled trials to investigate the safety and efficacy of intravenous magnesium in the setting of acute onset AF.

The addition of intravenous magnesium to digoxin or ibutilide did not improve the rate of converting AF to sinus rhythm, the authors report, and by itself it was no better than calcium antagonists or amiodarone in achieving sinus rhythm.

"While previous meta-analysis has shown that magnesium is effective in preventing the occurrence of atrial fibrillation after cardiac surgery," the authors conclude, "our study shows that adding intravenous magnesium to either digoxin or ibutilide is not effective in achieving sinus rhythm once AF has occurred."

When added to digoxin, however, intravenous magnesium increased the proportion of patients achieving a ventricular response rate below 100 beats/minute. Nevertheless, intravenous magnesium was less effective than intravenous verapamil in controlling the ventricular response rate. However, intravenous magnesium was less likely than other agents to induce bradycardia or atrioventricular block and hypotension, the researchers note.

Transient minor symptoms of flushing, tingling, and dizziness followed intravenous magnesium administration in about 17% of patients, the investigators say.

"I will certainly use intravenous magnesium when the serum magnesium concentration is low and also when the ventricular response rate of the AF is fast despite digoxin or amiodarone," Dr. Ho said.

Heart 2007;93:1433-1440.

16. The Success of Vaccine Programs in the U.S.

Roush SR, et al. JAMA. 2007;298:2155-2163.

Context: National vaccine recommendations in the United States target an increasing number of vaccine-preventable diseases for reduction, elimination, or eradication.

Objective: To compare morbidity and mortality before and after widespread implementation of national vaccine recommendations for 13 vaccine-preventable diseases for which recommendations were in place prior to 2005.

Design, Setting, and Participants: For the United States, prevaccine baselines were assessed based on representative historical data from primary sources and were compared to the most recent morbidity (2006) and mortality (2004) data for diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, poliomyelitis, measles, mumps, rubella (including congenital rubella syndrome), invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), acute hepatitis B, hepatitis A, varicella, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and smallpox.

Main Outcome Measures: Number of cases, deaths, and hospitalizations for 13 vaccine-preventable diseases. Estimates of the percent reductions from baseline to recent were made without adjustment for factors that could affect vaccine-preventable disease morbidity, mortality, or reporting.

Results: A greater than 92% decline in cases and a 99% or greater decline in deaths due to diseases prevented by vaccines recommended before 1980 were shown for diphtheria, mumps, pertussis, and tetanus. Endemic transmission of poliovirus and measles and rubella viruses has been eliminated in the United States; smallpox has been eradicated worldwide. Declines were 80% or greater for cases and deaths of most vaccine-preventable diseases targeted since 1980 including hepatitis A, acute hepatitis B, Hib, and varicella. Declines in cases and deaths of invasive S pneumoniae were 34% and 25%, respectively.

Conclusions: The number of cases of most vaccine-preventable diseases is at an all-time low; hospitalizations and deaths have also shown striking decreases.

17. Detection of Bloodstream Infections in Adults: How Many Blood Cultures Are Needed?

Andrew Lee A, et al. J Clin Microb 2007;47: 3546-3548

Although several reports have shown that two to three 20-ml blood cultures are adequate for the detection of bacteremia and fungemia in adults, a recent study (F. R. Cockerill et al., Clin. Infect. Dis. 38:1724-1730, 2004) found that two blood cultures detected only 80% of bloodstream infections and that three blood cultures detected 96% of episodes.

We reviewed data at two university hospitals to determine whether the recent observations by Cockerill et al. are applicable more widely. We assessed all blood cultures obtained from adult inpatients from 1 January 2004 through 31 December 2005 at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and Duke University Medical Center. All instances in which 3 blood cultures per patient were obtained during a 24-h period were included. The medical records of patients who met the inclusion criteria were reviewed retrospectively to determine the clinical significance of the positive blood culture (true infection versus contamination). Data were analyzed to determine the cumulative sensitivity of blood cultures obtained sequentially during the 24-h time period.

Of 629 unimicrobial episodes with 3 blood cultures obtained during the 24-h period, 460 (73.1%) were detected with the first blood culture, 564 (89.7%) were detected with the first two blood cultures, 618 (98.2%) were detected with the first three blood cultures, and 628 (99.8%) were detected with the first four blood cultures.

Of 351 unimicrobial episodes with 4 blood cultures obtained during the 24-h period, 257 (73.2%) were detected with the first blood culture, 308 (93.9%) were detected with the first two blood cultures, 340 (96.9%) were detected with the first three blood cultures, and 350 (99.7%) were detected with the first four blood cultures. Among unimicrobial episodes, Staphylococcus aureus was more likely to be detected with the first blood culture (approximately 90% detected with the first blood culture).

There were 58 polymicrobial episodes in which 3 blood cultures were obtained. Forty-seven (81.0%) were detected with the first blood culture, 54 (93.1%) were detected with the first two blood cultures, and 58 (100%) were detected with the first three blood cultures.

The results of this study indicate that two blood cultures in a 24-h period will detect approximately 90% of bloodstream infections in adults. To achieve a detection rate of greater than 99%, as many as four blood cultures may be needed. The previously held axiom that virtually all bloodstream infections can be detected with two to three blood cultures may no longer be valid but may also depend on the definition of the "first" blood culture obtained

18. Myths and Misconceptions of Wernicke’s Encephalopathy: What Every Emergency Physician Should Know (Review Article)

Donnino MW, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;50:715-721.

Summary: Wernicke’s encephalopathy continues to be an unrecognized and misunderstood disease. The cause of Wernicke’s encephalopathy is thiamine deficiency as a result of any nutritionally deficient state, though many physicians erroneously consider this disease to be confined only to alcoholics. Unfortunately, the syndrome is most often recognized only on autopsy, especially among nonalcoholics. Despite advances in magnetic resonance imaging, Wernicke’s encephalopathy remains primarily a clinical diagnosis. The common clinical findings include mental status changes, ocular dysfunction, and gait ataxia. Treatment mandates timely intravenous thiamine therapy, for which the optimum dosage remains controversial. We trace the history of Wernicke’s encephalopathy from the first description to our current understanding of the disease and include many of the misconceptions, myths, and controversies that surround this disease.

Full-text (subscription required): http://www.annemergmed.com/article/PIIS0196064407002077/fulltext

19. International Agency Plans to Call Night Work a Probable Carcinogen

The International Agency for Research on Cancer plans to categorize overnight shift work as a probable carcinogen, according to the Associated Press.

The AP says the agency will make the change in December, and the American Cancer Society is likely to follow suit. Until now, the ACS has considered the association between cancer and night work to be "uncertain, controversial or unproven."

Several epidemiologic studies, done mostly on nurses and flight crews, have shown a link between night work and cancer of the breast and prostate, the AP notes. Another analysis, prepared by the IARC, will be published in the December issue of Lancet Oncology.

In theory, sleep loss and circadian disruptions resulting from night work could contribute to cancer risk. Being exposed to light at night could disrupt production of melatonin, a hormone that can limit tumor growth.

Associated Press story (Free): http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071129/ap_on_he_me/night_shift_cancer

American Journal of Epidemiology article on rotating shift work and prostate cancer, 2006 (Free): http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/164/6/549

20. New Adenovirus Variant Causing Severe Disease

The CDC reports that a new adenovirus variant has caused at least 140 cases of severe respiratory illness in the United States, including 10 deaths.

After the first case in an infant in New York, additional clusters were confirmed in Oregon, Washington, and Texas during March to June 2007. Nearly 40% of the patients were hospitalized, 17% in intensive care. The cases suggest "a new and virulent" variant of adenovirus serotype 14 (Ad14), concludes a report in MMWR.

"What really got people's attention is these are healthy young adults landing in the hospital," the CDC's John Su told the Associated Press.

Several antiviral drugs, including ribavirin, cidofovir, and vidarabine, have been administered for adenoviral infections, but none has shown "definitive efficacy," the CDC says.

The agency encouraged physicians to consult their state health departments with questions about potential Ad14 cases.

MMWR article (Free): http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5645a1.htm

21. Early Oral Feeding in Mild Acute Pancreatitis: Presented at ACG

By Danny Kucharsky. PHILADELPHIA, PA -- October 25, 2007 -- Early feeding in patients with mild acute pancreatitis does not increase the risk of severe disease, according to a study presented here at the annual scientific meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG).

"It has been a commonly accepted practice that the initial treatment of acute pancreatitis is absence of feeding, to allow the pancreas to rest," said study presenter Nison Badalov, MD, Gastroenterologist, Division of Gastroenterology, Maimonides Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York, United States. "But recent studies have suggested the early feeding of patients in acute pancreatitis is safe and effective."

Among other things, early feeding stimulates bowel function, attenuates the systemic inflammatory response system, prevents bacterial overgrowth and translocation, and promotes the immune response. Dr. Badalov and colleagues therefore conducted their study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of early oral feeding as compared with traditional fasting in patients with mild acute pancreatitis.

The prospective, single-centre study randomised patients into one of three regimens -- standard treatment (fasting); a semi-elemental formula (low-fat diet), as tolerated, started within 12 hours of admission; a regular diet, as desired, started within 12 hours of admission. Patients were followed for pain medication requirements, complications, length of stay, and recurrence of disease.

After randomisation, 22 patients were enrolled in the fasting group, 18 in the low-fat diet, and 22 were enrolled in a regular diet group. The three groups did not differ in terms of age, gender and aetiology of acute pancreatitis. There were no differences in the three groups regarding severe disease, narcotic usage, mortality and recurrence of acute pancreatitis. The study found no significant differences in organ failure or pancreatic necrosis among the three groups. One patient developed multisystem organ failure and subsequently died.

Dr. Badalov concluded, "Patients with mild acute pancreatitis may be fed early in the course of the disease." The study provides further evidence that "placing the pancreas at rest" is not necessary in the management of patients with acute pancreatitis, he said.

Limitations of the study include enrolment, a design that did not include blinding, a lack of study on the placebo effect of eating on patients, and lack of quantification of nutrient intake. Further study with a larger enrolment will be needed to confirm the results, he added.

[Presentation title: Early Oral Feeding in Mild Acute Pancreatitis: A Randomized Prospective Trial. Abstract 10]

Saturday, November 03, 2007

Lit Bits. November 3, 2007

From the recent medical literature...

1. New Definition of "MI" Poised for World Domination

Steve Stiles, from Heartwire, WebMD. October 23, 2007 — A new consensus report sponsored jointly by four cardiology societies refines and expands on the definition of "myocardial infarction" last updated seven years ago and — in a bold move — recognizes five separate myocardial infarction (MI) categories based on differences in pathophysiology and whether percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is involved.

The new definition's components reflect knowledge and skills gained since the last time, much of which has been commonly used in clinical practice and research, though inconsistently and without a formal mandate. "What's not different is that troponin together with clinical information from the patient history and the electrocardiogram are still the gold standard," Dr Joseph S Alpert (University of Arizona, Tucson) told heartwire.

The document notes that troponin is the "preferred" biomarker but that others, such as the MB fraction of creatinine kinase (CK-MB), can suffice when troponin testing is unavailable. Other innovations include criteria for MI as the cause of sudden death and unprecedented weight given to findings from echocardiography, perfusion scans, and other imaging techniques.

One goal for the consensus document is to nail down specific criteria for making an MI diagnosis that will be modern, useful, and relevant most everywhere. "What we're trying to do is standardize the definition so that all clinical trials and people at hospitals around the world will on the same page," said Alpert, a cochair of the task force behind the "expert consensus document" jointly sponsored by the American College of Cardiology (ACC), American Heart Association (AHA), European Society of Cardiology (ESC), and the World Heart Federation (WHF).

Usually key to the diagnosis, with some notable exceptions, is an elevation in levels of troponin or other biomarkers exceeding the 99th percentile of the upper reference limit (URL), combined with the familiar clinical syndrome, electrocardiogram (ECG) signs, or imaging evidence of new myocardial ischemia.

The new criteria's effects may take some getting used to. Even in the absence of ECG changes, "if you have a syndrome consistent with myocardial infarction or acute coronary syndrome, with [such] a troponin elevation, then those two alone are sufficient to make the diagnosis," according to Dr Keith Fox (University of Edinburgh, UK). With troponin's specificity for myocardial necrosis at the specified concentration threshold, he observed, a great many more patients who would be missed by "previously conventional markers like CK and CK-MB" will be classified as having an MI. "It will increase by about a quarter the prevalence of myocardial infarction," he said.

Fox made the remarks during a Cardiology Panel discussion sponsored by theheart.org [3] that was recorded in September after the new MI definition was described at the European Society of Cardiology 2007 Scientific Meeting.

The new definition also formally recognizes myocardial necrosis associated with PCI or CABG as an MI as long as a biomarker threshold is met, and allows the diagnosis in the absence of biomarker elevations in the setting of sudden cardiac death as long as there is evidence of myocardial ischemia. With the MI definition's increased complexity comes a classification system to sort out the variations, starting with the syndrome's classic pathophysiology.

New clinical classification of MI

Classification Description
1 Spontaneous MI related to ischemia due to a primary coronary event, such as plaque erosion and/or rupture, fissuring, or dissection
2 MI secondary to ischemia due to an imbalance of O2 supply and demand, as from coronary spasm or embolism, anemia, arrhythmias, hypertension, or hypotension
3 Sudden unexpected cardiac death, including cardiac arrest, often with symptoms suggesting ischemia with new ST-segment elevation; new left bundle branch block; or pathologic or angiographic evidence of fresh coronary thrombus — in the absence of reliable biomarker findings
4a MI associated with PCI
4b MI associated with documented in-stent thrombosis
5 MI associated with CABG surgery

The system goes far beyond the long-outmoded distinctions of transmural vs nontransmural or Q-wave vs non-Q-wave MI, and even the contemporary terms ST-elevation and non-ST-elevation MI (STEMI and non-STEMI). "The distinction between STEMI and non-STEMI is becoming clinically less interesting," Alpert said. "We hope, and we recommend, that in the future in clinical trials and routinely in the hospital, people will begin to characterize infarction by the different categories."

The classifications and updated diagnostic criteria could ultimately improve patient care and outcomes, he predicted. With a broader range of patients classified as having an MI, many who might have been labeled with "unstable angina" will get more aggressive management, said Alpert, "which should result in a decrease in mortality."

Circ article (free, full-text): http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/reprint/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.187397v1

2. The ED Crowding Paradox: The Longer You Stay, the Less Care You Get

Hollander JE, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;50:497-499.

Although many guidelines for medical care are based largely on consensus opinion in the absence of definitive data, the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines for patients with unstable angina and non–ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (unstable angina/NSTEMI) are based on many randomized controlled trials. Actual registry data have demonstrated that hospitals that adhere more closely to the guidelines have reduced mortality rates. Some guidelines, such as the ACC/AHA guidelines for both ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and NSTEMI recommend specific periods for certain elements of upfront management. For example, time until initial ECG, time until administration of fibrinolytic therapy, and time until balloon inflation for STEMI and early catheterization for unstable angina/NSTEMI patients are well-known goals of the care of patients with acute coronary syndrome. Other aspects of the evaluation and treatment are less well delineated with respect to time.

Although there seems to be good evidence that timing of initial care is important, no guidelines that we are aware of recommend specific periods for intervention and reassessment after initial stabilization. What happens after the initial intervention and stabilization? If we ensure that the patient gets an ECG within 10 minutes and we administer appropriate emergency pharmacotherapies, is that the end of it? How important is reassessment? What about timely transfer of care to the admission service? What is the impact of providing patient care in the emergency department (ED) hallway or admitting patients while actually leaving them relatively unattended in the ED?

In this issue of Annals [November 2007], Diercks et al show that NSTEMI patients who spent more time in the ED were less likely to receive guideline-appropriate care. This observation was not isolated to a single institution but comes from a large database that includes patients treated at hundreds of hospitals. Additionally, adherence to these ACC/AHA guidelines is associated with reduced mortality in this specific cohort of patients. Although these data do not allow one to determine a root cause for this association, anyone who has spent time in the ED knows that emergency care is focused on the first few minutes of treatment. After that, the emergency care team has to focus on other patients with other emergencies. Optimal care requires appropriate transfer of care for NSTEMI patients to the inpatient service so that they can continue to receive high-quality care. As an additional benefit, early transfer of care will likely benefit the other ED patients because it will allow providers to focus on timely evaluation and intervention for the next patient.

Although the Diercks et al study did not directly address ED crowding, we think that it is the most likely explanation for the association between prolonged ED stay and lower likelihood of receiving guideline-appropriate care. Patients who waited more than 8 hours for a bed received care inferior to that of patients who waited less than 4 hours for a bed. Even though the health care team had more than twice as long to meet the same treatment goals, they were less likely to meet them. How does this happen? It is most likely that these patients waited longer in crowded, overburdened EDs. As a result, patients may not have received the detailed attention they needed. Maybe they were evaluated fully dressed in the hallway. Patients were definitely less likely to be expeditiously transferred to the ICU, which makes it more difficult for our cardiology colleagues to provide optimal care. Patients boarded in the ED do not get the same level of care they would receive in the ICU. Rather than 1:2 nursing, they often receive 1:10 nursing. The emergency nurses and physician cannot “cap” or “fill” and stop taking new patients. Once the emergency care team stabilizes the patient and performs the initial interventions, they must prioritize the next patient: 110 million “next” patients come through ED doors annually.

What do we know about the impact of ED crowding on patient-oriented outcomes?

o ED crowding is associated with prolonged time to fibrinolytic administration in patients with STEMI.5 Longer times to fibrinolytic administration increase mortality.

o ED crowding is associated with prolonged time to antibiotic administration for patients with pneumonia.6 Longer delays until antibiotic administration adversely affect outcome for patients with pneumonia and patients with sepsis.

o The simple addition of just a single trauma “alert” patient is associated with adverse 30-day outcomes in patients with potential acute coronary syndromes.

o ED crowding is associated with patients with severe pain being left untreated for their pain.

These are just 4 examples in which ED crowding is documented to adversely affect patient care. Ironically, all 4 examples demonstrate adverse effects on National Quality Forum priorities and Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) pay-for-performance conditions, yet JCAHO and other agencies have failed to measure or enforce any standards for transfer of admitted patients to their inpatient beds.

The study by Diercks et al is yet another one demonstrating that prolonged ED stays are not good for patient care. The prolonged stays were associated with reduced quality of care in a common and high-priority condition.

Those who work in the ED and those who seek care in the ED are well aware of effects of ED crowding. The recent Institute of Medicine report “Hospital-Based Emergency Care: At the Breaking Point” highlights this public health crisis. Macroeconomic factors that contribute to ED crowding include high patient volume, with more than 110 million patients seeking ED care in the United States annually, ED and hospital closures, reductions in ED and hospital bed capacity in those facilities remaining open, and increasing levels of hospital occupancy. Poor access to care, unwillingness of primary care providers to treat urgent unscheduled patients, referrals of patients to the ED from physician offices, and hospitals prioritizing elective admission and transfers all contribute to ED crowding.

What arguments can we use to convince our colleagues and administrators that this ED crowding is not acceptable? We recommend the following:

1. Continue to publish evidence about the adverse effects of ED crowding on quality of care. Data from studies such as that by Diercks et al will help motivate change.

2. Consider the impact of ED crowding on the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA). The EMTALA mandates assessment and stabilization of patients with acute conditions. Has an institution really met its EMTALA mandate when high-risk patients linger in the ED without receiving high-quality care?

3. Health care providers who write guidelines need to consider including operational components of care in their recommendations. They should incorporate specific goals about care of patients after stabilization in the ED and before arrival upstairs. We hope that the next set of guidelines includes a recommendation about the cardiologist and intensive care team beginning to provide care for acute coronary syndrome patients in the ED, rather than waiting until the patients come up the cardiac care unit. The improvement in outcomes from patients receiving prompt specialist care after ED assessment and stabilization might be greater than the improvement realized from some pharmacotherapies, especially because acute myocardial infarction patients treated by cardiologists have been shown to have reduced mortality.

4. Health care providers need to begin to focus on operational efficiencies that improve the care of all patients, not just the care of patients with a specific disease. Using pay-for-performance measures to prioritize patients with pneumonia to receive radiography to ensure that they can receive antibiotics in 4 hours will only result in some other segment of the population waiting longer for care. Instead of one disease, let’s fix the system so all patients are treated expeditiously.

Most institutions strive to improve patient care and adhere to evidence-based guidelines, particularly when the guidelines are associated with improved outcomes. Simultaneously, they strive to reduce risk, adverse outcomes, patient complaints, and malpractice suits. It is our contention that if we can fix ED crowding, the rest will follow. Improving operational efficiency across the spectrum is likely to be the most beneficial approach. All of our patients will benefit. After all, isn’t that the goal?

3. Early Treatment of Bell Palsy

Early treatment with steroids, but not with acyclovir, improved patients’ chances for full recovery.

Bell palsy (BP) resolves in most cases, but up to 30% of sufferers have prolonged facial paralysis and pain. Although steroids and antivirals — alone or in combination — are commonly used for treatment, their effectiveness remains unclear. Investigators in Scotland now report results from a double-blind trial examining the efficacy of steroids and acyclovir in the early treatment of BP. Adults presenting during the first 72 hours of symptoms were randomized to receive prednisolone (50 mg/day), acyclovir (2 g/day), both, or placebo, for 10 days. The primary outcome measure was recovery of facial-nerve function at 3 and 9 months, as determined using the House–Brackmann scale.

Of the 551 patients randomized, 496 had outcome measures assessed. At both time points, complete-recovery rates were significantly higher among participants randomized to prednisolone than among those randomized to no prednisolone (83% vs. 64% at 3 months, 94% vs. 82% at 9 months; P less than 0.001 for both comparisons). In contrast, complete-recovery rates were similar between participants randomized to acyclovir and those randomized to no acyclovir (85% vs. 91% at 9 months; P=0.1). Acyclovir provided no additional benefit when combined with prednisolone. At 9 months, prednisolone use was associated with a 12% absolute risk reduction; the number needed to treat to achieve one additional complete recovery was eight (95% confidence interval, 6–14).

Comment: This study provides convincing evidence that steroids, given early in the course of BP, increase the likelihood of complete recovery during the first 9 months, whereas acyclovir provides no benefit. As editorialists point out, these findings apply only to the tested antiviral, acyclovir. Other, better-absorbed antivirals — such as valacyclovir — deserve further study before all antivirals are completely abandoned for BP treatment.

— Daniel J. Diekema, MD, MS. Published in Journal Watch Infectious Diseases October 17, 2007. Citation: Sullivan FM et al. Early treatment with prednisolone or acyclovir in Bell’s palsy. N Engl J Med. 2007; 357:1598.

NEJM Abstract: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/357/16/1598

4. Vaccine as Effective as Immune Globulin for Hepatitis A Postexposure Prophylaxis — ACIP Changes Guidance

For postexposure prophylaxis, hepatitis A vaccine is as effective as immune globulin in preventing transmission, according to reports in NEJM and MMWR.

Researchers randomized 1090 susceptible household or day-care contacts of patients in Kazakhstan to prophylaxis with either hepatitis A vaccine or immune globulin within 2 weeks of exposure. They hypothesized that the effect of the vaccine would be similar to immune globulin. That criterion was met — between 2 and 8 weeks after exposure, vaccine recipients showed a 1.35 relative risk for developing symptomatic infection as compared with those receiving immune globulin. (The confidence interval for the apparent increased risk ranged from 0.70 to 2.67, which an editorialist comments "could signal a true difference between the interventions.)

Consequently, the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has changed its guidelines for postexposure prophylaxis, recommending vaccine for healthy individuals between the ages of 1 and 40. All others should receive immune globulin, if possible.

NEJM article (Free): http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/NEJMoa070546

MMWR article (Free): http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5641a3.htm

NEJM editorial (Free): http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/NEJMe078189

5. Oral antibiotics work as well as intravenous treatment in severe urinary tract infection

Susan Mayor, London. BMJ 2007;335:795.

Oral antibiotics are as effective as intravenous antibiotics in treating acute symptoms and preventing long term complications in severe urinary tract infection (UTI), according to a recent Cochrane review (Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2007;(4):CD003237).

The review analysed data from 15 studies of 1743 patients with severe, symptomatic urinary tract infection who received either oral or parenteral antibiotic treatment. They either used intravenous antibiotics throughout treatment or started with intravenous or intramuscular antibiotics before switching to oral antibiotics—"switch therapy".

The results showed no evidence that oral antibiotics were less effective than parenteral antibiotics, either used throughout treatment or before switching to oral treatment. No significant differences were seen in the number of patients cured of infection; in reinfection or relapse rates; in the number of patients with fever after 48 hours; or in the number of patients with adverse effects from their treatment.

Nine of the studies involved children, and six studies were of children younger than 1 year. Of the remaining six studies, two included only women, including one of pregnant women.

No difference was seen in any outcomes in the five studies (covering 1040 patients) that compared switch treatment with oral antibiotics alone. The proportions of patients with clinical and bacteriological cure at the end of treatment and after an interval were similar (relative risk 0.94, 95% confidence interval 0.78 to 1.13 v 0.97, 0.93 to 1.10).

Kidney scarring on dimercaptosuccinic acid scan after six months did not differ significantly in two studies that compared switch with oral treatment alone (424 patients; 0.87, 0.35 to 2.16). After a year's follow-up of one study, 90 scans showed that 29% of the patients had kidney scarring, but the damage occurred in similar numbers of patients who had switch treatment as had oral antibiotics.

The reviewer, Annette Pohl, postdoctoral fellow at University Clinic Freiburg, Germany, said, "Although severe UTI is usually treated exclusively with intravenous antibiotics—at least initially—followed by oral antibiotics, this review suggests that the mode of application is not essential for the success of therapy."

She noted that it was important to treat urinary tract infections adequately because they may have serious long term consequences, including kidney failure and hypertension. She added, "The available oral antibiotics, especially third generation cephalosporins, seem to be potent enough to treat patients with pyelonephritis efficiently. Even long term outcomes such as kidney scarring do not seem to differ."

In light of the review, Dr Pohl said that treatment of severe urinary tract infection with oral antibiotics might be justified. This might result in fewer hospital admissions, which, besides avoiding disruption for patients and families might also reduce hospital and related medical costs, she said. However, she cautioned that treatment with oral antibiotics requires careful supervision to guarantee compliance.

6. A Systematic Review of Medical Therapy to Facilitate Passage of Ureteral Calculi

Singh A, et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;50:552-563.

Study objective
Acute renal colic is a common presenting complaint to the emergency department. Recently, medical expulsive therapy using α-antagonists or calcium channel blockers has been shown to augment stone passage rates of moderately sized, distal, ureteral stones. Herein is a systematic evaluation of the use of medical expulsive therapy to facilitate ureteral stone expulsion.

Methods
We searched the databases of MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register. Additional sources included key urologic journals and bibliographies of selected articles. We included studies that incorporated a randomized or controlled clinical trial design, patients older than 18 years, treatment in which an α-antagonist or calcium channel blocker was compared to a standard therapy group, and studies that reported stone expulsion rates. A random effects model was used to obtain summary risk ratios (RRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for stone expulsion rate.

Results
A pooled analysis of 16 studies using an α-antagonist and 9 studies using a calcium channel blocker suggested that the addition of these agents compared to standard therapy significantly improved spontaneous stone expulsion (α-antagonist RR 1.59; 95% CI 1.44 to 1.75; number needed to treat 3.3 [95% CI 2.1 to 4.5]; calcium channel blocker RR 1.50; 95% CI 1.34 to 1.68; number needed to treat 3.9 [95% CI 3.2 to 4.6]) in patients with distal ureteral stones. Subgroup analysis of trials using concomitant medications (ie, low-dose steroids, antibiotics, and elimination of trials using an anticholinergic agent) yielded a similar improvement in stone expulsion rate. Adverse effects were noted in 4% of patients receiving α-antagonist and in 15.2% of patients receiving calcium channel blockers.

Conclusion
Our results suggest that “medical expulsive therapy,” using either α-antagonists or calcium channel blockers, augments the stone expulsion rate compared to standard therapy for moderately sized distal ureteral stones.

7. Characteristics of children discharged from hospitals in the US with the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever—it really does still (occasionally) occur

Miyake CY, et al. Pediatrics. 2007;120:503-8.

OBJECTIVE: The goal was to describe characteristics of children discharged from hospitals in the United States in 2000 with the diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever.

METHODS: We explored characteristics of children less than 21 years of age who were hospitalized with a diagnosis of acute rheumatic fever by using the 2000 Kids' Inpatient Database, weighted to estimate the number and rate of acute rheumatic fever-associated hospitalizations in the United States.

RESULTS: In 2000, an estimated 503 acute rheumatic fever hospitalizations occurred among children less than 21 years of age, at a rate of 14.8 cases per 100,000 hospitalized children, with a mean age of 10 years. In comparison with all Kids' Inpatient Database admissions, acute rheumatic fever hospitalizations were more common in the age group of 6 to 11 years and among male patients. Chorea was more common in female patients (61.7%). White patients were significantly underrepresented, whereas Asian/Pacific Islander patients and patients of other races were overrepresented. Hospitalizations of patients with acute rheumatic fever were significantly more common in the Northeast and less common in the South. The highest rates of acute rheumatic fever hospitalizations occurred in Utah, Hawaii, Pennsylvania, and New York. Significantly more acute rheumatic fever admissions occurred in March. The expected payor was more likely to be private insurance and less likely to be Medicaid. Acute rheumatic fever hospitalizations were more likely to occur in teaching hospitals, freestanding children's hospitals, and children's units in general hospitals and in urban locations. The median length of stay for acute rheumatic fever hospitalizations was 3 days, and the median total charges were $6349. The in-hospital mortality rate was 0.6%.

CONCLUSIONS: In 2000, we found that hospitalizations for acute rheumatic fever were infrequent and varied according to race, season, location, and type of hospital.

8. Stress at Work is Bad for your Heart

BMJ 2007;335:796

For the purposes of research, stress at work has two components—high workload and low autonomy. Jobs with both characteristics are unhealthy, especially for people with coronary heart disease. In one Canadian study, chronic job strain doubled the risk of recurrent heart disease in 972 adults (mostly men) returning to work after a heart attack (hazard ratio 2.00, 95% CI 1.08 to 3.72).

The researchers measured participant's job strain soon after their return to work and again two years later. People who scored highly on both occasions were significantly more likely to die of coronary heart disease, have another non-fatal heart attack, or develop unstable angina than those with less stressful jobs, over a follow-up of six years. The association persisted after adjusting for more than two dozen potentially confounding factors. Job strain seems to be an independent predictor of outcome for middle aged men with a history of heart attack.

While these findings are biologically plausible and consistent with research on other psychosocial stresses, the picture may be different for women, says a linked editorial (p 1693). There were only 106 women in this study (11%), so the researchers weren't able to analyse the sexes separately.

Reference: JAMA 2007;298:1652-60.

9. Poor Judgment, Teamwork Problems Implicated in Trainees' Medical Errors

Judgment mistakes, teamwork problems, and insufficient technical skill contribute to the majority of medical errors that involve trainees, reports the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Researchers examined malpractice claims (surgery, obstetrics, and internal medicine) from five U.S. insurers. Overall, 240 errors involving residents, interns, or fellows and causing adverse outcomes (death in one-third of cases) occurred from 1979 through 2001. The researchers found that:
o errors in judgment contributed to 72% of the cases;
o breakdowns in teamwork — particularly lack of supervision by attending physicians and problematic handoffs between trainees or between trainee and attending — were involved in 70%;
o poor technical competence, most often concerning diagnostic decision-making, contributed to 58%.

Seventy percent of the errors occurred among inpatients. To improve safety in this setting, editorialists propose an approach to "translational patient care" in which teams comprising house officers, hospitalists, and nurses care for the same patient from admission to discharge.

Arch Intern Med abstract: http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/167/19/2030

10. Impact of delayed transfer of critically ill patients from the ED to the ICU

Chalfin DB, et al. Crit Care Med. 2007;35:1477-1483.

Objective: Numerous factors can cause delays in transfer to an intensive care unit for critically ill emergency department patients. The impact of delays is unknown. We aimed to determine the association between emergency department "boarding" (holding admitted patients in the emergency department pending intensive care unit transfer) and outcomes for critically ill patients.

Design: This was a cross-sectional analytical study using the Project IMPACT database (a multicenter U.S. database of intensive care unit patients). Patients admitted from the emergency department to the intensive care unit (2000-2003) were included and divided into two groups: emergency department boarding 6 hrs or more (delayed) vs. emergency department boarding less than 6 hrs (nondelayed). Demographics, intensive care unit procedures, length of stay, and mortality were analyzed. Groups were compared using chi-square, Mann-Whitney, and unpaired Student's t-tests.

Setting and Patients: Emergency department and intensive care unit. Patients admitted from the emergency department to the intensive care unit (2000-2003).

Measurements and Main Results: Main outcomes were intensive care unit and hospital survival and intensive care unit and hospital length of stay. During the study period, 50,322 patients were admitted. Both groups (delayed, n = 1,036; nondelayed, n = 49,286) were similar in age, gender, and do-not-resuscitate status, along with Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score in the subgroup for which it was recorded. Among hospital survivors, the median hospital length of stay was 7.0 (delayed) vs. 6.0 days (nondelayed) (p less than .001). Intensive care unit mortality was 10.7% (delayed) vs. 8.4% (nondelayed) (p less than .01). In-hospital mortality was 17.4% (delayed) vs. 12.9% (nondelayed) (p less than .001). In the stepwise logistic model, delayed admission, advancing age, higher Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score, male gender, and diagnostic categories of trauma, intracerebral hemorrhage, and neurologic disease were associated with lower hospital survival (odds ratio for delayed admission, 0.709; 95% confidence interval, 0.561-0.895).

Conclusions: Critically ill emergency department patients with a 6-hr delay or more in intensive care unit transfer had increased hospital length of stay and higher intensive care unit and hospital mortality. This suggests the need to identify factors associated with delayed transfer as well as specific determinants of adverse outcomes.

Related Editorial: Golden hours wasted: The human cost of ICU and ED inefficiency

Gregory CJ, et al. Crit Care Med. 2007;35:1614-1615

The concept of the “golden hour”—the belief that physiologic derangements need to be corrected early after injury to reduce long-term mortality and morbidity—has its origins in the field of trauma. Using 60 mins as the crucial time period is arbitrary, and even the origins of the term are controversial, but the organizing principle that outcomes for critically injured patients depend on time-sensitive emergent surgical and medical interventions has shaped the evolution of the current trauma system in the United States. Changes aimed at streamlining care of injured patients based on the mantra that “time is tissue” have vastly improved outcomes for trauma patients across the country.

The idea of providing the earliest possible intervention to patients with life-threatening illnesses has been expanded to non-trauma populations with dramatic results. Current standard of care for many medical emergencies emphasizes the necessity for specialized teams and protocols to provide the most rapid transition from arrival in the emergency department (ED) to definitive treatment.

These system approaches have demonstrated dramatic results for such common conditions as myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, and stroke. In 2001, Rivers et al. convincingly demonstrated that availability of early goal-directed therapy provided via intensive care modalities was associated with significantly improved outcomes for patients presenting to the ED with severe sepsis and septic shock.

Unfortunately, even while this seminal study was underway, emergency and intensive care services nationwide have only become increasingly overburdened. Whereas EDs have seen consistent increases in the volume and illness severity of patients over the last decade, ED and inpatient capacity has actually declined. From 1988 to 1996 the number of EDs nationwide decreased by 9%, and from 1981 to 1999 the number of inpatient hospital beds decreased 39% in the United States. Additionally, the continuing crisis of insufficient health insurance leaves one of every six U.S. citizens, or 46.6 million people in 2005, dependent on the ED as their primary access to health care.

A 2006 Institute of Medicine report highlighted the detrimental effects that these combined social and medical trends have had on patient care both within and outside the ED. In the United States, 40% of all hospitals with ED services reported overcrowding in their ED on a daily basis. More than one third of hospitals had been on ED diversion (meaning the ED was closed to ambulance traffic) within the previous year. The primary reason cited for ED diversion was a lack of available critical care beds. Busier EDs and limited hospital inpatient capacity have led to an increasing incidence of “boarding” critically ill patients in the ED while waiting intensive care unit (ICU) bed availability.

In this issue of Critical Care Medicine, Dr. Chalfin and colleagues examine the association between delayed transfer to the ICU from the ED and outcomes for critically ill patients. Using information from the Project IMPACT database, they examined outcomes among a cohort of 50,322 patients admitted directly to the ICU from the ED. These patients were stratified into either delayed admissions (more than 6 hrs from ICU admission decision until actual transfer to ICU) or non-delayed admissions (less than 6 hrs from ICU admission decision to transfer). The Project IMPACT database is a multi-institution database created by the Society of Critical Care Medicine to track outcomes in adult ICUs and includes both patient- and hospital-level data. It has previously been used to identify predictors of prolonged ICU stay and ICU quality outliers.

The results of this study demonstrated that patients with delayed admission to the ICU had significantly higher ICU and hospital mortality rates and longer ICU and hospital length of stays compared with non-delayed patients. The negative effect of a prolonged stay in the ED on hospital survival persisted even after adjustment for the effects of age, gender, diagnostic category, and Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score in a stepwise logistic regression model. Delayed patients also more frequently required mechanical ventilation and central venous catheterization after arrival in the ICU…

11. Droperidol Does Not Increase Rates of Torsades de Pointes or Death

Nuttall GA, et al. Anesthesiology. 2007;107:531-536.

Background: The US Food and Drug Administration issued a black box warning regarding the use of droperidol and the potential for torsade de pointes (TdP).

Methods: The primary objective of this retrospective study was to determine whether low-dose droperidol administration increased the incidence of TdP in the general surgical population during a 3-yr time period before and after the Food and Drug Administration black box warning. A random sample of 150 surgical patients during each time interval was selected to estimate the droperidol use for each time period.

Results: During the time period before the black box warning (July 1, 1998 to June 30, 2001), 2,321/139,932 patients (1.66%) had QT prolongation, TdP, or death within 48 h after surgery. We could identify no patients who clearly developed TdP before the black box warning. There was one patient for whom the cause of death could not positively be ruled out as due to TdP. In the time period after the black box warning (July 1, 2002 to June 30, 2005), 2,207 patients (1.46%) had documented QT prolongation, TdP, or death within 48 h after surgery, including only two cases (less than 0.1%) of TdP. The incidence of droperidol exposure was approximately 12% (exact 95% confidence interval, 7.3-18.3%) before the black box warning and 0% after placement of the black box warning on droperidol. Therefore, we estimate that approximately 16,791 patients (95% confidence interval, 10,173-25,607) were exposed to droperidol, none of whom experienced documented TdP.

Conclusions: This indicates that the Food and Drug Administration black box warning for low dose droperidol is excessive and unnecessary.

12. ACIP Releases Adult Vaccine Schedule

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has approved an updated Adult Immunization Schedule for October 2007 to September 2008.

MMWR reports changes from the previous schedule, which include:
o Varicella vaccine is recommended for all adults without evidence of immunity.
o Zoster vaccine is advised for adults aged 60 or older.
o Recommendations for HIV-infected individuals are organized according to CD4 cell count.
o Healthcare workers have the option of either trivalent inactivated flu vaccine or live, attenuated vaccine.

MMWR article (Free): http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5641a7.htm

13. Effect of ED Crowding on Time to Antibiotics in Patients Admitted With Community-Acquired Pneumonia

Fee C, et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;50:501-509.e1

Study objective
We hypothesize that emergency department (ED) volume and increased patient complexity are associated with lower quality of care, as measured by time to antibiotics for patients being admitted with community-acquired pneumonia.

Methods
This was a cross-sectional study at a university tertiary care hospital ED. Community-acquired pneumonia patients admitted from the ED and discharged between January 2004 and June 2005 were reviewed by our institution for The Joint Commission’s antibiotic timing core measure. Medical records were abstracted for patient age, sex, race, mode of transport, arrival time, triage acuity, inpatient level of care, and arrival-to-antibiotic-administration times. Controlling for patient characteristics, multivariate logistic regression determined association of antibiotic administration within 4 hours of arrival, with total ED volume at the time of the community-acquired pneumonia patient’s arrival, and with number of ED patients requiring admission at the time of arrival.

Results
Four hundred eighty-six patients were eligible for the study; antibiotic administration time was available for 405. Sixty-one percent of patients received antibiotics within 4 hours. Antibiotic administration within 4 hours was less likely with a greater number of patients (odds ratio 0.96 per additional patient; 95% confidence interval 0.93 to 0.99) and a greater number of patients ultimately admitted (odds ratio 0.93 per patient; 95% confidence interval 0.88 to 0.99) in the ED. The effect of additional patients was present below total ED capacity.

Conclusion
As ED volume increases, ED patients with community-acquired pneumonia are less likely to receive timely antibiotic therapy. The effect of additional patients appears to occur even at volumes below the maximum bed capacity. Measures to ensure that quality targets are met in the ED should consider the impact of ED volume.

See also Pines JM, et al. The Impact of ED Crowding Measures on Time to Antibiotics for Patients With CAP. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;50: 510-516. http://www.annemergmed.com/article/PIIS0196064407013327/abstract

14. Humor Helps Kids Tolerate Pain

Humorous videos watched during painful procedures increase pain tolerance in children, according to a preliminary study published online in Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

The pilot study (financed by Comedy Central) involved 18 healthy volunteers between ages 7 and 16. The children immersed a hand in cold water for as long as they could — up to an unannounced limit of 3 minutes — under three circumstances: before, during, and after watching humorous videos. Although the children's rating of the intensity of pain did not change from test to test, their pain tolerance increased significantly for the test during which they watched a video.

The authors, recognizing several limitations in their design, say their findings "suggest that the primary objective is to engage the child." (Last year, another study in children similarly found that viewing TV cartoons lessened the pain of venipuncture: http://adc.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/adc.2006.097246v1 )

Full-text EB-CAM article (Free): http://ecam.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/nem097v1

15. Knowledge Translation in EM: Establishing a Research Agenda and Guide Map for Evidence Uptake

Lang ES, et al. Acad Emerg Med 2007;14:915-918.

Knowledge translation (KT) describes any process that contributes to the effective and timely incorporation of evidence-based information into the practices of health professionals in such a way as to effect optimal health care outcomes and maximize the potential of the health care system. The 2007 Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference was conceived to stimulate the development of a KT research agenda and a coordinated initiative within the specialty of emergency medicine (EM). This article provides an executive summary of the consensus conference initiative by describing the overriding themes that emerged as central to the KT enterprise for EM, as well as the specific research recommendations that received the greatest support.

The KT domain has emerged largely from the observation that there is a gap, and in some instances a chasm, between what is known from high-quality clinical research and what is consistently done in clinical practice. As such, the science of KT is the endeavor that seeks to quantify discrepancies between current practice and evidence-based care and understand the barriers to evidence uptake, and then designs and rigorously tests implementation strategies. While traditional research compares the effectiveness of intervention "A" versus "B" on a patient-oriented outcome, KT research (also known as implementation science) focuses on how to implement the better of the two interventions in an emergency department setting…

November’s issue of Acad Emerg Med is devoted to KT in EM. See TOC: http://www.aemj.org/content/vol14/issue11/

16. Rapid Tranquillisation in Emergency Psychiatric Settings

BMJ 2007;335:835-836

Two randomised controlled trials in this week's BMJ assess the effectiveness of different combinations of drugs for tranquillising and sedating people who are violent or agitated as a result of psychiatric disorders. Both trials were undertaken in developing countries.

The first trial, by Raveendran and colleagues, was carried out in the emergency services of a general psychiatry department in a hospital in South India. It compared the tranquillising and sedative effects of a single intramuscular administration of either olanzapine (10 mg) or a combination of haloperidol (10 mg) plus promethazine (50 mg) in 300 aggressive or agitated patients. The observation period lasted for four hours only and patients were followed up for just two weeks. This contrasts with most randomised controlled trials in psychiatry, which have treatment periods lasting for four to 12 weeks and can have several months of follow-up. The trial is important, however, because it looks at a neglected3 area—the early effects of treatment with parenteral antipsychotic drugs in patients who are violent or agitated. Without effective treatment these patients may harm themselves and their environment,3 and they are a heavy burden on resources in emergency psychiatry facilities.

Violent patients are usually psychotic and often receive antipsychotic drugs. In the Indian trial, 10% of the participants were depressed, two thirds were manic, and the remainder had other forms of psychosis. At all five assessments during the four hour study significantly more people were asleep after the haloperidol-promethazine combination than with olanzapine (number needed to treat (NNT) ranged from 5 to 8). Whereas revisits by consultants (NNT=6) and the use of additional drugs (NNT=5) were less frequent with the combination, the need for physical restraint and the adverse effects of drugs did not differ significantly between the treatment groups. No patient experienced dystonia.

Clinicians are usually satisfied if drugs tranquillise a disturbed patient. The two treatment groups did not differ significantly in the combined outcome measure of being tranquil or asleep at 15 and 30 minutes. However, at one hour significantly more people taking the combination treatment were tranquil or asleep (NNT=19). Some people taking olanzapine needed additional drugs, after which the proportion of those tranquil or asleep in the two groups was once again similar. There is a clear take home message here—if being tranquil or asleep is the desired end point, intramuscular olanzapine is as good as intramuscular haloperidol plus promethazine if the doctor is willing to take a 20% chance of being called back an hour later to give another dose.

BMJ Abstract: http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/335/7625/865

17. BNP Assay Aids Emergency Diagnosis of Critical Heart Disease in Infants

October 30, 2007 (San Francisco) — B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) testing may help emergency department medical personnel quickly assess whether critically ill infants have heart disease in addition to being affected by other conditions.

Kevin Maher, MD, a pediatric cardiologist at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, presented preliminary results here at the American Academy of Pediatrics 2007 National Conference and Exhibition indicating that BNP assay accurately identifies pediatric heart cases.

Access to such a test, which is now widely applied in adult cardiology, could help speed the transport of critically ill children with heart conditions from community hospitals without access to pediatric cardiology to tertiary care centers for specialized treatment, Dr. Maher said.

His findings were based on BNP blood tests of 33 children admitted to Emory's pediatric cardiac intensive care unit with newly diagnosed congenital and acquired critical heart disease and 60 control patients with respiratory or infectious complaints. The mean patient age was 29 months. BNP results were typically delivered to the attending physician in about 15 minutes.

Dr. Maher determined that the sensitivity and specificity of the assay for the presence of heart disease were 100% and 98%, respectively, based on 100 pg/mL being the minimum cutoff for positive findings. The mean BNP level for children with heart conditions was 3290 pg/mL, compared with mean of 17.4 pg/mL for infants and children with symptoms from noncardiac origins.

Nineteen patients (58%) with positive BNP findings had congenital heart disease. Fourteen others with positive tests had acquired heart disease. Cardiac diagnoses were confirmed with cardiography. Cardiac diagnoses included cardiomyopathy (15), aortic coarctation (7), total anomalous pulmonary venous return (2), hypoplastic left heart syndrome (2), interrupted aortic arch (3), and anomalous left coronary artery from the pulmonary artery (4).

Heart disease symptoms, including fever, respiratory complaints, abdominal pain, fussiness, and lethargy, are also consistent with the symptoms of other disorders. "You get a huge differential diagnosis," Dr. Maher said. "You are thinking sepsis or endocrine disorders — everything that goes into emergency medicine — but if the initial blood draw shows BNP is in the 2000 to 5000 [pg/mL] range, that should bring an immediate call to cardiology."

Experience with a 3-day-old infant with an interrupted aortic arch in the trial illustrated the need to improve response times, Dr. Maher said. The patient was first seen in a community hospital emergency department where physicians ruled out sepsis, collected cultures, and performed a spiral tap. She was then transferred to pediatric facility that did not have cardiac services. Physicians there realized the child did not have a good pulse, and a cardiologist was called in. He diagnosed an interrupted aorta and ordered air evacuation to Emory. At admission, the child had a BNP of 5000 pg/mL and was in shock.

According to session moderator Thomas K. Jones, MD, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington in Seattle, however, more study is needed before BNP can be recommended for screening. "It is clearly a good test to discriminate the 2 different diseases — heart failure or illness not involving heart failure," he said. "But it needs to be evaluated in the context of a screening test, which was not done here."

American Academy of Pediatrics 2007 National Conference and Exhibition. Presented October 26, 2007.

18. Emergency Physician Activation of the Cath Lab: Saving Time, Saving Lives

Magid D, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2007;50:535-537.

Reperfusion therapy with percutaneous coronary intervention reduces mortality for eligible ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients. The shorter the time from symptom onset to treatment, the greater the survival benefit. For primary percutaneous coronary intervention, treatment time is most commonly defined as the time from hospital arrival to first balloon inflation (door-to-balloon time). Although the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guidelines recommend a door-to-balloon time of 90 minutes or less, recent data indicate that only a minority of STEMI patients are receiving percutaneous coronary intervention within this period.

In most US hospitals, emergency physicians do not independently activate the cath lab, despite the fact that previous studies have shown that door-to-balloon times are shorter when emergency physicians activate the cath lab without cardiology consultation. Part of the reluctance of hospitals to implement such programs is a concern that emergency physician activation will lead to frequent mobilization of the cath teams for patients who are not truly having a STEMI. In addition to demonstrating that emergency medicine activation saves time, the articles by Kurz et al and Kraft et al in this issue of Annals indicate that “false” or unwarranted cath lab activation by emergency physicians is relatively rare.

In the study by Kurz et al, investigators conducted a pre/postintervention study of STEMI patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention at a single institution. In the 19-month period before the intervention, emergency physicians were required to consult a cardiologist before activation of the cath lab. In the 13-month postintervention period, emergency physicians activated the cath lab without cardiology consultation. All patients who were eligible for percutaneous coronary intervention and presented to the emergency department (ED) during the study period were included. The primary outcomes were door-to-balloon time and the appropriateness of cath lab activation, which was assessed by an independent cardiologist who conducted a retrospective medical review of all study patients.

A total of 172 percutaneous coronary intervention–eligible STEMI patients presenting to the ED during the study period were included (95 in the before period and 77 patients in the after period). The median door-to-balloon time in the before period, when emergency physicians consulted a cardiologist before activating the cath lab, was 123 minutes, which was significantly longer than the median door-to-balloon time of 88 minutes in the after period, when emergency physicians activated without cardiology consultation. Similarly, the proportion of patients receiving percutaneous coronary intervention within the ACC/AHA guideline-recommended door-to-balloon time of 90 minutes improved from 22% in the before period to 56% in the after period. During the 13 months in which the emergency physician independently activated the cath lab, all acute STEMI patients were appropriately identified during ED evaluation, and there was 1 unwarranted cath lab activation. The investigators concluded that emergency physicians are able to accurately initiate percutaneous coronary intervention for ED patients presenting with STEMI independent of cardiology consultation and that emergency physician–initiated percutaneous coronary intervention significantly reduces the door-to-balloon time.

Kraft et al report the results of another before-and-after study of STEMI patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention at a single institution. The goal of this study was to determine the impact of emergency physician activation of the cath lab on both door-to-balloon time and the rate of false cath lab activation. The median door-to-balloon time was 135 minutes for the 37 patients treated in the 6-month before period when emergency physicians consulted a cardiologist before activating the catheterization lab. The median door-to-balloon time was a significantly shorter 98 minutes for the 51 patients treated in the 6-month after period when emergency physicians independently activated the cath lab. There were no false activations of the cath lab during either period.

To further understand the determinants of change in percutaneous coronary intervention treatment times, Kraft et al examined 3 door-to-balloon subintervals: door to ECG, ECG to cath lab, and cath lab to revascularization. The length of the door-to-ECG and cath lab-to-revascularization subintervals was similar in the before and after periods. In contrast, the ECG-to-cath lab subinterval was substantially shorter in the after period and accounted for nearly all of the decrease in door-to-balloon time associated with the intervention. Because activation of the cath lab occurs during the ECG-to-cath lab subinterval, this finding further supports the conclusion of the investigators that emergency physician activation of the cath lab decreases door-to-balloon times.

Several limitations of the investigations by Kurz et al and Kraft et al should be noted. First, each of these interventions was tested at only 1 hospital. In addition, both studies used a simple before-after study design, without randomization or a concurrent control group. With this study design, it is more difficult to determine whether a change observed after the introduction of an intervention is due to the intervention itself or to 1 or more other events that affect the outcome of interest and are temporally related to the intervention. Although single-site studies may be limited in their generalizability and simple pre/post designs may provide less accurate estimates of the intervention effect, the consistency of the results of the Kraft et al and Kurz et al articles with previous literature and the size of the effects detected suggest that these limitations in study design do not detract from the importance or credibility of their findings.

Although the current articles provide evidence in support of emergency physician activation of the cath lab, several other strategies have been shown to improve door-to-balloon time for patients with STEMI. These include (1) activation of the cath lab while the patient is still en route to the hospital, according to out-of-hospital ECG data; (2) activation of the cath lab with a single call from the ED to a central page operator, who then simultaneously pages the interventional cardiologist and the cath lab staff; (3) expecting cath lab staff, when off site, to arrive within 20-30 minutes after being paged; and (4) providing real-time data feedback on primary percutaneous coronary intervention performance to ED and cath lab staff. The D2B Alliance (available online at http://www.d2balliance.com/), a network of organizations and individuals committed to lowering door-to-balloon times, provides technical support to those interested in implementing these proven practices.

Fifteen years ago in this journal, debate centered on whether fibrinolytic therapy should be administered by emergency physicians or cardiologists. This question has long since been resolved. Emergency physicians have shown that they can accurately identify reperfusion-eligible STEMI patients and that door-to-needle times are faster when they initiate therapy.

Today, we know that emergency physician activation of the cath lab saves time and saves lives, yet this practice is followed in fewer than half of hospitals in the United States. We owe it to the nearly 400,000 patients with STEMI who present to US hospitals annually to ensure that emergency physician activation, like emergency physician administration of fibrinolytic therapy, becomes the standard of care across the country. To achieve this goal will require leadership from and collaboration between the emergency medicine and cardiology communities at the local and national level.

See also NEJM review article (Oct 18, 2007) on this topic (free): Nallamothu BK, et al. Time to Treatment in Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. N Engl J Med. 2007; 357:1631-1638. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/16/1631

19. Incidental Brain Findings on MRI Are Common

Incidental findings on noncontrast brain MRI are common in the general population, with asymptomatic brain infarcts being most prevalent, NEJM reports.

In a population-based study in the Netherlands, 2000 adults aged 45 or older underwent brain MRI. Among the findings:
o Asymptomatic brain infarcts were observed in 7%.
o Aneurysms and benign tumors (mostly meningiomas) were each found in nearly 2%.
o The "medically most urgent" finding was a chronic subdural hematoma in one subject, which required surgical treatment; one other person had surgery, for a 12-mm aneurysm.
o Only two people had symptoms related to their MRI findings (hearing loss in both).

The authors note that the generalizability of their findings is limited by the homogeneous study population, comprising mostly white, middle-class people from one geographic area.

Writing in JW General Medicine, Allan S. Brett concludes, "Because the explosive use of MRI will uncover [aneurysms and meningiomas] with increasing frequency, we need better data on their natural history and optimal follow-up strategies."

NEJM article (Free abstract; full text requires subscription): http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/short/357/18/1821

20. Presenting with Seizure: Who Needs a CT?

Reassessment: Neuroimaging in the emergency patient presenting with seizure (an evidence-based review): Report of the Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology

Harden CL, et al. Neurology 2007;69:1772-1780.

Objective: To reassess the value of neuroimaging of the emergency patient presenting with seizure as a screening procedure for providing information that will change acute management, and to reassess clinical and historical features associated with an abnormal neuroimaging study in these patients.

Methods: A broad-based panel with topic expertise evaluated the available evidence based on a structured literature review using a Medline search from 1966 until November 2004.

Results: The 15 articles meeting criteria were Class II or III evidence since interpretation was not masked to the patient’s clinical presentation; most were series including 22 to 875 patients. There is evidence that for adults with first seizure, cranial CT will change acute management in 9 to 17% of patients. CT in the emergency department for children presenting with first seizure will change acute management in approximately 3 to 8%. There is no clear difference between rates of abnormal emergent CT for patients with chronic seizures vs first. Children less than 6 months presenting with seizures have clinically relevant abnormalities on CT scans 50% of the time. Persons with AIDS and first seizure have high rates of abnormalities, and CNS toxoplasmosis is frequently found. Abnormal neurologic examination, predisposing history, or focal seizure onset are probably predictive of an abnormal CT study in this context.

Conclusions: Immediate noncontrast CT is possibly useful for emergency patients presenting with seizure to guide appropriate acute management especially where there is an abnormal neurologic examination, predisposing history, or focal seizure onset.

21. Rapid Fluid Resuscitation in Pediatrics: Testing the American College of Critical Care Medicine Guideline

Stoner MJ, et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;50:601-607.

Study objective
The 2002 American College of Critical Care Medicine (ACCM) guidelines for the resuscitation of pediatric septic shock suggest that 20 mL/kg of bolus intravenous fluid be given within 5 minutes. Of 3 commonly used, inexpensive methods of fluid delivery, we hypothesized that only use of a manual push-pull system will permit guideline adherence.

Methods
This prospective, interventional study was open to children in the Columbus Children’s Hospital Emergency Department who were ordered a 20 mL/kg nonemergent fluid bolus by their treating physician. Subjects were randomized to receive the fluid for 5 minutes by a pressure bag maintained at 300 mm Hg, by a manual push-pull system, or by gravity. Volume of fluid delivered, absolute rates of fluid delivery, and adherence to the ACCM guideline were recorded. Statistical analysis was done with both parametric and nonparametric methods.

Results
Sixty children were enrolled, with 57 included in data analysis. Median volumes of fluid delivered in the study period were 20.9 mL/kg (pressure bag), 20.2 mL/kg (push-pull), and 6.2 mL/kg (gravity) (P less than .0001). The ACCM guideline was met in 58% of the pressure bag group, 68% of the push-pull group, and none of the gravity group. No children weighing greater than 40 kg met the guideline in any of the groups.

Conclusion
The ACCM guideline for rapid fluid resuscitation is feasible for many children, especially those weighing less than 40 kg. Contrary to our hypothesis, the use of a pressure bag and a manual push-pull system both appear to be acceptable methods of rapid fluid delivery. Administration of bolus fluid by gravity likely has a limited role in acute pediatric resuscitation.