EM Quick Hits 34 Carr’s Case, Septic Arthritis vs Transient Synovitis, Managing Tracheostomies, Ethylene Glycol Poisoning, Ketamine for Agitation

Emergency Medicine Cases - Un pódcast de Dr. Anton Helman - Martes

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Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast David Carr the mighty return of Carr's Cases! (00:38) Sarah Reid on differentiating septic arthritis from transient synovitis in pediatric limp (18:52) Anand Swaminathan on managing tracheostomy complications in the ED (27:50) Nour Khatib on rural medicine and ethylene glycol poisoning (37:52) Justin Morgenstern on RCTs for ketamine in patients with severe agitation (48:17) Podcast production, editing and sound design by Anton Helman Written summary & blog post by Sarah Reid and Anton Helman November, 2021 Cite this podcast as: Helman, A., Swaminathan, A., Khatib, N., Reid, S., H. Carr, D., Morgenstern J. EM Quick Hits 34 - Carr's Case, Septic Arthritis vs Transient Synovitis, Managing Tracheostomies, Ethylene Glycol Poisoning, Ketamine for Agitation. Emergency Medicine Cases. November, 2021. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-november-2021/. Accessed [date]. Pediatric nontraumatic limp - differentiating transient synovitis from acute bacterial osteoarticular infection (septic arthritis, osteomyelitis) * Age and fever dictate differential for nontraumatic pediatric limp Causes of non-traumatic limp by age/presence of fever * Workup to consider: * Xrays * CBCD, CRP, blood culture if infection/inflammatory cause suspected to help distinguish between transient synovitis and osteoarticular infection * US (for effusion, soft tissues) if significant fever and/or elevation of inflammatory markers and/or severe pain * MRI with gadolinium is the most accurate noninvasive test for osteoarticular infection and should be considered for patients with persistent pain/fever Differentiating transient synovitis and acute bacterial osteoarticular infection * Volume of blood matters when obtaining blood for culture and sensitivity which is essential, as hematogenous spread is common in children with osteoarticular infections Expand to view reference list * https://www.cps.ca/documents/position/osteoarticular-infections-in-children * Peltola H. and Paakkonen M.  Acute Osteomyelitis in Children.  N Engl J Med. 2014;370:352-360. * Tu J, et al. Test characteristics of history, examination and investigations in the evaluation for septic arthritis in the child presenting with acute non-traumatic limp. A systematic review. BMJ Open 2020;10:e038088. Approach to tracheostomy emergencies in the ED EM Cases Best Case Ever with Scott Weingart on Tracheo-innominate Fistula Expand to view reference list * First10EM Respiratory Distress in the Patient with Tracheostomy *