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Podcast
heft emcast archives
By HEFT ED
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An Emergency Medicine podcast brought to you from the Heart of England Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK
An Emergency Medicine podcast brought to you from the Heart of England Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK
Sedation in the ED
Episode in
heft emcast archives
An overview of sedation in the Emergency Department
28:26
Sepsis SMACCback
Episode in
heft emcast archives
So we're here at SMACC being treated to a fantastic conference and some superb talks. Last night (Day 1) closed with a superb panel of experts from across the globe talking on sepsis including Melvyn Singer, Paul Marik, John Myburgh, Simon Finfer, Kathryn Maitland & Flavia Machado. The panel challenged current global practice on sepsis including the use of SIRS criteria, antiobitic prescribing patterns and the utility of lactate.
18:29
Peripheral vasopressors and preshospital LMA vs ET Tube in Cardiac Arrest
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Over the last few episodes we’ve talked about the use of vasopressors and their utility in resuscitation. It is a commonly held belief that giving vasopressors peripherally puts patients at high risk of extravasation and secondary skin necrosis. In an ideal world patients would have a central line placed and then have their vasopressors commenced, sadly life in the ED doesn’t always mean that time permits this luxury......
08:59
RSI in the ED; should EM be taking the lead?
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Rapid sequence induction, or RSI, is the preferred method of emergency tracheal intubation outside the operating room because it results in a rapid state of unconsciousness (induction) and neuromuscular blockade (paralysis). The Scottish Intensive Care Society defines RSI as follows........
21:40
The Hector project, Heartlands Elderly Care Trauma & Ongoing Recovery; a progress report
Episode in
heft emcast archives
We catch up with Dr David Raven, Consultant in EM at HEFT regarding his Hector project, Heartlands Elderly Care Trauma & Ongoing Recovery, with a progress report.
16:57
Presyncope, what does it mean for our patients in ED?
Episode in
heft emcast archives
What does presyncope mean to you? If you ask this question to a handful of doctors you’ll get a multitude of different answers, you’ll also get a huge variety of opinion as to their understanding of it’s significance or associated morbidity and mortality. As with most areas of greyness in medicine this is contributed to significantly by a paucity of evidence on the topic.
19:23
Vasopressors & Inotropes in the ED
Episode in
heft emcast archives
In this podcast we are going to be talking about inotropes and vasopressors. And we’re going to be talking about them with respect to septic shock. In the UK we use the definition of septic shock as a patient who is hypotensive following the administration of 30 mils per kilo of IV fluids. You might wonder why we can’t continue giving these patients more and more IV fluids, but as with most things in medicine there are side effects and consequences to this. This fluid (and even more so in sepsis) is going to moving from the intravascular space to other fluid compartments and can give rise to problems such as pulmonary oedema. Inotropes and vasopressors in themselves are not harmless but they do have a role in supporting the cardiovascular system in haemodynamic compromise and the surviving sepsis campaign would ask us to consider them went 30 mils per kilo has been administered to patients without the resultant rise in BP.....
16:13
The PROMISE trial; is this the end of EGDT???
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Trial of Early, Goal-Directed Resuscitation for Septic Shock NEJM March 17 2015 Sepsis has been in the EM literature a lot over the past 12 months. The phenomenal reduction in mortality that Rivers Early Goal Directed Therapy (EGDT) demonstrated in 2001 has been variably implemented. He had demonstrated a NNT of 6 to save one life when implementing EGDT in severe sepsis or septic shock, it was however a small single center trial and many were skeptical of it’s external validity. The Surviving Sepsis Campaign has endorsed the implementation of EGDT. Despite this the implementation has not been widespread. In order to address concerns re the external validity of Rivers work the last 12 months has seen a trio of papers addressing the question;
13:26
Thrombolysis for presumed MI in cardiac arrest
Episode in
heft emcast archives
You’re in resus leading a cardiac arrest. Lying on the trolley is Dave, a 45 year old male, known hypertensive and type 2 diabetic. He collapsed whilst putting a big bet on in the bookies, having just complained of some chest pain, looked flushed and sweaty and fell to the deck. He had immediate bystander CPR, the ambulance arrived within a couple of minutes, confirmed cardiac arrest with a rhythm of VT.......
11:05
Assessing fluid status; USS and the IVC?
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Fluid resuscitation represents the bedrock of initial treatment in the critically ill and injured patient with shock. In septic shock, fluid loading as part of early goal directed therapy was shown to confer a huge mortality benefit. It seems intuitive that shocked patients require fluid loading however, numerous studies in critically ill patients have demonstrated that only around 50% respond to a fluid challenge. Are we over-resuscitating these patients and if so, what are the consequences? Evidence is accumulating that over-resuscitation is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Since clinical determination of fluid status in the haemodynamically unstable patient is unreliable, how do we assess volume status reliably to ensure those who need fluid get it?
11:29
Central Venous Pressure and fluid responsiveness
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Since Rivers’s publication of Early Goal Directed Therapy (EGDT) at the turn of the century clinicians have talked about aggressive resuscitation for septic shock. One of the goals underpinning this technique is the insertion of a central line with targeted goals of CVP and central venous oxygen saturations. This model of care for patients with septic shock had an NNT of 6 to save a life which is pretty phenomenal! Try to think of another therapy that has been proven to have such a dramatic effect on patients…… So why is it that most of you reading this won’t have followed EGDT in your patients with septic shock? How heavily should this guilt be weighing on your shoulders?
07:34
Framingham Risk Factors in the ED; from the RCFN
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Everyone asks about Framingham risk factors when taking a history for possible ACS but what significance do they actually hold?
12:33
HIV testing in the ED
Episode in
heft emcast archives
A contentious subject in the ED but how would it work??
06:34
A shocking pause
Episode in
heft emcast archives
A look at the impact that a prolonged cause in CPR has on the associated outcome.
08:00
Lactate and lactate clearance
Episode in
heft emcast archives
A patients lactate is something that we often want to know, but how much do you really understand about it’s significance and what is lactate clearance all about?
12:03
One year of EBM
Episode in
heft emcast archives
A round up of some of the key papers that we’ve reviewed over the 12 months that HEFTEMCAST has been running
10:33
Blood and Sepsis; the TRISS trial
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Sepsis is a hot topic at the moment. In this episode we look at the transfusion targets for patients with septic shock when on ITU
06:08
Video laryngoscopy; can you see the cords?
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Whilst the embedded management of the airway in ED is via direct laryngoscopy, advances in technology and equipment leads to multiple alternatives in the form of video laryngoscopy. We look at a recent systematic review looking at this topic.
04:47
The ARISE trial
Episode in
heft emcast archives
The ARISE trial, following on from the ProCESS trial, is there a different message or is EGDT a thing of the past?
10:30
Diagnostics in EM from the RCFN podcast
Episode in
heft emcast archives
Everything we do in the Emergency Department is a test, be that a question, looking for a clinical finding or performing a ‘traditional’ test. Truly understanding this concept and applying it will help lift your diagnostics to a higher level.
16:05
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