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Specialty: Emergency Medicine
Condition: Cough

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Total 8 results found since Jan 2013.

Large cerebellar stroke in a young COVID-19 positive patient
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), most frequently presents with respiratory symptoms such as fever, dyspnea, shortness of breath, cough, or myalgias. There is now a growing body of evidence that demonstrates that severe SARS-CoV-2 infections can develop clinically significant coagulopathy, inflammation, and cardiomyopathy, which have been implicated in COVID-19 associated cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs).
Source: The Journal of Emergency Medicine - February 9, 2021 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Faith Quenzer, Cameron Smyres, Norma Tabarez, Sukhdeep Singh, Andrew LaFree, Christian Tomaszewski, Stephen R. Hayden Tags: Selected Topics: Neurological Emergencies Source Type: research

Large Cerebellar Stroke in a Young COVID-19 –Positive Patient: Case Report
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), most frequently presents with respiratory symptoms, such as fever, dyspnea, shortness of breath, cough, or myalgias. There is now a growing body of evidence that demonstrates that severe SARS-CoV-2 infections can develop clinically significant coagulopathy, inflammation, and cardiomyopathy, which have been implicated in COVID-19 –associated cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs).
Source: The Journal of Emergency Medicine - February 9, 2021 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Faith Quenzer, Cameron Smyres, Norma Tabarez, Sukhdeep Singh, Andrew LaFree, Christian Tomaszewski, Stephen R. Hayden Tags: Selected Topics: Neurological Emergencies Source Type: research

Studying the Clinical Data of COVID Positive patients admitted to a tertiary care academic hospital
Conclusion: The most common presenting symptoms included fever, cough, and shortness of breath. Patients who required ICU admission at presentation had a worse prognosis. Those with greater severity of symptoms were mainly elderly patients among which the most common comorbidity was hypertention followed by cardiac disease.
Source: Journal of Emergencies, Trauma and Shock - June 9, 2020 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Julio Arrieta Sagar Galwankar Natalia Lattanzio Darrel Ray Amit Agrawal Source Type: research

Ditch the Machine to Improve Accuracy in Blood Pressure Measurement and Diagnostics
Conclusion For the patient in this case, the decision to forego the convenience of a machine in favor of the skills of a knowledgeable paramedic was lifesaving. Much like the comparison often drawn between the old-fashioned barbell and more sophisticated exercise machines, newer, more complex, and more expensive might make a process more comfortable, but doesn’t always equate to superior results. As we surrender more and more of our hands-on skills to the ease of automated technology, we risk more than the loss of the aptitudes that form the foundation of sound patient assessment—we place our patients in jeopardy of mi...
Source: JEMS Special Topics - October 24, 2018 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Mark Rock, NRP Tags: Exclusive Articles Cardiac & Resuscitation Source Type: news

A True Hematologic Emergency
​BY GREGORY TAYLOR, DO, & JACKLYN M​CPARLANE, DO​A 33-year-old woman with a past medical history of sickle cell SS presented to the emergency department with chest pain, difficulty breathing, and a cough for two days. Her chest pain was diffuse, without radiation, and partially reproducible. Her cough was nonproductive, and she also reported fever and chills.The patient noted this was different from her normal back and leg pain from past sickle cell crises. She was following up with a sickle cell specialist, and was compliant with her hydroxyurea treatment.Her temperature was 102.8°F, blood pressure was 94/60 mm...
Source: The Case Files - June 26, 2018 Category: Emergency Medicine Tags: Blog Posts Source Type: research

Polymethylmethacrylate cement pulmonary embolism and infarct
Discussion Pulmonary cement emboli can occur in up to 23% of percutaneous vertebroplasty.1 This procedure is widely used making emergency practitioner recognition of complications important. Most complications are related to leakage of the bone cement into the venous system. Pulmonary migration...
Source: Emergency Medicine Journal - February 13, 2014 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Stevens, A. C. Tags: Fractures, Drugs: cardiovascular system, Pain (neurology), Stroke, Venous thromboembolism, Radiology, Pulmonary embolism, Clinical diagnostic tests, Radiology (diagnostics), Ethics, Trauma Images in emergency medicine Source Type: research

Short answer question case series: a dangerous cause of dyspnoea
Case vignette A 52-year-old man with hepatitis C and a remote history of recreational drug abuse presents with several days of shortness of breath, cough and malaise. He was seen at an outside hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia given his cough and shortness of breath. Subsequently, he was seen again and found to have a small abscess of his arm that was drained. On review of systems, he endorses nausea and generalised weakness but denies abdominal pain, chest pain, numbness, fever, headache or dizziness. On physical exam, he is afebrile but tachypnoeic, has decreased breath sounds at the bases, and has an appropriately h...
Source: Emergency Medicine Journal - July 19, 2013 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Woodfield, A., Runde, D., Jang, T. Tags: Poisoning/Injestion, Foodborne infections, Hepatitis and other GI infections, Pneumonia (infectious disease), TB and other respiratory infections, Cranial nerves, Headache (including migraine), Pain (neurology), Stroke, Drugs misuse (including addiction), Source Type: research

A Melioidosis Patient Presenting with Brainstem Signs in the Emergency Department
Conclusions: In light of this case, patients with identifiable risk factors, especially underlying diabetes, a history of positive soil contact, and those who lived in an endemic area or ever traveled to an endemic area, and who present themselves with fever and neurologic deficit or multi-organ involvement, should have melioidosis considered in the differential diagnosis.
Source: The Journal of Emergency Medicine - April 11, 2012 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Chia-Te Kung, Chao-Jui Li, Sheung-Fat Ko, Chen-Hsiang Lee Tags: Clinical Communications: Adults Source Type: research