390 likes | 517 Views
Naval Medical Center Portsmouth IDC Symposium. “Welcome” . Emergency Medicine Pearls. David Johnson CDR , MC, USN Department of Emergency Medicine Naval Medical Center Portsmouth. Emergency Medicine on Ship. Platform dependent Various expertise levels Medication dependent Ask for help
E N D
Naval Medical Center Portsmouth IDC Symposium “Welcome”
Emergency Medicine Pearls David Johnson CDR, MC, USN Department of Emergency Medicine Naval Medical Center Portsmouth
Emergency Medicine on Ship • Platform dependent • Various expertise levels • Medication dependent • Ask for help • Shipboard • Off ship • You’re the expert – find where to look • www.emedicine.com • www.mdconsult.com
Approach - Prepare • Teamwork • Know your equipment and its location • ABC’s first • Train your crew and department
Arrival on scene • Take charge • Get the help you need • Defuse the situation • Get the pt where they need to go
Mass casualty • If you don’t know what to do before it happens, it’s too late. • Know your plan • Write your plan • You are the expert
Trauma • ABC’s, IV, O2 monitor • C-spine – NEXUS • No distracting injury • No neuro deficits • No altered mental status • No midline tenderness • No alcohol • Complete remainder of exam and intervene as needed
Minor trauma - Ottawa • Ankle • Unable to bear weight (3 steps) • Lateral, medial malleolar pain • Foot • Unable to bear weight • Navicular bone pain • 5th metatarsal pain • Knee • Unable to bear weight • Patellar pain • Fibular head pain • >55 yrs • Unable to flex >90
Acute Myocardial Infarction • Diagnosis • Suspicious Chest Pain History • EKG With Characteristic Changes • Elevated Serum Markers
Acute Myocardial Infarction • Treatment • IV, O2, Monitors • Antiplatelet (Aspirin 325mg) • +/- Nitroglycerine (0.4mg SL q5 x3) • Anticoagulation (heparin, lovenox 1mg/kg))
Emergency End-Organ Damage Urgency DBP >115 mmHg Not really used anymore Hypertension
Hypertension • Emergency • 30% in 1° • Meds: Nitroprusside, Nitroglycerine, Labetalol (20mg IV, double dose q10 until goal (max 300mg)) • Urgency • 24-48° • Meds: Nifedipine, Labetalol, Clonidine, ACE I’s • Special Cases • Pregnancy • Cocaine
Closed Head Injury CT Scan Indications - History • Any LOC • Amnesia • Coagulopathy • Post Trauma Seizure • Post Trauma Emesis CT Scan Indications - Physical • Focal Neurologic Findings • Asymmetric Pupils • Distracting Injury • Intoxication • Large Extracranial Hematoma • Signs of Skull Fracture
Increased ICP • Elevate HOB 30 degrees • Intubate! • Avoid Hypotension • Mannitol 1gm/kg • HTS? • ? Seizure prophylaxis (phenytoin) • Medevac/CT
Seizure • ABC’s, IV, O2 • Goal stop in 30 min • Stop the seizure • Ativan – 2-4mg IV, repeat up to 10mg • Phenytoin 20mg/kg IV at 50mg/min • Consider alcohol withdrawal • Thiamine 100mg IV, Dextrose • Make sure not pregnant!
Migraine Headache • “Kitchen Sink:” IV, Oxygen, Benadryl 25mg IV, Toradol 30 mg IV, Compazine/Reglan 10 mg IV • Narcotics • Sumitriptans • Depakote: 500mg IV (1 dose and then d/c) • DHE: Q8° for 48-72 °’s • Lidocaine 4% Intranasal 1cc
Asthma • History and physical • Acute Treatment • Beta Agonists (albuterol 2,5-5mg) • Anticholinergics (atrovent) • Steroids (solumedrol 125mg IV, decadron 10mg IV) • Subcutaneous epinephrine (1:1000) 0.1-0.5mg SQ • Magnesium 50mg/kg IV over 20 min • Peak Flows
Allergic reaction • Pruritis, urticaria, vomiting, SOB • Benadryl 50 mg IV • Zantac 50 mg IV • Epinephrine • 0.3mg IM of 1:1000 • Dilute 1 ml of 1:10000 in 9 cc NS (100mcg/10ml) at 5-10 mcg/min • Mix 1 ml of 1:1000 in 250cc D5W (4mcg/ml) at 4-10mcg/min • Albuterol, Solumedrol, glucagon
Pneumonia • Mycoplasmapneumoniae • Antibioitics • macrolide • fluoroquinolone • doxycycline
Pharyngitis • GABHS – Centor • Exudates • Anterior lymph nodes • Fever • Absence of cough • Suppurative Complications • Antibiotic Selection • Steroids
Acute Gastroenteritis • Volume Assessment • IV vs Oral Rehydration • Antiemetics • Phenergan 12.5/25 • Zofran
Acute Gastroenteritis • Oral Rehydration Formula • 1 qt water • 1 cup OJ • 4 tbsp sugar • 1 tsp baking soda • 3/4 tsp table salt
Acute Gastroenteritis • Antibiotics: Diarrhea + Blood, Fecal WBCs, Fever, Pain, >6 BMs/24°, Diarrhea >48°, Immunosuppression, or Travel History • Fluoroquinolones (cipro 500mg bid x3) • Macrolides • TMP-SMX • Antimotility Agents (pepto, Imodium)
Urolithiasis • Diagnosis • UA, CT • Treatment • NSAIDs (Ketorolac 30mg IV, Naprosyn 500mg po BID) • Opiates (Morphine 4mg IV, Vicodin 1-2 po q6h PRN) • Antiemetics (Phenergan /Zofran)
UTI • Simple • TMP-SMX • Nitrofurantoin • Fluoroquinolones • Pyridium • Pyelonephritis • Initial Long-Acting IV Antibiotic (Ceftriaxone), IVF & Analgesia • Fluoroquinolones • TMP-SMX • Pyridium
STDs • Quinolone Resistance • Antibiotics • Ceftriaxone250mg IM • PLUS • Azithromycin 1gm po x 1 OR • Doxycycline 100mg po BID f7
Lacerations • Antibiotics • Tetanus • Anesthesia Selection
Lacerations Tetanus Prophylaxis dT: Diptheria & Tetnus Toxoids TIG: Tetnus Immune Globulin *Refer these patients to complete their series, dT in 6 weeks and 6 months
Laceration • Suture Removal Timeline • 1. Face: 3 to 5 days (always replace with Steri Strips) • 2. Scalp and Trunk: 7 to 10 days • 3. Arms and legs: 10 to 14 days • 4. Joints: 14 days
Procedural Sedation • Amnesia • Benzodiazepines • Ketamine • Analgesia • Opiates
Altered Mental Status • ABC’s, IV, O2, accucheck, C-spine • History and physical • Intervene as needed • D50, narcan, thiamine • Labs as available
Toxicology • Sympathomimetics, Anticholinergic, Cholinergic • Benzo’s are your friend • Alcohol withdrawal • Atropine / 2 PAM • Glucagon (B-blockers) • Naloxone, flumazenil