Sunday, September 28, 2014

BP in Sepsis, Abx for COPD, and Fever in SSD

We had our last Journal Club on September 17, and it was great.  Much great discussion.

First Article:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22923662
Efficacy of antibiotic therapy for acute exacerbations of mild to moderate chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Bottom Line: Antibiotics may be useful in mild to moderate COPD exacerbations; whereas we already know it's beneficial (mortality benefit) in severe COPD.  Gerenalizability is limited by choice of antibiotics, and infrequent use of steroids.

Second Article:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24635770
High versus low blood-pressure target in patients with septic shock.
Bottom Line: This is a good one that was overshadowed by the Process Trial.  No benefit for MAP goal of 85 vs 65.  However, in patient's with hypertension, the high target group required less renal replacement therapy.  So, you may consider a higher target in those with chronic hypertension, but no strong, compelling evidence to do so.  Also, probably doesn't matter in the ED.

Third Article:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23669523
Bacteremia risk and outpatient management of febrile patients with sickle cell disease.
Bottom Line: In pediatric patients with good follow up, it is safe to discharge a febrile sickle cell patient after a shot of ceftriaxone - less than 1% of these patients had bacteremia.  I think the key here is that this was Boston Children's, and they all had good follow up.  So, if that's your scenario, discharge away (unless they look ill, of course).  Great comment from one of our community docs - "I've never gone home and thought dang, I wish I wouldn't have given that rocephin."

Monday, July 7, 2014

How I Navigate Online Emergency Medicine Resources

This may seem a bit cryptic without actually hearing me give the lecture, but you get the idea...


Choosing Wisely Campaign

Last October, ACEP joined ABIM's "Choosing Wisely" campaign.  5 measures were agreed upon.  They're pretty soft, but it's a start:

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Aggressive BP Management in Patients with ICH

Check out my guest post at EMDocs.net here: http://www.emdocs.net/aggressive-bp-management-patients-ich/

Bottom Line:
Early BP reduction in ICH is safe and probably efficacious, although the data doesn’t definitively say so yet.  The AHA still recommends “modest” reduction if SBP>180 or MAP>130 to a goal of 160/90 or MAP of 110, but the ATACH results may prompt a change in the guidelines…we shall see.  Also worth noting, the ADAPT trial confirms that perihematoma blood flow is maintained even in those with aggressive BP lowering.  So, if you’re feeling rather aggressive, lower away!  BP lowering will not harm your patient with ICH, and may help.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Bugs & Drugs - Antibiotic QuickCard

Antibiotic selection has been identified as a potential weak spot for our residents. So, I created the below table to serve as a quick reference while on shift. My hope is to condense it to the size of a badge (front and back) so that it can be worn on one's badge holder.  Please note the disclaimer below.  This has not been peer reviewed yet.  References are listed below.

SourceBugsDrugsComments
PNA
CAPS. pneumonia, H. influenza, Moraxella
Atypicals - Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella
OP - azithro x 5d OR doxy 100mg bid x 7d
IP - ceftriaxone 1g + azithro 500mg
consider moxifloxacin for comorbidities (i.e COPD, DM, CHF)
HCAPPsA, MRSA, E. Coli, Acinetobacter, SerratiaIP - vanc 20mg/kg + pip/tazo 4.5g + azithro 500mgPen allergic - substitute aztreonam or cefepime for pip/tazo

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Mini Intern Bootcamp

Every July, a countless number of bright-eyed Emergency Medicine interns will exit their 4th year slumber and wake up to a sobering shower of utter confusion. I know this because I remember well the day I forgot 4 years of medical education. It wasn't that long ago for me. Allow me to introduce a project that may ease the interns’ hemorrhage of medical knowledge. You may think of it as tranexamic acid for the traumatized and bleeding intern – it just may reduce your interns’ ED mortality rate.

Small Bowel Obstruction


55M c h/o colon ca p/w abd pain x 3d.  Rebound on exam.  3/6/9 Rule: small bowel dilated if > 3 cm, large bowel if > 6 cm, cecum if > 9 cm.