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I'll be honest, I don't know much about spirometry, but she does have decreased Tidal volume if that helps.Ok, due to her sob then get me a CXR and spirometry
Give me both for contrast
@LucidSplash I'm only 16
Page Cardiothoracic surgery; go to the OR
I would personally from an ED perspective run the sepsis pathway because of the tachycardia and fever. The blood pressure is high, but that could be associated with compensated shock. Elevated white count and signs of UTI, I would think urosepsis is a possibility. Considering all the hell going on, I felt it would be a safe approach. I of course could be wrong but that'd be how I would go about it until proven otherwise. A lot of unreliable labs however given the circumstances. Maybe I'd even leave it up to the admitting physicians before initiating the ABxI gotta ask, would you run sepsis protocol given the vital signs?
I would personally from an ED perspective run the sepsis pathway because of the tachycardia and fever. The blood pressure is high, but that could be associated with compensated shock. Elevated white count and signs of UTI, I would think urosepsis is a possibility. Considering all the hell going on, I felt it would be a safe approach. I of course could be wrong but that'd be how I would go about it until proven otherwise. A lot of unreliable labs however given the circumstances. Maybe I'd even leave it up to the admitting physicians before initiating the ABx
Thank you for that, all good information to know and to be aware of, especially the last part👍Just from a learning standpoint, if the dissection is descending only, do not bother CT surgery, they won't care. If ascending only go ahead. If BOTH you'll need both services (but the vascular consult isn't as urgent as the CT consult). But if you suspect dissection that heavily get the CTA all the way into the abdomen to see the distal extent of the dissection. The hematuria could also be from a kidney that is malperfused if the dissection because it is coming off the false lumen.
Just from a learning standpoint, if the dissection is descending only, do not bother CT surgery, they won't care. If ascending only go ahead. If BOTH you'll need both services (but the vascular consult isn't as urgent as the CT consult). But if you suspect dissection that heavily get the CTA all the way into the abdomen to see the distal extent of the dissection. The hematuria could also be from a kidney that is malperfused if the dissection extends that far because it is coming off the false lumen.
from real world standpoint,though, if someone has a thoracic dissection of any kind then i'm calling CT surgery. as a non-surgeon, I'm not going to make the call about medical vs surgical management. i'm going to make them come see the patient, and review the images, and if they don't want to surgerize after that, then so be it. But i'm not going to be a GP or ER doc making that call on my own...
from real world standpoint,though, if someone has a thoracic dissection of any kind then i'm calling CT surgery. as a non-surgeon, I'm not going to make the call about medical vs surgical management. i'm going to make them come see the patient, and review the images, and if they don't want to surgerize after that, then so be it. But i'm not going to be a GP or ER doc making that call on my own...
All the hospitals i have worked in have bylawsAdditionally it should be noted that "in the real world," knowing the appropriate service to consult is important. No one "makes me" come see consults. If it isn't an appropriate consult then the ED doc and I have an adult discussion and I'm happy to provide education to them on the subject; that's part of my job anyway. Everyone is better off for it. I've never had a situation where an ED doc refused to accept that for something as cut and dry as ascending vs descending dissection because I work with generally decent ED docs who are amenable to being educated about specialty-specific consulting. I will frequently review the images for them remotely if necessary but I can guarantee that our CT guys (who don't have residents or fellows but PAs and NPs instead) are just going to tell you to call the appropriate service as soon as they confirm with you there isn't an ascending component to the dissection.
Additionally it should be noted that "in the real world," knowing the appropriate service to consult is important. No one "makes me" come see consults. If it isn't an appropriate consult then the ED doc and I have an adult discussion and I'm happy to provide education to them on the subject; that's part of my job anyway. Everyone is better off for it. I've never had a situation where an ED doc refused to accept that for something as cut and dry as ascending vs descending dissection because I work with generally decent ED docs who are amenable to being educated about specialty-specific consulting. I will frequently review the images for them remotely if necessary but I can guarantee that our CT guys (who don't have residents or fellows but PAs and NPs instead) are just going to tell you to call the appropriate service as soon as they confirm with you there isn't an ascending component to the dissection.
I don't understand why you are unwilling to understand that this is about the appropriateness of the consult. I'm just trying to educate you on who is the right person to talk to about your hypothetical patient's problem and that can be done over the phone in this setting. I mean maybe go ask in the EM forum? They might tell you that CT surgery doesn't manage descending dissections and that should go to vascular. I'm just trying to help you understand that. CT can't tell you if the patient needs surgery for a descending dissection because they don't manage them.
If you threatened CT and they came, they would write that in their note "consulted to see patient for descending dissection. This is not an appropriate consult, patient requires vascular surgery consult. Recommend vascular consult."
Make an easy one if you are willing to give me one 😀
This is good, I'm sure he'll get this one. Dang 30 hours though hahaPatient is a 40 year old female coming in with 30 hours of abrupt onset right sided and substernal chest pain with associated shortness of breath. She says the pain is constant since onset, worse when she takes a deep breath. Pain does not radiate anywhere, she has never had anything like this before. She has no other medical problems excepting gallstones. She only takes oral birth control pills. She drinks socially, smokes 1 ppd cigs, and denies street drug use. She has no surgical history.
Pulse 105, O2 92%, RR 20, Temp 100.0F, BP is 110/70, D-stick is 90.
Before you start rattling off tests, list top 5 items in your differential, and what you are looking for on physical exam to confirm your primary diagnosis.
I would like to order a CBC and Arterial Blood gas for labs
I am worried for possible infection due to increased WBC, or possible reoccurrence of the cancer?
Ok so might want to start the patient on o2
EKG and CXR will be needed
Angiogram needed?