LAST Chance to Verify That Dose

A 34-year-old male presents to the emergency department from his urologist’s office after exhibiting word-finding difficulty and confusion during an elective surgery. He had previously been feeling well and is otherwise healthy. Per discussion with his urologist, the patient reported continued discomfort during the procedure, so he was given additional lidocaine until his pain was sufficiently managed. He developed symptoms that progressed from dizziness to word-finding difficulty and confusion. It was subsequently noticed that he had accidentally been treated with 2% lidocaine without epinephrine instead of 1% lidocaine without epinephrine, thus doubling the intended dose…

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Pediatric Submersions

The overhead announcement goes off: “Team B to the trauma room”. The report: EMS is bringing a 2-year-old female that was found unresponsive in the family swimming pool by her mother after being alerted by an older sibling. Unknown downtime. The patient is being bagged by bag-valve mask (BVM) and has slow, but palpable, femoral pulses, she is unresponsive, ETA 2 minutes…

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A Flare in the ED: Using Ultrasound to Diagnose Gout

A 53-year-old male with hypertension presents to the emergency room with painful swelling of the right first toe at the MTP joint. The patient was in good health until a few days ago, where he was attending a college reunion. The swelling and pain increased overnight. The patient is having difficulty walking this morning due to the pain. He tried taking two Advil for the pain, which helped bring the pain from an 8/10 to a 6/10…

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