Saturday, December 17, 2011

Lit Bits: Dec 17, 2011

From the recent medical literature...

1. Do Boarding and Overcrowding Have Measurable Adverse Clinical Consequences?

A. The Association between Length of ED Boarding and Mortality

Singer AJ, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2011;18:1324-1329.

Objectives: Emergency department (ED) boarding has been associated with several negative patient-oriented outcomes, from worse satisfaction to higher inpatient mortality rates. The current study evaluates the association between length of ED boarding and outcomes. The authors expected that prolonged ED boarding of admitted patients would be associated with higher mortality rates and longer hospital lengths of stay (LOS).

Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study set at a suburban academic ED with an annual ED census of 90,000 visits. Consecutive patients admitted to the hospital from the ED and discharged between October 2005 and September 2008 were included. An electronic medical record (EMR) system was used to extract patient demographics, ED disposition (discharge, admit to floor), ED and hospital LOS, and in-hospital mortality. Boarding was defined as ED LOS 2 hours or more after decision for admission. Descriptive statistics were used to evaluate the association between length of ED boarding and hospital LOS, subsequent transfer to an intensive care unit (ICU), and mortality controlling for comorbidities.

Results: There were 41,256 admissions from the ED. Mortality generally increased with increasing boarding time, from 2.5% in patients boarded less than 2 hours to 4.5% in patients boarding 12 hours or more (p less than 0.001). Mean hospital LOS also showed an increase with boarding time (p less than 0.001), from 5.6 days (SD ± 11.4 days) for those who stayed in the ED for less than 2 hours to 8.7 days (SD ± 16.3 days) for those who boarded for more than 24 hours. The increases were still apparent after adjustment for comorbid conditions and other factors.

Conclusions: Hospital mortality and hospital LOS are associated with length of ED boarding.

B. The Association of ED Crowding and Time to Antibiotics in Febrile Neonates

Kennebeck SS, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2011;18:1380-1385.

Objectives: The objective was to assess the relationship between emergency department (ED) crowding and timeliness of antibiotic administration to neonates presenting with fever in a pediatric ED.

Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of febrile neonates (aged 0–30 days) evaluated for serious bacterial infections (SBIs) in a pediatric ED from January 2006 to January 2008. General linear models were used to evaluate the association of five measures of ED crowding with timeliness of antibiotic administration, controlling for patient characteristics. A secondary analysis was conducted to determine which part of the ED visit for this population was most affected by crowding.

Results: A total of 190 patients met inclusion criteria. Mean time to first antibiotic was 181.7 minutes (range = 18–397 minutes). At the time of case presentation, the number of patients waiting in the waiting area, total number of hours spent in the ED by current ED patients, number of ED patients awaiting admission, and hourly boarding time were all positively associated with longer times to antibiotic. The time from patient arrival to room placement exhibited the strongest association with measures of crowding.

Conclusions: Emergency department crowding is associated with delays in antibiotic administration to the febrile neonate despite rapid recognition of this patient population as a high-risk group. Each component of ED crowding, in terms of input, throughput, and output factors, was associated with delays. Further work is required to develop processes that foster a more rapid treatment protocol for these high-risk patients, regardless of ED crowding pressures.

C. An Empirical Assessment of Boarding and Quality of Care: Delays in Care among Chest Pain, Pneumonia, and Cellulitis Patients

Liu SW, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2011;18:1339–1348.

Background: As hospital crowding has increased, more patients have ended up boarding in the emergency department (ED) awaiting their inpatient beds. To the best of our knowledge, no study has compared the quality of care of boarded and nonboarded patients.

Objectives: This study sought to examine whether being a boarded patient and boarding longer were associated with more delays, medication errors, and adverse events among ED patients admitted with chest pain, pneumonia, or cellulitis.

Methods: This study was a retrospective cohort design in which data collection was accomplished via medical record review from two urban teaching hospitals. Patients admitted with chest pain, pneumonia, or cellulitis between August 2004 and January 2005 were eligible for inclusion. Our outcomes measures were: 1) delays in administration of home medications, cardiac enzyme tests, partial thromboplastin time (PTT), and antibiotics; 2) medication errors; and 3) adverse events or near misses. Primary independent variables were boarded status, boarding time, and boarded time interval. Multiple logistic regression models controlling for patient, ED, and hospital characteristics were used.

Results: A total of 1,431 patient charts were included: 811 with chest pain, 387 with pneumonia, and 233 with cellulitis. Boarding time was associated with an increased odds of home medication delays (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.07, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.05 to 1.10), as were boarded time intervals of 12, 18, and 24 hours. Boarding time also was associated with lower odds of having a late cardiac enzyme test (AOR = 0.93, 95% CI = 0.88 to 0.97).

Conclusions: Boarding was associated with home medication delays, but fewer cardiac enzyme test delays. Boarding was not associated with delayed PTT checks, antibiotic administration, medication errors, or adverse events/near misses. These findings likely reflect the inherent resources of the ED and the inpatient units.

D. ED Crowding is Associated with Decreased Quality of Analgesia Delivery for Children with Pain Related to Acute, Isolated, Long-bone Fractures

Sills MR, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2011;18:1330-1338.

Objectives: The authors sought to determine which quality measures of analgesia delivery are most influenced by emergency department (ED) crowding for pediatric patients with long-bone fractures.

Methods: This cross-sectional, retrospective study included patients 0–21 years seen for acute, isolated long-bone fractures, November 2007 to October 2008, at a children’s hospital ED. Nine quality measures were studied: six were based on the timeliness (1-hour receipt) and effectiveness (receipt/nonreceipt) of three fracture-related processes: pain score, any analgesic, and opioid analgesic administration. Three equity measures were also tested: language, identified primary care provider (PCP), and insurance. The primary independent variable was a crowding measure: ED occupancy. Models were adjusted for age, language, insurance, identified PCP, triage level, ambulance arrival, and time of day. The adjusted risk of each timeliness or effectiveness quality measure was measured at five percentiles of crowding and compared to the risk at the 10th and 90th percentiles. The role of equity measures as moderators of the crowding-quality models was tested.

Results: The study population included 1,229 patients. Timeliness and effectiveness quality measures showed an inverse association with crowding—an effect not moderated by equity measures. Patients were 4% to 47% less likely to receive timely care and were 3% to 17% less likely to receive effective care when each crowding measure was at the 90th than at the 10th percentile (p less than 0.05). For three of the six quality measures, quality declined steeply between the 75th and 90th crowding percentiles.

Conclusions: Crowding is associated with decreased timeliness and effectiveness, but not equity, of analgesia delivery for children with fracture-related pain.

E. Crowding Does Not Adversely Affect Time to PCI for AMI in a Community ED

Harris B, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;59:13-17.

Study objective: Multiple studies have linked emergency department (ED) crowding to delays in patient care, such as treatment with antibiotics and analgesics. Multiple studies have also demonstrated the benefit of timely percutaneous coronary intervention for patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). We therefore study whether increased occupancy rates in our community ED might correlate with delays in door-to-balloon time for patients with acute STEMI who are referred for emergency percutaneous coronary intervention.

Methods: This study was a single-institution prospective observational study. For every patient arriving in our ED from June 2007 through October 2009 with acute STEMI treated with percutaneous coronary intervention, we measured the ED occupancy rate on arrival and the door-to-balloon time and determined the correlation between these variables in univariate and multivariate analyses controlling for patient characteristics, occupancy rate, times to ECG and catheter laboratory activation, and the availability of the catheterization laboratory team (in-house versus on-call).

Results: During the study period, 210 patients were treated with emergency percutaneous coronary intervention in accordance with the hospital protocol. For these patients, the mean ED occupancy rate at arrival was 127% (range 28% to 214%). The mean time to balloon inflation was 65 minutes (range 25 to 142 minutes). The time to balloon inflation did not significantly change with increasing occupancy rate in univariate analysis (Spearman's correlation −0.02; 95% confidence interval −0.13 to 0.11) or in multivariate analysis, with the only significant variable being the availability of the catheterization laboratory team in house, which was associated with reduced time to balloon inflation.

Conclusion: Times to achieve emergency percutaneous coronary intervention for acute STEMI do not correlate positively with crowding as measured by the occupancy rate in our ED.

2. CHADS2 Telling in AF Patients on Oral Anticoagulants

Megan Brooks. November 22, 2011 — In patients with atrial fibrillation, higher CHADS2 score is associated with increased risk for stroke or systemic embolism, bleeding, and death, even with optimal anticoagulation with warfarin or dabigatran, according to a subgroup analysis of the RE-LY trial.

In anticoagulated patients, "the commonly used CHADS2 risk score not only predicts stroke (as it was developed for) but also mortality and major bleeding," first author Jonas Oldgren, MD, associate professor of cardiology, Uppsala Clinical Research Centre and Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden, told Medscape Medical News.

The analysis was published November 15 in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Prediction Rule

CHADS2 is a simple and validated clinical prediction rule for estimating stroke risk in patients with atrial fibrillation not receiving anticoagulants, the authors note in their paper. Its value in predicting thrombotic and bleeding complications in patients receiving anticoagulant therapy is unclear.

Dr. Oldgren and colleagues used data from the Randomized Evaluation of Long-Term Anticoagulation Therapy (RE-LY) trial to assess thrombotic and bleeding risk according to the baseline CHADS2 score.

The study involved 18,112 patients with atrial fibrillation at risk for stroke who were randomly assigned to treatment with dabigatran (Pradaxa, Boehringer Ingelheim), 110 mg or 150 mg twice daily, or warfarin at a dose adjusted to an international normalized ratio (INR) of 2.0 to 3.0 for a median of 2 years.

The main RE-LY results, published in 2009 in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that the rates of stroke or systemic embolism and death each decreased by 0.5% per year with dabigatran, 150 mg twice daily, compared with dose-adjusted warfarin. Rates of major bleeding did not differ, but intracranial bleeding was less common with dabigatran.

The CHADS2 risk score assigns 1 point for a history of congestive heart failure, hypertension, diabetes, or age older than 75 years and 2 points for a history of stroke or transient ischemic attack.

In the RE-LY cohort, 5775 patients had CHADS2 scores of 0 to 1, 6455 had scores of 2, and 5882 patients had scores of 3 to 6.

Even with anticoagulation, the risk for the primary outcome of stroke or systemic embolism increased with increasing CHADS2 score, the authors report.

There was also a progressive near-linear increase in the risk for other outcomes with increasing CHADS2 score, the authors report.

Regardless of CHADS2 score, "rates of stroke or systemic embolism were lower with dabigatran, 150 mg twice daily, and rates of intracranial bleeding were lower with both dabigatran doses than with warfarin treatment," Dr. Oldgren told Medscape Medical News.

These findings "extend our knowledge in important ways," write the authors of a linked commentary.

"CHADS2 scores of 3 or higher identify patients with the most to gain and the most to lose by using anticoagulant therapy," note Rebecca J. Beyth, MD, University of Florida, Gainesville, and C. Seth Landefeld, MD, University of California, San Francisco.

"Whether they receive warfarin or dabigatran, 150 mg twice daily, these patients have a 2% to 3% annual risk for stroke or systemic embolism, a nearly 5% risk for major bleeding, and a nearly 6% risk for death," they add.

Interpret Cautiously

Dr. Oldgren and colleagues caution that these subgroup analyses were not prespecified and "should be deemed exploratory."

Nonetheless, "we believe these results are valuable for clinicians in their daily practice and useful in the decision on oral anticoagulant treatment in patients with atrial fibrillation at risk for stroke," Dr. Oldgren told Medscape Medical News.

Dr. Beyth and Dr. Landefeld agree. They say these data along with other studies performed to date can help physicians choose whether to use dabigatran or warfarin.

"On the one hand, dabigatran is more effective and safer for many patients with nonvalvular atrial fibrillation, especially younger patients, patients with CHADS2 scores of 0 or 1, and those in whom the INR is not maintained within the therapeutic range at least 60% of the time," they point out.

"On the other hand, the relative benefits of warfarin and dabigatran depend on the proportion of time that the INR is maintained within the therapeutic range in patients receiving warfarin and on patients adhering to a twice-daily regimen of dabigatran," they note.

The study was funded by Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals. A complete list of disclosures for the RE-LY investigators and editorial writers can be found on the journal's Web site.

Ann Intern Med. 2011;155:660-667, 714-715.

Abstract: http://www.annals.org/content/155/10/660.abstract

3. Acutely Injured ED Patients on Dabigatran: Problematic

Cotton BA, et al. N Engl J Med 2011; 365:2039-2040.

To the Editor:

Trauma remains the fourth leading cause of death in the United States, with 40,000 deaths annually in persons over the age of 65. U.S. trauma centers are seeing an increasing number of severely injured elderly patients,1 and hemorrhagic complications and head injuries account for a substantial proportion of these fatalities.1 Although the preinjury use of warfarin is increasing and is associated with a considerable increase in morbidity and mortality, these complications can be dramatically reduced with methods that rapidly reverse the anticoagulant effect.1 Moreover, numerous options are available to achieve warfarin reversal (e.g., vitamin K, plasma, factor VIIa, and factor concentrates).1 Warfarin reversal can also be easily monitored with readily available laboratory and point-of-care tests.

Warfarin has long been the mainstay of anticoagulation therapy in atrial fibrillation. However, dabigatran etexilate (a new oral direct thrombin inhibitor) has recently been reported to have a similar or lower bleeding risk as compared with warfarin.2,3 Unlike warfarin, dietary restrictions and frequent blood sampling to monitor the degree of anticoagulation are unnecessary with dabigatran. Enthusiasm for this agent, however, must be tempered by three notable concerns: there is no readily available means for assessing the degree of anticoagulation with dabigatran, there is no readily available reversal strategy, and life-threatening bleeding complications can occur after an injury in patients taking this drug.

Lack of a readily available method to determine the degree of anticoagulation creates a major challenge to those treating injured patients. Moreover, the irreversible coagulopathy of dabigatran is of great concern to trauma and emergency physicians. Currently, the only reversal option for dabigatran is emergency dialysis (as suggested in a single line in the package insert). The ability to perform rapid dialysis in patients with bleeding whose condition is unstable or in those with large intracranial hemorrhages will present an incredible challenge, even at level 1 trauma centers.

Recently, we have cared for several injured patients receiving dabigatran, all of whom had poor outcomes. Although the results of conventional coagulation studies were normal, the values obtained on rapid thromboelastography (rTEG) at the time of admission were grossly abnormal. Specifically, the values for activated clotting time on rTEG (normal range, 86 to 118 seconds), which correspond to the inhibition of enzymatic clotting, were markedly prolonged. Figure 1 (link below) is the tracing from a patient who fell from a standing position, deteriorated neurologically, and died shortly after emergency craniotomy. It shows that all values except activated clotting time were normal. Unfortunately, even with the aid of rTEG, supportive care is all that is available in the emergency setting.

As dabigatran and other similar therapeutic agents move into the marketplace, we urge the Food and Drug Administration to consider the generalizability of study findings and to support more pragmatic trials. As such, we strongly urge that hemorrhagic complications and death resulting from trauma be included as part of the routine surveillance of all newly approved oral anticoagulants.

Link to figure (free): http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1111095

Related Medscape Article: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/754332

4. Elevated HCG with an Empty Uterus Does Not Always Mean Ectopic Pregnancy

Live birth can occur in women with elevated HCG and no gestational sac seen on initial transvaginal ultrasound.

Until recently, common teaching was that when serum β human chorionic gonadotropin (β-HCG) is above 1000–2000 mIU/mL — the "discriminatory zone" — a gestational sac should be seen on transvaginal ultrasound in normal intrauterine pregnancy. To test this, researchers at a Boston hospital analyzed data for 202 patients during an 11-year period who had elevated β-HCG on the same day as transvaginal ultrasound showing no intrauterine fluid collection and then had subsequent ultrasound evidence of a live intrauterine embryo or fetus.

On the day of initial scan, β-HCG levels were less than 1000 mIU/mL in 80% of patients, 1000–1499 in 9%, 1500–1999 in 6%, and above 2000 mIU/mL in 5%. None of the 9 patients with β-HCG levels above 2000 mIU/mL had fibroids or other anatomic abnormalities that would have interfered with visualization of intrauterine fluid collection. The highest initial β-HCG level in a pregnancy that culminated in a live birth was 4336 mIU/mL. Initial β-HCG levels were not associated with pregnancy outcomes.

Comment: The Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound is planning a consensus conference on early first trimester sonography in 2012, which might well end the notion of the HCG "discriminatory zone" for diagnosis of ectopic pregnancy. Nevertheless, in hemodynamically stable patients with elevated β-HCG and no gestational sac or adnexal masses suggestive of ectopic pregnancy on transvaginal ultrasound, serial β-HCG measurement and repeat ultrasound to assess for a viable fetus is a reasonable option before diagnosing ectopic pregnancy.

— Kristi L. Koenig, MD, FACEP. Published in Journal Watch Emergency Medicine December 16, 2011. Citation: Doubilet PM and Benson CB. Further evidence against the reliability of the human chorionic gonadotropin discriminatory level. J Ultrasound Med 2011 Dec; 30:1637.

Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22123998

5. Prevalence of Clinically Important TBI in Children with Minor Blunt Head Trauma and Isolated Severe Injury Mechanisms

Nigrovic LE, et al.for the Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) Working Group of the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN). Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. Published online December 5, 2011.

Objective: To determine the prevalence of clinically important traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) with severe injury mechanisms in children with minor blunt head trauma but with no other risk factors from the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) TBI prediction rules (defined as isolated severe injury mechanisms).

Design: Secondary analysis of a large prospective observational cohort study.

Setting: Twenty-five emergency departments participating in the PECARN.

Patients: Children with minor blunt head trauma and Glasgow Coma Scale scores of at least 14.

Intervention: Treating clinicians completed a structured data form that included injury mechanism (severity categories defined a priori).

Main Outcome Measures: Clinically important TBIs were defined as intracranial injuries resulting in death, neurosurgical intervention, intubation for more than 24 hours, or hospital admission for at least 2 nights. We investigated the rate of clinically important TBIs in children with either severe injury mechanisms or isolated severe injury mechanisms.

Results: Of the 42 412 patients enrolled in the overall study, 42 099 (99%) had injury mechanisms recorded, and their data were included for analysis. Of all study patients, 5869 (14%) had severe injury mechanisms, and 3302 (8%) had isolated severe injury mechanisms. Overall, 367 children had clinically important TBIs (0.9%; 95% CI, 0.8%-1.0%). Of the 1327 children younger than 2 years with isolated severe injury mechanisms, 4 (0.3%; 95% CI, 0.1%-0.8%) had clinically important TBIs, as did 12 of the 1975 children 2 years or older (0.6%; 95% CI, 0.3%-1.1%).

Conclusion: Children with isolated severe injury mechanisms are at low risk of clinically important TBI, and many do not require emergent neuroimaging.

6. Emergency Hospitalizations for Adverse Drug Events in Older Americans

Adverse drug events (ADEs) cause an estimated 100,000 emergency hospitalizations for seniors each year, yet two thirds involve just a handful of anticoagulants and diabetes medications, according to a study published in the November 24 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

The study, by researchers from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), singles out 4 drugs and drug classes — warfarin, oral antiplatelet medications, insulins, and oral hypoglycemic agents. Alone or together, they account for 67% of emergency ADE hospitalizations of adults 65 years and older. Warfarin was implicated in 33%, lead author Daniel Budnitz, MD, MPH, director of the CDC's Medication Safety Program, and coauthors write.

Budnitz DS, et al. N Engl J Med 2011; 365:2002-2012.

Introduction: Decreasing the number of preventable rehospitalizations by 20% by the end of 2013 is a goal of the $1 billion federal initiative Partnership for Patients, and the pursuit of this goal represents an opportunity to reduce harm to patients and reduce health care costs. Adverse drug events are a direct consequence of clinical care and a key focus of the partnership.

Hospitalizations for adverse drug events are likely to increase as Americans live longer, have greater numbers of chronic conditions, and take more medications. Among adults 65 years of age or older, 40% take 5 to 9 medications and 18% take 10 or more. Age-related physiological changes, a greater degree of frailty, a larger number of coexisting conditions, and polypharmacy have been associated with an increased risk of adverse events, and older adults are nearly seven times as likely as younger persons to have adverse drug events that require hospitalization.

In a previous study, we found that medications classified as always potentially inappropriate were implicated in only 3.6% of emergency department visits for adverse drug events in older adults, whereas three medications (warfarin, insulin, and digoxin) were implicated in 33.3% of such emergency department visits. Data on the medications that most commonly cause hospitalizations for adverse drug events in the United States have been limited. Detailed and drug-specific data are needed to help focus current patient-safety efforts. We used nationally representative public health surveillance data to describe emergency hospitalizations for adverse drug events in persons 65 years of age or older and to assess the contribution of specific medications, including those identified as high-risk or inappropriate by current national health care quality measures.

Background: Adverse drug events are important preventable causes of hospitalization in older adults. However, nationally representative data on adverse drug events that result in hospitalization in this population have been limited.

Methods: We used adverse-event data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System–Cooperative Adverse Drug Event Surveillance project (2007 through 2009) to estimate the frequency and rates of hospitalization after emergency department visits for adverse drug events in older adults and to assess the contribution of specific medications, including those identified as high-risk or potentially inappropriate by national quality measures.

Results: On the basis of 5077 cases identified in our sample, there were an estimated 99,628 emergency hospitalizations (95% confidence interval [CI], 55,531 to 143,724) for adverse drug events in U.S. adults 65 years of age or older each year from 2007 through 2009. Nearly half of these hospitalizations were among adults 80 years of age or older (48.1%; 95% CI, 44.6 to 51.6). Nearly two thirds of hospitalizations were due to unintentional overdoses (65.7%; 95% CI, 60.1 to 71.3). Four medications or medication classes were implicated alone or in combination in 67.0% (95% CI, 60.0 to 74.1) of hospitalizations: warfarin (33.3%), insulins (13.9%), oral antiplatelet agents (13.3%), and oral hypoglycemic agents (10.7%). High-risk medications were implicated in only 1.2% (95% CI, 0.7 to 1.7) of hospitalizations.

Conclusions: Most emergency hospitalizations for recognized adverse drug events in older adults resulted from a few commonly used medications, and relatively few resulted from medications typically designated as high-risk or inappropriate. Improved management of antithrombotic and antidiabetic drugs has the potential to reduce hospitalizations for adverse drug events in older adults.

Medscape Review: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/754138

7. Does primary stroke center certification change ED diagnosis, utilization, and disposition of patients with acute stroke?

Ballard DW, et al. Am J Emerg Med. 2011 Nov 17. [Epub ahead of print]

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We examined the impact of primary stroke center (PSC) certification on emergency department (ED) use and outcomes within an integrated delivery system in which EDs underwent staggered certification.

METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of 30 461 patients seen in 17 integrated delivery system EDs with a primary diagnosis of transient ischemic attack (TIA), intracranial hemorrhage, or ischemic stroke between 2005 and 2008 was conducted. We compared ED stroke patient visits across hospitals for (1) temporal trends and (2) pre- and post-PSC certification-using logistic and linear regression models to adjust for comorbidities, patient characteristics, and calendar time, to examine major outcomes (ED throughput time, hospital admission, radiographic imaging utilization and throughput, and mortality) across certification stages.

RESULTS: There were 15 687 precertification ED visits and 11 040 postcertification visits. Primary stroke center certification was associated with significant changes in care processes associated with PSC certification process, including (1) ED throughput for patients with intracranial hemorrhage (55 minutes faster), (2) increased utilization of cranial magnetic resonance imaging for patients with ischemic stroke (odds ratio, 1.88; 95% confidence interval, 1.36-2.60), and (3) decrease in time to radiographic imaging for most modalities, including cranial computed tomography done within 6 hours of ED arrival (TIA: 12 minutes faster, ischemic stroke: 11 minutes faster), magnetic resonance imaging for patients with ischemic stroke (197 minutes faster), and carotid Doppler sonography for TIA patients (138 minutes faster). There were no significant changes in survival.

CONCLUSIONS: Stroke center certification was associated with significant changes in ED admission and radiographic utilization patterns, without measurable improvements in survival.

8. Do outcomes of near syncope really parallel those of syncope? Uh…yup.

Grossman SA, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2012;30:203-206.

Background: Limited information on the evaluation of emergency department (ED) patients complaining of “near syncope” exists. Multiple studies of syncope exclude near syncope claiming near syncope is poorly defined and its definition is nonuniform.

Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of critical interventions or adverse outcomes associated with near syncope and compare these outcomes with syncope.

Methods: Prospective, observational study enrolling (August 2007–October 2008) consecutive ED patients (age, ≥18 years) presenting with near syncope was conducted. Near syncope was defined as an episode in which the patient felt they might lose consciousness but did not. Critical intervention/adverse outcome was defined as hemorrhage, cardiac ischemia/intervention, alteration in antidysrhythmics, pacemaker/defibrillator placement, sepsis, stroke, death, dysrhythmia, sepsis, pulmonary embolus, or carotid stenosis. Primary outcome was an adverse outcome or critical intervention in hospital or less than 30 days. Near syncope and syncope outcomes and admission rates were compared using the χ2 test.

Results; After 1870 patients were screened, 244 met the study definition. Of the 244 patients, follow-up was achieved in 242 (99%). Emergency department hospitalization or 30-day adverse outcomes occurred in 49 (20%) of 244 compared with 68 (23%) of 293 of patients with syncope (P = .40). The most common adverse outcomes/critical interventions were hemorrhage (n = 6), bradydysrhythmia (n = 6), alteration in antidysrhythmics (n = 6), and sepsis (n = 10). Of patients with near syncope, 49% were admitted compared with 69% with syncope (P = .001).

Conclusion: Patients with near syncope are as likely those with syncope to experience critical interventions or adverse outcomes; however, near-syncope patients are less likely to be admitted. Given similar risk of adverse outcomes for near syncope and syncope, future studies are warranted to improve the treatment of ED patients with near syncope.

9. National Performance is Poor on Door-In to Door-Out Time among Patients Transferred for Primary PCI

Herrin J, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(21):1879-1886.

Background: Delays in treatment time are commonplace for patients with ST-segment elevation acute myocardial infarction who must be transferred to another hospital for percutaneous coronary intervention. Experts have recommended that door-in to door-out (DIDO) time (ie, time from arrival at the first hospital to transfer from that hospital to the percutaneous coronary intervention hospital) should not exceed 30 minutes. We sought to describe national performance in DIDO time using a new measure developed by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.

Methods: We report national median DIDO time and examine associations with patient characteristics (age, sex, race, contraindication to fibrinolytic therapy, and arrival time) and hospital characteristics (number of beds, geographic region, location [rural or urban], and number of cases reported) using a mixed effects multivariable model.

Results: Among 13 776 included patients from 1034 hospitals, only 1343 (9.7%) had a DIDO time within 30 minutes, and DIDO exceeded 90 minutes for 4267 patients (31.0%). Mean estimated times (95% CI) to transfer based on multivariable analysis were 8.9 (5.6-12.2) minutes longer for women, 9.1 (2.7-16.0) minutes longer for African Americans, 6.9 (1.6-11.9) minutes longer for patients with contraindication to fibrinolytic therapy, shorter for all age categories (except older than 75 years) relative to the category of 18 to 35 years, 15.3 (7.3-23.5) minutes longer for rural hospitals, and 14.4 (6.6-21.3) minutes longer for hospitals with 9 or fewer transfers vs 15 or more in 2009 (all P less than .001).

Conclusion: Among patients presenting to emergency departments and requiring transfer to another facility for percutaneous coronary intervention, the DIDO time rarely met the recommended 30 minutes.

10. Effect of IV ondansetron on QT interval prolongation in patients with cardiovascular disease and additional risk factors for torsades: a prospective, observational study.

Hafermann MJ, et al. Drug Healthc Patient Saf. 2011;3:53-8.

BACKGROUND: The 5-hydroxytryptamine type 3 antagonists, or setrons (eg, ondansetron), are commonly used for nausea and vomiting in the hospital setting. In 2001, droperidol was given a black box warning because it was found to prolong the QT interval and induce arrhythmias. The setrons share with droperidol the same potential proarrhythmic mechanisms, but limited data exist concerning their effects on the QT interval in individuals at high risk for torsades de pointes.

METHODS: Forty hospitalized patients admitted for heart failure or acute coronary syndromes with one or more risk factors for torsades de pointes and an order for intravenous ondansetron 4 mg were enrolled in this prospective, observational study. The QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc) was obtained via a 12-lead electrocardiogram on admission and again 120 minutes after the first dose of ondansetron in order to determine the mean change in QTc following ondansetron exposure.

RESULTS: The mean time interval between obtaining the baseline electrocardiogram and the second electrocardiogram following ondansetron administration was 3.5 ± 2.14 hours. In the total population, the QTc interval was prolonged by 19.3 ± 18 msec (P less than 0.0001) 120 minutes after ondansetron administration. For patients with an acute coronary syndrome and those with heart failure, QTc was prolonged by 18.3 ± 20 msec (P less than 0.0001) and 20.6 ± 20 msec (P less than 0.0012), respectively. Following ondansetron exposure, 31% and 46% in the heart failure and acute coronary syndromes groups, respectively, met gender-related thresholds for a prolonged QTc.

CONCLUSION: Our study found QTc prolongation due to ondansetron administration similar to that found in previous studies. When used in patients with cardiovascular disease (eg, heart failure or acute coronary syndromes) with one or more risk factors for torsades de pointes, ondansetron may significantly increase the QTc interval for up to 120 minutes after administration. From a patient safety perspective, patients who are at high risk for torsades de pointes and receiving ondansetron should be followed via telemetry when admitted to hospital.

Full-text (free): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3202761/

11. The Role of Triage Nurse Ordering on Mitigating Overcrowding in EDs: A Systematic Review

Rowe BH, et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2011;18:1349-1357.

Objectives: The objective was to examine the effectiveness of triage nurse ordering (TNO) on mitigating the effect of emergency department (ED) overcrowding.

Methods: Electronic databases (Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, SCOPUS, Web of Science, HealthSTAR, Dissertation Abstracts, ABI/INFORM Global), controlled trial registry websites, conference proceedings, study references, experts in the field, and correspondence with authors were used to identify potentially relevant studies. Interventional studies in which TNO was used to influence ED overcrowding metrics (length of stay [LOS] and physician initial assessment [PIA]) were included in the review. Two reviewers independently assessed study eligibility and methodologic quality. Mean differences were calculated and reported with corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs).

Results: From more than 14,000 potentially relevant studies, 14 were included in the systematic review. Most were single-center ED studies; the overall quality was rated as weak, due to methodologic deficiencies and variable outcome reporting. TNO was associated with a 37-minute mean reduction (95% CI = −44.10 to −30.30 minutes) in the overall ED LOS in one randomized clinical trial (RCT); a 51-minute mean reduction (95% CI = −56.3 to −45.5 minutes) was observed in non-RCTs. When applied to injured subjects with suspected fractures, TNO interventions reduced ED LOS by 20 minutes (95% CI = −37.5 to −1.9 minutes) in three RCTs and by 18 minutes (95% CI = −23.2 to −13.2) in two non-RCTs. No significant reduction in PIA was observed in two RCTs.

Conclusions: Overall, TNO appears to be an effective intervention to reduce ED LOS, especially in injury and/or suspected fracture cases. The available evidence is limited by small numbers of studies, weak methodologic quality, and incomplete reporting. Future studies should focus on a better description of the contextual factors surrounding these interventions and exploring the impact of TNO on other indicators of productivity and satisfaction with health care delivery.

12. Corticosteroids Useful in Acute COPD Exacerbation Requiring Ventilatory Support

Alia I, et al. Arch Intern Med 2011;171:1939-1948.

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Dec 01 - Patients with an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) receiving invasive or noninvasive mechanical ventilation benefit from systemic corticosteroid therapy, a randomized controlled trial in this critically ill patient population confirms.

Compared with placebo, corticosteroid therapy cut the duration of mechanical ventilation and intensive care by one day each, although the latter effect did not reach statistical significance.

For patients initially requiring non-invasive ventilation, corticosteroids eliminated the need for rescue mechanical ventilation.

Dr. Inmaculada Alia, from Hospital Universitario de Getafe in Spain and colleagues report their study in the Archives of Internal Medicine November 28.

A commentary appearing in the journal notes that the shorter intensive care unit (ICU) stay is "certainly clinically significant."

Given the "economic burden" of acute COPD exacerbations, reducing time spent in the ICU, and the need for rescue mechanical ventilation, can lead to "substantial savings," write Dr. Andrew Shorr and Dr. Chee Chan from the Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Section, Washington Hospital Center and Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.

Roughly 10% of patients with acute exacerbations of COPD need mechanical ventilation. Yet studies assessing the effect of corticosteroid therapy on COPD exacerbations have excluded those requiring mechanical ventilation or admitted to the ICU because they are prone to complications associated with corticosteroids, such as infections, hyperglycemia and ICU-acquired paresis.

Dr. Alia and colleagues performed a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in 83 patients with an acute exacerbation of COPD who were receiving invasive or non-invasive mechanical ventilation. Participants were randomly assigned to receive intravenous methylprednisolone (0.5 mg/kg every 6 hours for 72 hours, 0.5 mg/kg every 12 hours on days 4 through 6, and 0.5 mg/kg/d on days 7 through 10) or placebo.

The groups were well-matched in terms of demographics, severity of illness, reasons for COPD exacerbation, gas exchange variables and corticosteroid rescue treatment.

Receipt of corticosteroids led to a reduction in the median duration of mechanical ventilation (3 days vs. 4 days; p=0.04); a trend toward a shorter median length of ICU stay (6 days vs. 7 days; p=0.09); and a reduction in the rate of failure of noninvasive mechanical ventilation (0% vs. 37%; p=0.04).

Importantly, say the investigators, giving systemic corticosteroids to this critically ill group of patients did not appear to raise the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding, superinfections, psychiatric disorders, or acquired neuromuscular weakness.

The major complication was hyperglycemia, a well-known consequence of corticosteroid therapy. However, it had no unfavorable clinical consequences in this study, the researchers say.

Dr. Alia and colleagues acknowledge that these findings "may not have a great impact on the current clinical treatment of ICU patients with COPD exacerbations because most of them are probably treated with corticosteroids."

However, the results "do provide strong evidence of the beneficial effects of systemic corticosteroid therapy on clinically relevant outcomes in a patient population that has never previously been enrolled in a clinical trial," they say.

Drs. Shorr and Chan say the findings are "important," noting that "few researchers venture into the ICU for clinical trials. As a consequence, intensivists are often left extrapolating data from non-critically ill patients."

However, they suggest that equipoise -- the concept that there must be uncertainty as to the relative benefit of the intervention(s) under evaluation - was "at least potentially in question for the current trial."

"If clinical trials of what are considered standard treatments are to be conducted...they must be performed with full consideration of equipoise," they contend.

SOURCE: http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/171/21/1939

13. The non-utility of routine CXR in initial evaluation of stable blunt trauma patients

Paydar S, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2012;30:1-4.

Background: Radiology plays an important role in evaluation of a trauma patient. Although chest radiography is recommended for initial evaluation of the trauma patient by the Advanced Trauma Life Support course, we hypothesized that precise physical examinations and history taking accurately identify those blunt trauma patients at low risk for chest injury, making routine radiographs unnecessary. Thus, this study was performed to investigate the role of chest radiography in initial evaluation of those trauma patients with normal physical examination.

Methods: In this prospective cross-sectional study, all the hemodynamically stable blunt trauma patients with negative physical examination result referred to our trauma center during a 4-month period (March-June 2009) were included. Chest radiographies were performed and reviewed for abnormalities.

Results: During the study period, 5091 blunt trauma patients referred to our center, out of which, 1008 were hemodynamically stable and had negative physical examination result. Only 1 (0.1%) patient had abnormal chest radiography that showed perihilar lymphadenopathy, unrelated to trauma.

Conclusion: Performing routine chest radiography in stable blunt trauma patients is of low clinical value. Thus, decision making for performing chest radiography in blunt trauma patients based on clinical findings would be efficacious and resource saving.

14. Images in (Emergency) Medicine

Lingual Zoster
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1107466

A Lucent Hemithorax Not Due to Pneumothorax
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1101918

Zoster of the Tympanic Membrane
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1104444

Thrombosis of a Mechanical Mitral Valve
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1100131
Internal-Carotid-Artery Dissection and Cranial-Nerve Palsies
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1009319

Can You Name these Foot Bones?
http://www.bmj.com/content/343/bmj.d7830

Adult Female with Ocular Lens Injury
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00500-2/fulltext

Young Man with Stab Wound to the Neck
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00389-1/fulltext

Adult Female with Abdominal Pain
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00717-7/fulltext

15. Medscape’s Highlights of the Year

In Medicine Generally
http://www.medscape.com/features/year-in-medicine/2011

In Emergency Medicine Research in Particular
http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/753872

16. Variables Associated with Discordance between Emergency Physician and Neurologist Diagnoses of TIA in the ED

Schrock JW, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;59:19-26.

Study objective: Transient ischemic attack is a common clinical diagnosis in emergency department (ED) patients with acute neurologic complaints. Accurate diagnosis of transient ischemic attack is essential to help guide evaluation and avoid treatment delays. We seek to determine the prevalence of discordant diagnosis for patients receiving an ED diagnosis of transient ischemic attack compared with neurologist final diagnosis. Secondary goals are to evaluate the influence of atypical transient ischemic attack symptoms, the ABCD2 score, and emergency physician experience on discordant diagnoses.

Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study evaluating all ED patients receiving a diagnosis of transient ischemic attack during a 4-year period. The emergency physician diagnosis was compared with that of the neurologist. The neurologist's final diagnosis was considered the criterion standard diagnosis. Subject demographic and clinical information was collected with a structured instrument. The following atypical symptoms present at the ED evaluation were evaluated with logistic regression: headache, tingling, involuntary movement, seeing flashing lights or wavy lines, dizziness, confusion, incontinence, and ABCD2 score of 4 or greater. Bivariate analysis was used to evaluate the influence of emergency physician experience (≤6 years versus more than 6 years) on discordant diagnosis. Odds ratios (ORs) and proportions are reported with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), interquartile range was used where appropriate.

Results: We evaluated 436 subjects, of whom 7 were excluded, allowing 429 subjects for evaluation. Of these individuals, 156 (36%; 95% CI 32% to 41%) received a discordant diagnosis. The median emergency physician time in clinical practice was 6 years (interquartile range 2 to 12 years). Features associated with a discordant transient ischemic attack diagnosis included headache (OR 2.52; 95% CI 1.59 to 3.99), involuntary movement (OR 3.19; 95% CI 1.35 to 7.54), and dizziness (OR 1.92; 95% CI 1.22 to 3.02). Incontinence, confusion, and seeing wavy lines or flashing lights were not significantly associated with a discordant diagnosis. Patients with tingling and a high ABCD2 score had an increased odds of concordant transient ischemic attack diagnosis (OR 0.54, 95% CI 0.32 to 0.92; OR 0.53, 95% CI 0.35 to 0.82, respectively).

Conclusion: Discordant diagnoses between emergency physicians and neurologists were observed in 36% of patients. The presence of headache, involuntary movement, and dizziness predicted discordant diagnoses, whereas the presence of tingling and an increased ABCD2 score predicted concordant transient ischemic attack diagnosis.

17. How Prevalent Is Pulmonary Thrombosis During Acute Chest Syndrome?

In a French study, PT occurred in 17% of ACS episodes.

Mekontso Dessap A, et al. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2011 Nov 1; 184:1022

Rationale: The pathophysiology of acute chest syndrome (ACS) in patients with sickle cell disease is complex, and pulmonary artery thrombosis (PT) may contribute to this complication.

Objectives: To evaluate the prevalence of PT during ACS using multidetector computed tomography (MDCT).

Methods: We screened 125 consecutive patients during 144 ACS episodes. One hundred twenty-one MDCTs (in 103 consecutive patients) were included in the study.

Measurements and Main Results: Twenty MDCTs were positive for PT, determining a prevalence of 17% (95% confidence interval, 10–23%). Revised Geneva clinical probability score was similar between patients with PT and those without. D-dimer testing was very often positive (95%) during ACS. A precipitating factor for ACS was less frequently found in patients with PT as compared with those without. Patients with PT exhibited significantly higher platelet counts (517 [273–729] vs. 307 [228–412] 109/L, P less than 0.01) and lower bilirubin (28 [19–43] vs. 44 [31–71] µmol/L, P less than 0.01) levels at the onset of ACS as compared with others. In addition, patients with PT had a higher platelet count peak (537 [345–785] vs. 417 [330–555] 109/L, P = 0.048) and smaller bilirubin peak (36 [18–51] vs. 46 [32–83] µmol/L, P = 0.048) and lactate dehydrogenase peak (357 [320–704] vs. 604 [442–788] IU/L, P = 0.01) during hospital stay as compared with others.

Conclusions: PT is not a rare event in the context of ACS and seems more likely in patients with higher platelet counts and lower hemolytic rate during ACS. Patients with sickle cell disease presenting with respiratory symptoms suggestive of ACS may benefit from evaluation for PT.

18. CTA Shows Promise for Diagnosing Lower GI Bleeding

James Brice. Medscape. November 28, 2011 — Computed tomography (CT) angiography could emerge as a viable option for detecting the presence and origin of lower intestinal hemorrhage in patients who present to the emergency department.

A prospective study, conducted at La Paz University Hospital in Madrid, Spain, has established the feasibility of CT angiography in this setting. The imaging technique had 100% sensitivity (19 of 19 patients) and 96% specificity (27 of 28 patients) for diagnosing active or recent lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract bleeding in a series of 47 consecutive patients. The results of the study were published online November 14 in Radiology.

Milagros Martí, MD, and coauthors stressed the importance of quickly obtaining an accurate assessment of suspected lower GI bleeding for effective treatment. Hemorrhage can occur anywhere in the GI tract from the esophagus to the rectum, and can range from mild to massive acute bleeding. Mortality rates range from 8% to 16%, but can be as high as 40% when bleeding is severe, the authors note.

Currently, diagnosis can require a multimodal approach. Optical colonoscopy is the preferred choice for initial evaluation distal to the ligament of Treitz, but problems with staff availability during off hours, proper bowel preparation, and poor bowel visualization from obstructions caused by intraluminal blood clots make it difficult to apply. Additionally, the source of bleeding is extracolonic in about 10% of cases.

Technetium-99m red blood cell imaging is another accepted option because of its high sensitivity to moderate and severe bleeding. However, it cannot be relied upon to identify the precise source and cause of bleeding.

Conventional angiography and emergency surgery are often performed to address persistent bleeding, but physicians generally try to avoid these invasive and expensive procedures when possible.

Previous studies have suggested that CT angiography might be useful in this setting, but have been limited by their small size or retrospective nature.

In this prospective study, Dr. Martí and colleagues tested a triphasic CT protocol that ranged from the diaphragm to the inferior pubic ramus. Imaging was performed on a 64-slice scanner. Tube voltage was 120 kVp, with automatic tube current modulation to reduce dosage. Oral contrast was not used.

The investigators used a preliminary unenhanced CT scan to uncover preexisting intraluminal hyperattenuating material. The unenhanced scan helped prevent the misinterpretation of hyperattenuating material that can mimic contrast medium extravasation and result in false-positive findings, the authors explain.

Intravenous contrast material (4 mL/s) was administered before the acquisition of an arterial phase scan. It was obtained using automated bolus triggering and began when attenuation in the proximal abdominal aorta reached 150 HU. A portal venous phase scan was acquired 70 seconds after the start of contrast injection.

CT angiography identified extravasation, indicating active hemorrhage, in 14 patients. Seven patients were transferred directly to the angiography suite for possible embolization. Conventional angiography confirmed the presence and location of bleeding suggested by CT angiography in 6 of the 7 cases — 2 in the jejunum/ileum, 3 in the colon, and 1 in the rectosigmoid region. In 1 patient, CT angiography depicted active extravasation in the colon, but bleeding had stopped before angiography was performed. The researchers classified that case as a false positive.

The remaining 7 patients underwent surgery.

The authors conclude that CT angiography helped identify active bleeding and the site of bleeding in 83% of the cases (39 of 47 patients). Imaging results helped guided therapy and helped select the most appropriate hemostatic intervention. The ability to localize the point of origin of bleeding allowed targeted endovascular embolization to stanch it.

Study limitations include the small sample size from a single hospital, the lack of a control group, and the focus on patients from whom emergent colonoscopy was requested. More sophisticated multicenter trials are needed to determine if CT angiography qualifies as a front-line exam for diagnosing lower GI hemorrhage.

Radiology. Published online November 14, 2011.

Abstract: http://radiology.rsna.org/content/early/2011/11/08/radiol.11110326.abstract

19. Hospital Admission Decision for Patients with Community-Acquired Pneumonia: Variability among Physicians in an ED

Dean NC, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2012;59:35-41.

Study objective: We examine variability among emergency physicians in rate of hospitalization for patients with pneumonia and the effect of variability on clinical outcomes.

Methods: We studied 2,069 LDS Hospital emergency department (ED) patients with community-acquired pneumonia who were aged 18 years or older during 1996 to 2006, identified by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision coding and compatible chest radiographs. We extracted vital signs, laboratory and radiographic results, hospitalization, and outcomes from the electronic medical record. We defined “low severity” as PaO2/FiO2 ratio greater than or equal to 280 mm Hg, predicted mortality less than 5% by an electronic version of CURB-65 that uses continuous and weighted elements (eCURB), and less than 3 Infectious Disease Society of America-American Thoracic Society 2007 severe pneumonia minor criteria. We adjusted hospitalization decisions and outcomes for illness severity and patient demographics.

Results: Initial hospitalization rate was 58%; 10.7% of patients initially treated as outpatients were secondarily hospitalized within 7 days. Median age of admitted patients was 63 years; median eCURB predicted mortality was 2.65% (mean 6.8%) versus 46 years and 0.93% for outpatients. The 18 emergency physicians (average age 44.9 [standard deviation 7.6] years; years in practice 8.4 [standard deviation 6.9]) objectively calculated and documented illness severity in 2.7% of patients. Observed 30-day mortality for inpatients was 6.8% (outpatient mortality 0.34%) and decreased over time. Individual physician admission rates ranged from 38% to 79%, with variability not explained by illness severity, time of day, day of week, resident care in conjunction with an attending physician, or patient or physician demographics. Higher hospitalization rates were not associated with reduced mortality or fewer secondary hospital admissions.

Conclusion: We observed a 2-fold difference in pneumonia hospitalization rates among emergency physicians, unexplained by objective data

20. Treating secondary spontaneous PTX: Is a pigtail catheter sufficient?

Chen C, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2012;30:45-50.

Objective: The study aimed to assess the clinical efficacy of pigtail catheter drainage for patients with a first episode of secondary spontaneous pneumothorax (SSP) and different associated conditions.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the records of patients with SSP who received pigtail catheter drainage as their initial management between July 2002 and October 2009. A total of 168 patients were included in the analysis; 144 (86%) males and 24 (14%) females with a mean age of 60.3 ± 18.3 years (range, 17-91 years). Data regarding demographic characteristics, pneumothorax size, complications, treatments, length of hospital stay, and associated conditions were analyzed.

Results: In total, 118 (70%) patients were successfully treated with pigtail catheter drainage, and 50 (30%) patients required further management. Chronic obstructive lung disease was the most common underlying disease (57% of cases). Secondary spontaneous pneumothorax associated with infectious diseases had a higher rate of treatment failure than SSP associated with obstructive lung conditions (19/38 [50%] successful vs 78/104 [75%] successful, P = .004) and malignancy (19/38 [50%] successful vs 13/16 [81%] successful, P = .021). Moreover, patients with SSP associated with infectious diseases had a longer length of hospital stay than those with obstructive lung conditions (23.8 vs 14.5 days, P = .003) and malignancy (23.8 vs 12.1 days, P = .017). No complications were associated with pigtail catheter drainage.

Conclusions: A higher rate of treatment failure was noted in SSP patients with infectious diseases; thus, pigtail catheter drainage is appropriate as an initial management for patients with SSPs associated with obstructive lung conditions and malignancy.

21. Likelihood That a Woman with Screen-Detected Breast Cancer Has Had Her "Life Saved" by That Screening

Welch HG, et al. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(22):2043-2046.

Background: Perhaps the most persuasive messages promoting screening mammography come from women who argue that the test "saved my life." Because other possibilities exist, we sought to determine how often lives were actually saved by mammography screening.

Methods: We created a simple method to estimate the probability that a woman with screen-detected breast cancer has had her life saved because of screening. We used DevCan, the National Cancer Institute's software for analyzing Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) data, to estimate the 10-year risk of diagnosis and the 20-year risk of death—a time horizon long enough to capture the downstream benefits of screening. Using a range of estimates on the ability of screening mammography to reduce breast cancer mortality (relative risk reduction [RRR], 5%-25%), we estimated the risk of dying from breast cancer in the presence and absence of mammography in women of various ages (ages 40, 50, 60, and 70 years).

Results: We found that for a 50-year-old woman, the estimated risk of having a screen-detected breast cancer in the next 10 years is 1910 per 100 000. Her observed 20-year risk of breast cancer death is 990 per 100 000. Assuming that mammography has already reduced this risk by 20%, the risk of death in the absence of screening would be 1240 per 100 000, which suggests that the mortality benefit accrued to 250 per 100 000. Thus, the probability that a woman with screen-detected breast cancer avoids a breast cancer death because of mammography is 13% (250/1910). This number falls to 3% if screening mammography reduces breast cancer mortality by 5%. Similar analyses of women of different ages all yield probability estimates below 25%.

Conclusions: Most women with screen-detected breast cancer have not had their life saved by screening. They are instead either diagnosed early (with no effect on their mortality) or overdiagnosed.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Lit Bits: Nov 26, 2011

From the recent medical literature...

1. Number of Coronary Heart Disease Risk Factors and Mortality in Patients with First MI

Risk of fatal heart attack higher without warning signs

One in seven patients who did not display risk factors suggestive of heart disease died after experiencing a heart attack compared with 1 in 28 with five risk factors, according to a study in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The survival of patients with more risk factors might be due to medications they took, researchers said. The findings were based on data from a national registry of nearly 550,000 first-time heart attack cases from 1994 to 2006

Canto JG, et al. JAMA 2011; 306(19):2120-2127.

Context: Few studies have examined the association between the number of coronary heart disease risk factors and outcomes of acute myocardial infarction in community practice.

Objective: To determine the association between the number of coronary heart disease risk factors in patients with first myocardial infarction and hospital mortality.

Design: Observational study from the National Registry of Myocardial Infarction, 1994-2006.

Patients: We examined the presence and absence of 5 major traditional coronary heart disease risk factors (hypertension, smoking, dyslipidemia, diabetes, and family history of coronary heart disease) and hospital mortality among 542 008 patients with first myocardial infarction and without prior cardiovascular disease.

Main Outcome Measure: All-cause in-hospital mortality.

Results: A majority (85.6%) of patients who presented with initial myocardial infarction had at least 1 of the 5 coronary heart disease risk factors, and 14.4% had none of the 5 risk factors. Age varied inversely with the number of coronary heart disease risk factors, from a mean age of 71.5 years with 0 risk factors to 56.7 years with 5 risk factors (P for trend less than .001). The total number of in-hospital deaths for all causes was 50 788. Unadjusted in-hospital mortality rates were 14.9%, 10.9%, 7.9%, 5.3%, 4.2%, and 3.6% for patients with 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 risk factors, respectively. After adjusting for age and other clinical factors, there was an inverse association between the number of coronary heart disease risk factors and hospital mortality adjusted odds ratio (1.54; 95% CI, 1.23-1.94) among individuals with 0 vs 5 risk factors. This association was consistent among several age strata and important patient subgroups.

Conclusion: Among patients with incident acute myocardial infarction without prior cardiovascular disease, in-hospital mortality was inversely related to the number of coronary heart disease risk factors.

2. Children with Normal CT after Blunt Head Injury Are at Low Risk for Neurological Complications

No neurosurgical interventions were required in children with blunt head injury who had GCS scores of 14 or 15 and normal head CT scans in the emergency department.

In a planned secondary analysis of a prospective observational cohort study from PECARN (the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network), investigators evaluated the frequency of neurological complications in children (age, below 18 years) with blunt head trauma (isolated or multisystem trauma), initial Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores of 14 or 15, and normal emergency department head computed tomography (CT) scans. CT scans were performed at the discretion of the treating provider. Patients discharged to home were followed up at 1 week by telephone survey (capture rate, 79%); morgue and medical records were reviewed for patients with incomplete surveys.

Of 13,543 patients (mean age, 8.9 years; 20% below 2 years) who met inclusion criteria during the 2-year study period, 2485 (18%) were hospitalized. Among hospitalized patients, 137 (6%) underwent subsequent neuroimaging, and 16 (0.6%) had abnormal findings. Among discharged patients, 197 (2%) underwent subsequent neuroimaging, and 5 (0.05%) had abnormal findings. No patient in either group required neurosurgical intervention.

Comment: Children with blunt head injury who have normal GCS scores and head CT scans can be safely discharged home with postconcussive follow-up care instructions regarding signs of deterioration and outpatient follow-up before resuming physical activities, such as sports.

— Katherine Bakes, MD. Published in Journal Watch Emergency Medicine November 4, 2011

Citation: Holmes JF et al. Do children with blunt head trauma and normal cranial computed tomography scan results require hospitalization for neurologic observation? Ann Emerg Med 2011 Oct; 58:315.

Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21683474

3. Cardioversion of acute AF in the short observation unit in Italy: comparison of a protocol focused on electrical cardioversion with simple antiarrhythmic treatment

Cristoni L, et al. Emerg Med J 2011;28:932-937

Background: Direct current cardioversion (DCC) has been shown to be effective for the management of atrial fibrillation (AF) in the emergency department (ED). Pharmacological cardioversion was compared with a strategy including DCC on patients with uncomplicated, recent-onset (within 48 h) AF managed in a short observation unit (SOU).

Methods: A prospective observational study was undertaken over a period of 13 months in two institutions. A DCC-centred protocol was applied to 171 AF cases in a hospital (DCC-cohort) and pharmacological cardioversion to 151 AF cases in another hospital (P-cohort). Patients remaining in AF after 24 h were admitted. The outcomes were rate of discharge in sinus rhythm, length of stay in the ED-SOU, rate of hospitalisation and complications of treatment. Data collected were analysed according to Student t test and χ2 statistics.

Results: Discharge in sinus rhythm was achieved in 159/171 cases in the DCC-cohort and 77/151 cases in the P-cohort (93% vs 51%; number needed to treat (NNT) 2.4; 95% CI 2.0 to 3.1, p less than 0.001), whereas mean length of stay was 7+7 h in the DCC-cohort and 9+6 h in the P-cohort (p=0.43). Eleven cases from the DCC-cohort and 67 from the P-cohort were admitted (admission rate 6% vs 44%; NNT 2.6; 95% CI 2.2 to 3.5, p less than 0.001). Three short-term complications occurred in the DCC-cohort and five in the P-cohort (2% vs 3%, p=0.59). Two strokes were registered in the DCC-cohort during 6-month follow-up (p undefined).

Conclusions: Electrical cardioversion of recent-onset AF in the SOU is safe, effective and reduces hospitalisations. Further studies are needed to identify the most cost-effective strategy for the management of AF patients in emergency settings.

Cf a U.S. ED study with similar results without employing an obs unit: Managing ED Patients with Recent-onset AF. J Emerg Med. 2010 Jul 15. [Epub ahead of print] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20634022

4. Broken Toe? Forget the Follow-up

by Kevin Klauer, DO, Emergency Physicians Monthly, November 10, 2011

Want to save the healthcare system time and money? Forget the follow-up and make the emergency department the last stop for a range of simple injuries. First up: broken toes.

Definitive management? Aren’t we capable of finishing anything we start? In a different place, in a different time, in a world where common sense outweighs defensive medicine, we should be the last stop for certain conditions.

Toe fractures are an excellent place to start. Let’s assume that complications are expected with toe fractures. How bad could they be? Even if there is a non-union, you have nine others! Clearly, many patients cannot receive definitive management in the ED, either due to the need for specialized care (i.e., complex fracture management), assessment for response to treatment (i.e., community acquired pneumonia or cellulitis) or the need for further diagnostic evaluation (i.e., low risk chest or undifferentiated abdominal pain). In contrast to a toe, chest pain patients only have one heart, and that organ trumps a toe any day.

I have no idea how many toe fractures are seen annually in U.S. EDs. However, I would venture to guess it’s more than a baker’s dozen. Thus, the impact for providing more efficient and cost-effective care by providing definitive management for toe fractures is likely to be substantial. About a year and a half ago, I dropped a trailer hitch on my right 5th toe. I knew upon impact it was broken. I’m not a swearing man. However, I consulted the socially unacceptable thesaurus on that one. It hurt. It swelled, and it wasn’t back to normal for about 5 weeks, but I didn’t seek medical attention for it. In my “N” of one, the outcome has been good and the cost of care was $0.00. Not withstanding the lack of value of radiographic evaluation, buddy taping and buying a post-op shoe, follow-up care wouldn’t have changed the outcome.

Not only is definitive management of toe fractures a reasonable consideration, with respect to incorporating cost-saving strategies for healthcare reform, using less diagnostics makes sense also. So, what are we worried about? Sure. It’s broken. So, the reflex is to order an x-ray. However, when you already know it’s broken and you won’t do anything different with the test you’re considering ordering, just say no. In my opinion, too many radiographs are ordered due to culture and not used to improve care. Most patients want an answer, not a test. So, if you can give them a definitive answer without order a radiograph, you both might be happier.

Although there is much data on this topic, let’s just discuss one contemporary article by Van Vliet-Koppert…

The remainder of the essay is here: http://www.epmonthly.com/subspecialties/management/broken-toe-forget-the-follow-up/

5. Relationship between Pain Severity and Outcomes in Patients Presenting with Potential ACS

Edwards M, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011;58:501-507.

Study objective: Although lay people often assume that severe pain is more commonly associated with worse outcomes, the relationship between pain severity and outcome for patients presenting with potential acute coronary syndrome has not been well described. We hypothesize that pain severity will not be associated with acute myocardial infarction or 30-day cardiovascular complications.

Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with potential acute coronary syndrome. Trained research assistants collected data, including demographics, medical history, symptoms, hospital course, and 30-day outcomes (record review and telephone). Pain score on arrival (0 to 10) was abstracted from nurses' triage documentation in the electronic record. Severe pain was defined as 9 or 10. The main outcomes were the prevalence of acute myocardial infarction during index visit and composite of death, acute myocardial infarction, revascularization including percutaneous coronary intervention, or coronary bypass artery grafting at 30 days. Multivariable modeling was prespecified to adjust for age, race, sex, pain duration, thrombolysis in myocardial infarction (TIMI) score, and mode of arrival. Data are presented as relative risk (RR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI).

Results: Patients (3,306) had pain documented (mean age 51.0 years; SD 12.6 years; 57% women; 66% black). Follow-up was 93%. By 30 days, 34 patients had died, 105 patients underwent revascularization (94 percutaneous coronary intervention, 14 coronary bypass artery grafting), and 111 patients experienced acute myocardial infarction. There was not a relationship between severe pain and acute myocardial infarction (RR 1.28; 95% CI 0.93 to 1.76) or 30-day composite outcome (1.19; 95% CI 0.91 to 1.56). After adjusting for potential confounding variables, we found that the prevalence of inhospital acute myocardial infarction was related to TIMI score (adjusted relative risk [aRR] 2.00; 95% CI 1.05 to 3.80), male sex (aRR 1.48; 95% CI 1.00 to 2.18), and arrival by emergency medical services (EMS) (aRR 1.73; 95% CI 1.13 to 2.63) but not age (aRR 1.42; 95% CI 0.68 to 2.95), white race (aRR 1.25; 95% CI 0.85 to 1.86), pain duration greater than 1 hour (aRR 1.36; 95% CI 0.89 to 2.07), or severe pain (aRR 1.43; 95% CI 0.91 to 2.22). Thirty-day composite outcome was related to male sex (aRR 1.53; 95% CI 1.16 to 2.01), white race (aRR 1.43; 95% CI 1.09 to 1.87), and higher TIMI score (aRR 2.24; 95% CI 1.39 to 3.60) but was not related to age (aRR 1.26; 95% CI 0.75 to 2.11), pain duration greater than 1 hour (aRR 0.8; 95% CI 0.60 to 1.06), EMS arrival (aRR 1.23; 95% CI 0.96 to 1.60), or severe pain (aRR 1.39; 95% CI 0.95 to 1.97).

Conclusion: For patients who present to the ED with potential acute coronary syndrome, severe pain is not related to likelihood of acute myocardial infarction at presentation or death, acute myocardial infarction or revascularization within 30 days.

6. Lytics for Acute CVA

A. Stroke Mimics and Intravenous Thrombolysis

Artto V, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011; in press.

Study objective: The necessity for rapid administration of intravenous thrombolysis in patients with acute ischemic stroke may lead to treatment of patients with conditions mimicking stroke. We analyze stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis in our center to characterize cases classified as stroke mimics.

Methods: We identified and reviewed all cases with a diagnosis other than ischemic stroke in our large-scale single-center stroke thrombolysis registry. We compared these stroke mimics with patients with neuroimaging-negative and neuroimaging-positive ischemic stroke results.

Results: Among 985 consecutive intravenous thrombolysis–treated patients, we found 14 stroke mimics (1.4%; 95% confidence interval 0.8% to 2.4%), 694 (70.5%) patients with neuroimaging-positive ischemic stroke results, and 275 (27.9%) patients with neuroimaging-negative ischemic stroke results. Stroke mimics were younger than patients with neuroimaging-negative or -positive ischemic stroke results. Compared with patients with neuroimaging-positive ischemic stroke results, stroke mimics had less severe symptoms at baseline and better 3-month outcome. No differences appeared in medical history or clinical features between stroke mimics and patients with neuroimaging-negative ischemic stroke results. None of the stroke mimics developed symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage compared with 63 (9.1%) among patients with neuroimaging-positive ischemic stroke results and 6 (2.2%) among patients with neuroimaging-negative ischemic stroke results.

Conclusion: Stroke mimics were infrequent among intravenous thrombolysis–treated stroke patients in this cohort, and their treatment did not lead to harmful complications.

B. Patients with Diabetes and Prior Stroke Benefit from Thrombolytic Therapy for Treatment of Acute Stroke

This finding will expand eligibility for thrombolysis in the U.S.

Concomitant diabetes mellitus and prior stroke is thought to potentially mitigate the benefits of thrombolytic therapy for acute stroke. In Europe, concomitant diabetes and prior stroke is considered a contraindication to thrombolytic therapy, whereas in the U.S., it is considered a contraindication only for patients who present in the expanded treatment window (3–4.5 hours).

Researchers used registry data to assess the effect of diabetes and prior stroke on outcomes (adjusted 90-day modified Rankin Scale score) in patients who received tissue plasminogen activator (TPA) for acute stroke (data from the Safe Implementation of Thrombolysis in Stroke–International Stroke Thrombolysis Register) and control patients who did not (data from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive). Analyses were controlled for the following confounding patient variables: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score, age, and comorbidities.

Of 29,500 patients, 19% had diabetes, 17% had prior stroke, and 6% had both. Among patients with diabetes, prior stroke, or both, those who received TPA had significantly better outcomes than those who did not receive TPA. Among patients who received TPA, those with diabetes, prior stroke, or both had similar outcomes to those with neither diabetes nor prior stroke.

Comment: This large study does not support excluding patients with diabetes mellitus, prior stroke, or both from consideration for thrombolytic therapy for treatment of acute stroke. This finding will expand eligibility for thrombolytic therapy.

— Richard D. Zane, MD, FAAEM. Published in Journal Watch Emergency Medicine November 18, 2011. Citation: Mishra NK et al. Thrombolysis outcomes in acute ischemic stroke patients with prior stroke and diabetes mellitus. Neurology 2011 Nov 22; 77:1866.

Abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22094479

7. Patterns and Predictors of Short-Term Death after ED Discharge

Gelareh Z. Gabayan GZ, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011;58:551-558.e2.

Study objective: The emergency department (ED) is an inherently high-risk setting. Early death after an ED evaluation is a rare and devastating outcome; understanding it can potentially help improve patient care and outcomes. Using administrative data from an integrated health system, we describe characteristics and predictors of patients who experienced 7-day death after ED discharge.

Methods: Administrative data from 12 hospitals were used to identify death after discharge in adults aged 18 year or older within 7 days of ED presentation from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2008. Patients who were nonmembers of the health system, in hospice care, or treated at out-of-network EDs were excluded. Predictors of 7-day postdischarge death were identified with multivariable logistic regression.

Results; The study cohort contained a total of 475,829 members, with 728,312 discharges from Kaiser Permanente Southern California EDs in 2007 and 2008. Death within 7 days of discharge occurred in 357 cases (0.05%). Increasing age, male sex, and number of preexisting comorbidities were associated with increased risk of death. The top 3 primary discharge diagnoses predictive of 7-day death after discharge included noninfectious lung disease (odds ratio [OR] 7.1; 95% confidence interval [CI] 2.9 to 17.4), renal disease (OR 5.6; 95% CI 2.2 to 14.2), and ischemic heart disease (OR 3.8; 95% CI 1.0 to 13.6).

Conclusion; Our study suggests that 50 in 100,000 patients in the United States die within 7 days of discharge from an ED. To our knowledge, our study is the first to identify potentially “high-risk” discharge diagnoses in patients who experience a short-term death after discharge.

8. What Do We Do With a Positive Troponin Test?

Amal Mattu, MD. Medscape Emerg Med. Posted: 10/28/2011

Introduction

A physician recently emailed me with a question (paraphrasing): "Our lab recently switched over to using the new high-sensitivity troponin test and we're confused. What do we do with a positive troponin (TN) test?"

A handful of years ago, I suppose my gut response to someone asking what to do with a positive TN test would have been to tell that person to do more continuing medical education before seeing any more patients. My belief now, however, has become one of complete empathy with this physician and his colleagues. It seems that we all are having a tough time figuring this out, including our own cardiologists. The most recent high-profile article pertaining to the high-sensitivity (HS)-TN test has prompted another flurry of emails, questions, and uncertainty. Here's a quick summary and then some further thoughts about the article, TN testing, and evaluating patients with possible acute coronary syndromes.

Rapid Exclusion of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Patients With Undetectable Troponin Using a High-Sensitivity Assay

Body R, Carley S, McDowell G, et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011;58:1332-1339

Study Summary

The study authors evaluated 703 patients presenting with chest pain to a large hospital's emergency department (ED) in the United Kingdom. A total of 130 (18.5%) patients were diagnosed with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) using standard, accepted criteria for diagnosis with TN testing, which incorporates a serial rise (or fall) of TN. Serial testing in this case meant that the researchers obtained a TN level (a HS-TN-T assay was used in this study) at the time of presentation and a second level at 12 hours after the onset of symptoms. Nearly half (46%) of the patients presented within 3 hours of symptom onset, so the study did incorporate many early presenters.

The study authors found that of 130 patients diagnosed with AMI, 100% had an elevated HS-TN level at the time of presentation (95% confidence interval was 95.1%-100%). In other words, no patients who presented initially with a negative HS-TN level had a positive HS-TN on serial testing. The study authors suggested that this HS-TN level would obviate the need for serial testing and therefore allow early discharge of these patients from the ED. Sounds great! No more serial TN testing is needed, and we can now make dispositions after only 1 blood test and, at least slightly, decrease ED crowding. Right?

Viewpoint

Before we even begin to address the limitations associated with the study and its conclusions, let's first try to agree on a few things:

• Nothing in medicine is 100%: Nothing is 100% positive, 100% negative, or 100% accurate. Well, death is 100% certain, but not much else. Just like every other study in history that claimed 100% accuracy, subsequent attempts to validate this study will demonstrate numbers less than 100%.

• What we do in emergency medicine is not to rule in or rule out diseases, but we risk stratify everything. For example, if you see a patient with chest pain who has an ECG with ST-segment elevation in the anterior leads and ST-depression in the inferior leads, it risk stratifies that patient to a higher likelihood of AMI, but it doesn't definitely rule in AMI. In fact, the accuracy of such an ECG for AMI is only ~90%. Similarly, if a patient with chest pain has a normal ECG, it risk stratifies that patient to a lower likelihood of AMI but doesn't rule it out.

• This same concept of risk stratification applies to TN testing. A negative TN risk stratifies a patient to a lower likelihood of AMI but not to 0%. Also, a positive TN risk stratifies a patient to a higher likelihood of AMI, but not to 100%. This last point is critically important to remember: Positive TNs are markers of myocardial injury, but AMI is only one cause of myocardial injury. There are numerous other causes of positive TN: cardiac trauma, congestive heart failure, aortic valve disease, dysrhythmias (tachy- or brady-), rhabdomyolysis, pulmonary embolism, acute neurologic disease (including stroke and subarachnoid hemorrhage), inflammatory diseases of the heart (pericarditis, myocarditis), infiltrative diseases of the heart, sepsis, toxins, and so on.[1] In fact, many cardiologists already think that the current TN tests are too sensitive!

• The fact that there are so many causes of positive TNs is the exact reason why the international universal definition of AMI[1] incorporates serial TN testing rather than relying on an isolated positive TN. True atherosclerosis-related AMI produces a rise and fall of TNs, whereas the majority of other causes of positive TN do not produce this typical sequence of levels.

•It's important to remember that our mandate in the ED -- at least in the United States -- is not to simply evaluate patients for AMI. We also need to evaluate patients for acute coronary syndrome. Elevated levels of TN are helpful for diagnosing myocardial injury, but they are nearly worthless for diagnosing ischemia (ie, unstable angina). Therefore, what we currently have in TN is a test that, when positive, doesn't rule in acute coronary syndrome and when negative doesn't rule out acute coronary syndrome.

Putting history and ECG aside, let's focus on just the TN. How exactly are we supposed to use TN testing? First, it's important that we all change our mind-set such that we don't think of TNs as a test to rule in or rule out disease. They are only useful at risk stratifying the disease and making decisions that are based on that risk. If the TN is positive, you and your consulting cardiologists might consider cardiac catheterization or instead consider performing serial testing to distinguish between the typical rise of true AMI vs the "smoldering" elevation that is often seen in the other conditions. On the other hand, if the TN is negative, it simply risk stratifies patients to a lower likelihood of acute coronary syndrome (but not zero). Essentially, negative TNs indicate that a patient is now stable for a provocative test; they do not exclude acute coronary syndrome. The current national American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA)[2,3] and American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP)[4] guidelines allow us to discontinue the ACS workup only after a negative provocative test; they do not allow us to discontinue the workup after negative TNs.

The remainder of the article can be found here: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/752166

9. Low yield of ED MRI for suspected epidural abscess

El Sayed M, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2011;978-982.

Purpose: The aim of this study was to estimate the yield of emergency department (ED) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in detecting spinal epidural abscess (SEA) and to identify clinical factors predicting positive MRI results.

Basic Procedure: We examined a cohort of patients who underwent MRI to rule out SEA, followed by a nested case-control comparison of those with positive results and a sample with negative results. A positive result was defined as osteomyelitis, discitis, or SEA. Predictor variables included temperature, presenting complaint, drug abuse status, history of SEA or back surgery, midline back tenderness, neurologic deficit, MRI level, mean white blood cell count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and C-reactive protein level.

Main Findings: Fourteen of the 120 available MRIs were excluded; 7 (6.6%) of the remaining 106 were positive. Temperature was 1.1°C higher in cases than controls (95% CI, 0.6-1.7).

Conclusion: Emergency department MRI for suspected SEA has a low yield. Clinical guidelines are needed to improve efficiency.

10. Rapid (60 mL/kg) versus standard (20 mL/kg) intravenous rehydration in paediatric gastroenteritis: pragmatic blinded randomised clinical trial

Freedman SB, et al. BMJ 2011;343:bmj.d6976

Introduction

Gastroenteritis remains a disease of major importance in public health. Although oral rehydration is appropriate for most children, many receive prolonged intravenous rehydration, which contributes to overcrowding in the emergency department. Given the safety of replacing fluid deficits over 24 hours in haemodynamically stable children, traditional teaching and the National Patient Safety Agency have advocated such an approach. Experts have noted, however, that there is a disparity between the slow restoration regimens recommended and the rapid rehydration regimens used by clinicians treating dehydration. The latter has the potential to reduce a child’s level of agitation and clinical signs of dehydration, in addition to enhancing alertness and appetite. These potential benefits might enable clinicians to achieve earlier rehydration with subsequent reductions in length of stay and costs. A review of rapid intravenous rehydration studies concluded that evidence of efficacy is lacking. Thus gastroenteritis treatment guidelines aimed at developed countries, where severe dehydration is uncommon, rarely provide a detailed rapid rehydration strategy.

Because of its potential benefits, and despite a paucity of evidence, rapid intravenous rehydration has gradually become incorporated into clinical practice9 and is recommended in a leading textbook of emergency medicine. This procedure, however, is not without risks. A recent study of fluid bolus resuscitation in febrile African children had to be stopped early because of increased mortality in the bolus group. Moreover, advocates for rapid intravenous rehydration4 suggest that serum should be routinely tested to enable the detection of severe hyponatraemia or hypernatraemia, which necessitates specific therapeutic approaches to reduce the risk of central pontine myelinolysis and cerebral oedema, respectively. As only 30% of academic paediatric emergency medicine physicians routinely check electrolytes in the United States, the widespread use of rapid intravenous rehydration might place children at unnecessary risk. Given the established safety of standard rehydration in haemodynamically stable children, the lack of evidence of benefit, and the potential complications that might arise with the widespread use of rapid intravenous rehydration, a rigorous evaluation of this more aggressive approach is needed.

We carried out a pragmatic randomised, blinded, comparative effectiveness trial among haemodynamically stable children in whom oral rehydration had failed and who were deemed to require intravenous rehydration. Our primary objective was to determine whether treatment with rapid intravenous rehydration resulted in a clinically important increase in the number of children achieving rehydration compared with standard treatment.

Abstract

Objective: To determine if rapid rather than standard intravenous rehydration results in improved hydration and clinical outcomes when administered to children with gastroenteritis.

Design: Single centre, two arm, parallel randomised pragmatic controlled trial. Blocked randomisation stratified by site. Participants, caregivers, outcome assessors, investigators, and statisticians were blinded to the treatment assignment.

Setting: Paediatric emergency department in a tertiary care centre in Toronto, Canada.

Participants: 226 children aged 3 months to 11 years; complete follow-up was obtained on 223 (99%). Eligible children were aged over 90 days, had a diagnosis of dehydration secondary to gastroenteritis, had not responded to oral rehydration, and had been prescribed intravenous rehydration. Children were excluded if they weighed less than 5 kg or more than 33 kg, required fluid restriction, had a suspected surgical condition, or had an insurmountable language barrier. Children were also excluded if they had a history of a chronic systemic disease, abdominal surgery, bilious or bloody vomit, hypotension, or hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia.

Interventions: Rapid (60 mL/kg) or standard (20 mL/kg) rehydration with 0.9% saline over an hour; subsequent fluids administered according to protocol.

Main outcome measures: Primary outcome: clinical rehydration, assessed with a validated scale, two hours after the start of treatment. Secondary outcomes: prolonged treatment, mean clinical dehydration scores over the four hour study period, time to discharge, repeat visits to emergency department, adequate oral intake, and physician’s comfort with discharge. Data from all randomised patients were included in an intention to treat analysis.

Results: 114 patients were randomised to rapid rehydration and 112 to standard. One child was withdrawn because of severe hyponatraemia at baseline. There was no evidence of a difference between the rapid and standard rehydration groups in the proportions of participants who were rehydrated at two hours (41/114 (36%) v 33/112 (30%); difference 6.5% (95% confidence interval −5.7% to 18.7%; P=0.32). The results did not change after adjustment for weight, baseline dehydration score, and baseline pH (odds ratio 1.8, 0.90 to 3.5; P=0.10). The rates of prolonged treatment were similar (52% rapid v 43% standard; difference 8.9%, 21% to −5%; P=0.19). Although dehydration scores were similar throughout the study period (P=0.96), the median time to discharge was longer in the rapid group (6.3 v 5.0 hours; P=0.03).

Conclusions: There are no relevant clinical benefits from the administration of rapid rather than standard intravenous rehydration to haemodynamically stable children deemed to require intravenous rehydration.

Full-text: http://www.bmj.com/content/343/bmj.d6976

11. Febrile Infants Aged 30 to 90 Days with Positive Urinalyses Require LP

Despite the authors' conclusion that lumbar puncture is not needed, this study failed to show lower risk for meningitis in febrile infants with urinary tract infections.

Paquette K et al. Pediatr Emerg Care. 2011 Nov;27(11):1057-61.

Is a lumbar puncture necessary when evaluating febrile infants (30 to 90 days of age) with an abnormal urinalysis?

OBJECTIVES: Guidelines for the management of febrile infants aged 30 to 90 days presenting to the emergency department (ED) suggest that a lumbar puncture (LP) should be performed routinely if a positive urinalysis is found during initial investigations. The aim of our study was to assess the necessity of routine LPs in infants aged 30 to 90 days presenting to the ED for a fever without source but are found to have a positive urine analysis.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed the records of all infants aged 30 to 90 days, presenting to the Montreal Children's Hospital ED from October 2001 to August 2005 who underwent an LP for bacterial culture, in addition to urinalysis and blood and urine cultures. Descriptive statistics and their corresponding confidence intervals were used.

RESULTS: Overall, 392 infants were identified using the microbiology laboratory database. Fifty-seven patients had an abnormal urinalysis. Of these, 1 infant (71 days old) had an Escherichia coli urinary tract infection, bacteremia, and meningitis. This patient, however, was not well on history, and the peripheral white blood cell count was low at 2.9 × 10/L. Thus, the negative predictive value of an abnormal urinalysis for meningitis was 98.2%.

CONCLUSIONS: Routine LPs are not required in infants (30-90 days) presenting to the ED with a fever and a positive urinalysis if they are considered at low risk for serious bacterial infection based on clinical and laboratory criteria. However, we recommend that judicious clinical judgment be used; in doubt, an LP should be performed before empiric antibiotic therapy is begun..

12. Standard Therapy Is Sufficient for Most Patients with Saddle PE

In this small retrospective study, most patients responded to unfractionated heparin.

Saddle pulmonary embolism: Is it as bad as it looks? A community hospital experience.

Sardi A et al. Crit Care Med. 2011 Nov;39(11):2413-8.

BACKGROUND: Saddle pulmonary embolism represents a large clot and a risk for sudden hemodynamic collapse. However, the clinical presentation and outcomes vary widely. On the basis of the findings of right heart dysfunction on echocardiograms, computed tomography angiography, or cardiac enzyme elevation, some argue for the use of thrombolytics or catheter thrombectomy even for hemodynamically stable patients.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the outcomes and management of patients with saddle pulmonary embolism, including radiographic appearance (estimate of clot burden) and echocardiographic features.

INTERVENTIONS: None.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: This study is a retrospective evaluation of all patients with computed tomography angiography positive for pulmonary embolism from June 1, 2004, to February 28, 2009. Two radiologists selected those with saddle pulmonary embolism and evaluated the clot burden score. The clinical information, echocardiography, treatments, and outcomes of these patients were extracted via chart review. Saddle pulmonary embolism was found in 37 of 680 patients (5.4%, 95% confidence interval 4% to 7%) with documented pulmonary embolism on computed tomography angiography. For patients with saddle pulmonary embolism, the median age was 60 yrs and 41% were males. Major comorbidities were neurologic (24%), recent surgery (24%), and malignancy (22%). Transient hypotension occurred in 14% and persistent shock in 8%. One patient required mechanical ventilation. Echocardiography was performed in 27 patients (73%). Right ventricle enlargement and dysfunction were found in 78% and elevated pulmonary artery systolic pressure in 67%. Computed tomography angiography demonstrated a high median pulmonary artery clot burden score of 31 points. The median right ventricle to left ventricle diameter ratio was 1.39. Inferior vena cava filters were placed in 46%. Unfractionated heparin was administered in 33 (87%) and thrombolytics in four (11%). The median hospital length of stay was 9 days. Two of 37 saddle pulmonary embolism patients (5.4%) died in the hospital (95% confidence interval 0.7% to 18%).

CONCLUSIONS: Most patients with saddle pulmonary embolism found on computed tomography angiography responded to the standard management for pulmonary embolism with unfractionated heparin. Although ominous in appearance, most patients with saddle pulmonary embolism are hemodynamically stable and do not require thrombolytic therapy or other interventions.

13. Oxygen therapy for AMI: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Burls A, et al. Emerg Med J2011;28:917-923

Oxygen (O2) is widely recommended in international guidelines for treatment of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), but there is uncertainty about its safety and benefits. A systematic review and meta-analysis were performed to determine whether inhaled O2 in AMI improves pain or the risk of death.

Cochrane CENTRAL Register of Controlled Trials, MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, EMBASE, CINAHL, LILACS and PASCAL were searched from start date to February 2010. Other sources included British Library ZETOC, Web of Science, ISI Proceedings, relevant conferences, expert contacts. Randomised controlled trials of inhaled O2 versus air in patients with suspected or proven AMI of less than 24 h onset were included. Two authors independently reviewed studies to confirm inclusion criteria met, and undertook data abstraction. Quality of studies and risk of bias was assessed according to Cochrane Collaboration guidance. Main outcomes were death, pain, and complications. Measure of effect used was the RR.

Three trials (n=387 patients) were included. Pooled RR of death on O2 compared to air was 2.88 (95%CI 0.88 to 9.39) on ITT analysis and 3.03 (95%CI 0.93 to 9.83) in confirmed AMI. While suggestive of harm, this could be a chance occurrence. Pain was measured by analgesic use. Pooled RR for the use of analgesics was 0.97 (95%CI 0.78 to 1.20).

Evidence for O2 in AMI is sparse, of poor quality and pre-dates advances in reperfusion and trial methods. Evidence is suggestive of harm but lacks power and excess deaths in the O2 group could be due to chance. More research is required.

Systematic review registration number Original protocol registered with the Cochrane Collaboration. RevMan ID 848507032313175590, doi:10.1002/14651858.CD007160.

14. Images in (Emergency) Medicine

Lingual Zoster
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMicm1107466

Man with Rash and Nausea
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00352-0/fulltext

Man with Shoulder Pain after a Fall
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00360-X/fulltext

Unilateral Facial Swelling With Fever
http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)00716-5/fulltext

15. Chest compressions linked to physical fitness

Russo SG, et al. BMC Emerg Med 2011;11:20

Assessment of BMI and physical fitness, particularly focusing on the upper body, can predict quality of external chest compressions, with rescuers with higher BMI and greater physical fitness performing better quality external chest compressions and experiencing less fatigue.

Full-text (free): http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-227X/11/20/abstract

16. Do Alert, Neurologically Intact Trauma Patients with Persistent Midline Tenderness and Negative CT Results Require C-Spine MRI? Maybe

Ackland HM, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011;58:521-530.

Study objective: We aim to determine the prevalence and factors associated with cervical discoligamentous injuries detected on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in acute, alert, neurologically intact trauma patients with computed tomography (CT) imaging negative for acute injury and persistent midline cervical spine tenderness. We present the cross-sectional analysis of baseline information collected as a component of a prospective observational study.

Methods: Alert, neurologically intact trauma patients presenting to a Level I trauma center with CT negative for acute injury, who underwent MRI for investigation of persistent midline cervical tenderness, were prospectively recruited. Deidentified images were assessed, and injuries were identified and graded. Outcome measures included the presence and extent of MRI-detected injury of the cervical ligaments, intervertebral discs, spinal cord and associated soft tissues.

Results: There were 178 patients recruited during a 2-year period to January 2009. Of these, 78 patients (44%) had acute cervical injury detected on MRI. There were 48 single-column injuries, 15 two-column injuries, and 5 three-column injuries. Of the remaining 10 patients, 6 had isolated posterior muscle edema, 2 had alar ligamentous edema, 1 had epidural hematoma, and 1 had atlanto-occipital edema. The injuries to 38 patients (21%) were managed clinically; 33 patients were treated in cervical collars for 2 to 12 weeks, and 5 patients (2.8%) underwent operative management, 1 of whom had delayed instability. Ordinal logistic regression revealed that factors associated with a higher number of spinal columns injured included advanced CT-detected cervical spondylosis (odds ratio [OR] 11.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.9 to 34.3), minor isolated thoracolumbar fractures (OR 5.4; 95% CI 1.5 to 19.7), and multidirectional cervical spine forces (OR 2.5; 95% CI 1.2 to 5.2).

Conclusion: In patients with cervical midline tenderness and negative acute CT findings, we found that a subset of patients had MRI-detected cervical discoligamentous injuries and that advanced cervical spine degeneration evident on CT, minor thoracolumbar fracture, and multidirectional cervical spine forces were associated with increased injury extent. However, a larger study is required to validate which variables may reliably predict clinically important injury in such patients, thereby indicating the need for further radiographic assessment.

17. Using appendicitis scores in the pediatric ED

Mandeville K, et al. Amer J Emerg Med 2011:29:972-977.

Study Objective: The aims of the study were to prospectively evaluate the Alvarado and Samuel (pediatric appendicitis score [PAS]) appendicitis scoring systems in children and determine performance based on sex.

Methods: Children with abdominal pain concerning for appendicitis were recruited. Nine parameters evaluated by the scores were documented before imaging/surgery consultation. Test characteristics were calculated on all patients and by sex.

Results: Two hundred eighty-seven patients enrolled; median age was 9.8 years; and 155 (54%) were diagnosed with pathologic examination-confirmed appendicitis. Patients with appendicitis had mean PAS of 7.6, and those without had mean of 5.6 (P less than .001). Patients with appendicitis had a mean Alvarado of 7.2, and those without had a mean of 5.2 (P < .001). In appendicitis patients, PAS cutoff of 6 or greater would give 137 correct diagnoses; sensitivity, 88%; specificity, 50%; and positive predictive value (PPV), 67%. An Alvarado cutoff of 7 or greater would give 118 correct diagnoses; sensitivity, 76%; specificity, 72%; and PPV, 76%. Both performed better in males than females.

Conclusion: Regardless of sex, neither PAS nor Alvarado has adequate predictive values for sole use to diagnose appendicitis.

18. Yoga Works for Chronic Low Back Pain: A Randomized Trial

Tilbrook HE, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2011; 155;569-578.

Background: Previous studies indicate that yoga may be an effective treatment for chronic or recurrent low back pain.

Objective: To compare the effectiveness of yoga and usual care for chronic or recurrent low back pain.

Design: Parallel-group, randomized, controlled trial using computer-generated randomization conducted from April 2007 to March 2010. Outcomes were assessed by postal questionnaire. (International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number Register: ISRCTN 81079604)

Setting: 13 non–National Health Service premises in the United Kingdom.

Patients: 313 adults with chronic or recurrent low back pain.

Intervention: Yoga (n = 156) or usual care (n = 157). All participants received a back pain education booklet. The intervention group was offered a 12-class, gradually progressing yoga program delivered by 12 teachers over 3 months.

Measurements: Scores on the Roland–Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) at 3 (primary outcome), 6, and 12 (secondary outcomes) months; pain, pain self-efficacy, and general health measures at 3, 6, and 12 months (secondary outcomes).

Results: 93 (60%) patients offered yoga attended at least 3 of the first 6 sessions and at least 3 other sessions. The yoga group had better back function at 3, 6, and 12 months than the usual care group. The adjusted mean RMDQ score was 2.17 points (95% CI, 1.03 to 3.31 points) lower in the yoga group at 3 months, 1.48 points (CI, 0.33 to 2.62 points) lower at 6 months, and 1.57 points (CI, 0.42 to 2.71 points) lower at 12 months. The yoga and usual care groups had similar back pain and general health scores at 3, 6, and 12 months, and the yoga group had higher pain self-efficacy scores at 3 and 6 months but not at 12 months. Two of the 157 usual care participants and 12 of the 156 yoga participants reported adverse events, mostly increased pain.

Limitation: There were missing data for the primary outcome (yoga group, n = 21; usual care group, n = 18) and differential missing data (more in the yoga group) for secondary outcomes.

Conclusion: Offering a 12-week yoga program to adults with chronic or recurrent low back pain led to greater improvements in back function than did usual care.

Full-text (free): http://www.annals.org/content/155/9/569.full.pdf+html

19. CNS Events in Children with Sickle Cell Disease Presenting Acutely with HA

Hines PC, et al. J Pediatr. 2011;159:472-478

Background. The incidence of headache as a chief complaint in children with sickle cell disease (SCD) is relatively common and not too different from the incidence in healthy children. However, the higher baseline risk for intracranial pathology in patients with SCD makes evaluation of headache in this population more concerning for clinicians. The goal of this study was to use existing data to determine whether an approach could be devised that would help guide clinicians on how aggressive to be in evaluating patients with SCD and headache.

Methods. The participants were children and young adults, ages 5-21 years, with homozygous SCD who were treated in the pediatric emergency department of a single children's hospital from 2001 to 2005. All patients had a chief complaint of headache. By reviewing various inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient records, the investigators obtained clinical data about the presentation of headache including vital signs, physical exam findings, and neurologic exam findings. They also collected data on medical history such as whether a child participated in transfusion protocols, participated in hydroxyurea protocols, and had a history of seizures or central nervous system (CNS) pathology such as stroke and obtained results of any previous CNS imaging.

Findings. The investigators identified 73 patients who presented with 102 episodes of headache during the study period, with 83% of those visits being conducted in the emergency department and the remainder in an acute access hematology clinic. Headache was the exclusive complaint in 60 of the 102 visits, whereas headache was an accompanying complaint in the other 42 visits. Across all visits, 6.9% of the headache episodes were associated with new or changes in known intracranial pathology. However, only 42% of the headache visits in children with SCD prompted imaging. Therefore, the frequency of new pathology in patients with SCD with headache who received imaging was 16.3%. Children with an acute CNS event were much more likely to have a history of a stroke, a transient ischemic attack, or a seizure (40%-60%) than children who did not have CNS events (4.6%-8.5%). With respect to neurologic complaints at presentation, 40%-50% of the children with an acute CNS event had vision changes, weakness, any focal weakness, or numbness compared with only 0%-8.2% of children with no CNS events. At least 1 focal neurologic complaint was found upon presentation in 85% of the children with an acute CNS event compared with 9.5% of the children with no CNS pathology. Similarly, 85% of the children with an acute CNS event had at least 1 neurologic exam abnormality compared with only 5.3% of the children without CNS events.

The investigators concluded that a history of stroke, transient ischemic attack, or the presence of neurologic symptoms or focal neurologic findings suggest a higher risk for CNS pathology in patients with SCD and acute headache. They emphasized that 6.9% of the visits for acute headache in children with SCD were associated with evidence of acute CNS pathology compared with frequencies of 0.5% in healthy children noted in other studies.

Comment: William T. Basco, Jr., MD. Medscape Emerg Med. Posted: 11/04/2011 Full-text: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/752295

20. Treating primary headaches in the ED: can droperidol regain its role?

Faine B, et al. Amer J Emerg Med. 2011; in press

Objective: The aim of this study was to describe the use and efficacy of low-dose (≤2 mg) droperidol for the treatment of primary headaches (ie, migraine, cluster, tension-type headache and trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias, and other primary headaches) in the emergency department (ED).

Methods: A report was generated from a pharmacy database to identify all adult patients who received low-dose droperidol in the ED over a 7-month period; a subsequent retrospective chart review was conducted. Low-dose droperidol was defined as a cumulative dose of ≤2 mg. Patients who received droperidol for any other reason than the treatment of a headache were excluded. Data were analyzed descriptively.

Results: Seventy-three cases in which droperidol was administered for the treatment of a headache were identified over the 7-month period. Most doses (92%) administered were 1.25 mg or less. Fifty-three patients (73%) had complete resolution or significant improvement of headache symptoms as subjectively or objectively (eg, numerical pain scale) documented by the treating physician. Eight patients (11%) had minimal improvement in their headaches symptoms; 12 patients (16%) received no relief after the administration of droperidol. The average time to discharge from the ED was 94.8 ± 67.2 minutes. No cardiac arrhythmias were noted. Other adverse events included 2 cases of extrapyramidal side effects; one patient reported restlessness/anxiousness and the other patient had dystonia.

Conclusion: The administration of low-dose (≤2 mg) droperidol may be safe and effective for the treatment of primary headaches in the ED.

21. Intraosseous Bests IV Access During Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Reades R, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011;58:509-516.

Study objective; Intraosseous needle insertion during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is rapidly replacing peripheral intravenous routes in the out-of-hospital setting. However, there are few data directly comparing the effectiveness of intraosseous needle insertions with peripheral intravenous insertions during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. The objective of this study is to determine whether there is a difference in the frequency of first-attempt success between humeral intraosseous, tibial intraosseous, and peripheral intravenous insertions during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Methods: This was a randomized trial of adult patients experiencing a nontraumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in which resuscitation efforts were initiated. Patients were randomized to one of 3 routes of vascular access: tibial intraosseous, humeral intraosseous, or peripheral intravenous. Paramedics received intensive training and exposure to all 3 methods before study initiation. The primary outcome was first-attempt success, defined as secure needle position in the marrow cavity or a peripheral vein, with normal fluid flow. Needle dislodgement during resuscitation was coded as a failure to maintain vascular access.

Results: There were 182 patients enrolled, with 64 (35%) assigned to tibial intraosseous, 51 (28%) humeral intraosseous, and 67 (37%) peripheral intravenous access. Demographic characteristics were similar among patients in the 3 study arms. There were 130 (71%) patients who experienced initial vascular access success, with 17 (9%) needles becoming dislodged, for an overall frequency of first-attempt success of 113 (62%). Individuals randomized to tibial intraosseous access were more likely to experience a successful first attempt at vascular access (91%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 83% to 98%) compared with either humeral intraosseous access (51%; 95% CI 37% to 65%) or peripheral intravenous access (43%; 95% CI 31% to 55%) groups. Time to initial success was significantly shorter for individuals assigned to the tibial intraosseous access group (4.6 minutes; interquartile range 3.6 to 6.2 minutes) compared with those assigned to the humeral intraosseous access group (7.0 minutes; interquartile range 3.9 to 10.0 minutes), and neither time was significantly different from that of the peripheral intravenous access group (5.8 minutes; interquartile range 4.1 to 8.0 minutes).

Conclusion: Tibial intraosseous access was found to have the highest first-attempt success for vascular access and the most rapid time to vascular access during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest compared with peripheral intravenous and humeral intraosseous access.

22. The Captain Morgan Technique for the Reduction of the Dislocated Hip

We highlighted this article in an earlier Lit Bits. It’s now in print and available for free. See below.

Article full-text: http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)01307-2/fulltext

Video: http://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(11)01307-2/attachment?filename=mmc1.mpg