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Online Medical Education on Emergency Department (ED) Critical Care, Trauma, and Resuscitation

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You are here: Home / Archives for Josh Farkas

Rapid Sequence Termination (RST) of status epilepticus

June 4, 2014 by Josh Farkas 12 Comments

[PLEASE NOTE:  This post has been updated with a new post.  If you have time, consider reading them in sequence, starting with this post first]   0 Introduction 0 Status Epilepticus is our favorite neurologic emergency.   If managed correctly, patients will often have excellent neurologic outcomes and short ICU stays.   Incorrect management increases risk of […]

Contraindication checklist for thrombolysis in PE

May 31, 2014 by Josh Farkas 2 Comments

A few weekends ago during a very chaotic call, my ICU team ordered half-dose alteplase for a patient with a submassive PE without checking his INR.   They had performed a thoughtful interview of the patient to look for contraindications to thrombolysis, but somehow this slipped through the cracks.   On reviewing all the data together […]

Hypertonic saline infusion rant

May 28, 2014 by Josh Farkas Leave a Comment

0 Clinical Question 0 A patient is admitted status post ischemic stroke with focal edema on CT scan.   There is no concern regarding herniation.   Is there a role for continuous infusion of hypertonic saline with a goal of maintaining a sustained elevation of sodium? 0 Theoretical Benefit 0 Theoretically, elevating the tonicity of the blood […]

Rapid Sequence Intubation and Procedurization

May 22, 2014 by Josh Farkas 4 Comments

0 Introduction with a case 0 A otherwise healthy 70 year-old woman presented to Genius General Hospital with multifocal pneumonia.  In the ED she was treated with appropriate antibiotics and two liters of crystalloid.   During her ED course she was found to have increasing tachypnea to 30-35 breaths/min, and was subsequently transferred to the ICU.   […]

Avoiding over-diagnosis and over-treatment of MI in critically ill patients

May 17, 2014 by Josh Farkas 1 Comment

Introduction 0 It’s common for critically ill patients to be screened for MI using troponin.   Troponin levels are often positive.   One thing leads to another, and before you know it the frail 99-year-old lady you admitted for a COPD exacerbation has an intracranial hemorrhage from the heparin drip she was put on because her troponin […]

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