Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Critical Care Notes

Anyone in medical (including APPs) education using AI in assignments? I don’t mean using it to grade or create assignments or content, but having students do something with AI? #MedEd

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Post image

Confused about steroids in the ICU? This week on the podcast, we talk to David Janz about who needs them, which ones to use, and which dose. icuscenarios.com/lightning-ro...

4 months ago 2 0 1 0
DOPES in Crashing Vent  #criticalcare #emergencymedicine
DOPES in Crashing Vent #criticalcare #emergencymedicine YouTube video by EMSwami

DOPES Mnemonic: structured approach to deal with hypoxia in the ventilated patient
Displacement, Obstruction, Patient factors (ie PE, PTX), Equipment Issues, Stacked Breaths.
Address all of these factors in parallel

youtube.com/shorts/rwumW...
#EMIMCC

4 months ago 4 3 1 0

I have a long standing belief that procrastination often pays off. You just have to known WHEN to procrastinate.

5 months ago 2 0 1 0

Remembering the most likely mediator of reduced mortality in the original EGDT therapy was the presence of the CI in the intervention arm, the regular attendance of an interested and informed clinician (and skilled ICU nurse) likely has a bigger impact than any single drug or intervention.

5 months ago 30 9 4 1
Post image
6 months ago 2 1 0 0
Preview
a woman in a pearl costume says pearls ALT: a woman in a pearl costume says pearls

Just updated the IBCC chapter on cholecystitis & cholangitis.

These patients are often initially triaged to the ICU.

Understanding these diseases can help us direct patients to interventions they need.

Let’s talk about four pearls 😁

chapter: emcrit.org/ibcc/biliary... #EMIMCC

6 months ago 21 6 1 1
Advertisement
Video

A man in his 50s seeks the ED for the umpteenth time since his abdo pain started a few years ago. He says that it’s his gallbladder, surgery has been denied because of diffuse pain and normal blood tests. Today CRP 9, Leukocytes 11. #POCUS He got his operation the next day. #EMIMCC

6 months ago 12 3 1 0

I do this pretty regularly

7 months ago 1 0 0 0
Preview
Expanding the horizon: The case for point-of-care... : Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners enhanced diagnostic accuracy, faster decision-making, and improved patient satisfaction. With growing access to affordable handheld devices and expanding educational opportunities, POCUS is becoming i...

Point-of-care ultrasound is being used by an increasing number of nurse practitioners, but its utility is not limited to the ICU, nor even to Acute Care.

journals.lww.com/jaanp/abstra...

8 months ago 1 1 0 0
Preview
a man wearing sunglasses and a green shirt with breaking bobby bones on the bottom ALT: a man wearing sunglasses and a green shirt with breaking bobby bones on the bottom

rapidly pushing IV calcium may cause:

😦 vasodilation, bradycardia, hypotension
😦 nausea/vomiting, flushing

if patients are conscious, this can make them feel horrible

if the patient is obtunded & not intubated, emesis can be a big problem

whenever possible, give IV Ca slowly #EMIMCC

8 months ago 64 12 3 1

The other thing to remember is that patients in HFNC typically benefit more from “flow” than FiO2. So wean the FiO2 before the flow.

8 months ago 2 0 0 0

And remember, ST is often compensatory. Don’t slow it down blindly.

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

“But WHY did they fail?” All too often I get, “they failed SBT” from someone who also wasn’t there, and that’s that. Do it again and see for yourself. Often you can get them off the vent after all.

9 months ago 2 0 0 0
Advertisement

Big news for lung ultrasound #POCUS

9 months ago 2 1 0 0

I sadly see this not rarely. Especially with overworked interns. They run out of time and rather than admit this, and risk being perceived as failing, they lie. And they ALWAYS get caught.

9 months ago 0 0 0 0

I’ll add to this, communicate when you want to be called. Don’t just start NE with a MAP goal>65, add, “call me if you get to X.” This prevents you getting busy and checking back to find that they’re almost maxed.

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
Post image

Occult VF in Cardiac Arrest: 5.3% of patients with cardiac arrest showed VF on echo but ECG w/ PEA/asystole

Study does not show improved outcomes but not powered to do so

Strong argument for intra-arrest echo as it can dramatically change management

#EMIMCC

9 months ago 9 5 0 0
Advice for Interns 2: Listen to The Nurses #emergencymedicine #internship #residents
Advice for Interns 2: Listen to The Nurses #emergencymedicine #internship #residents YouTube video by EMSwami

Advice for New Trainees #2: Listen to your nurses

Don’t mistake your short time as a doctor as equivalent clinically to their years and decades of experience

If a nurse asks you to reevaluate a patient, GO TO THE BEDSIDE AND RE-EVALUTE THE PATIENT, EVERY TIME.

youtube.com/shorts/c0o5F...
#EMIMCC

9 months ago 13 3 0 2
Post image

Might we be correcting hyponatremia too slowly? May our patients be suffering because we're too fearful of the risk of central pontine myelinolysis? Here's data that may challenge our regular approach. Hat tip to the authors.
eddyjoemd.com/foamed

9 months ago 5 2 3 0

Interesting. Had never thought of this before. How many other things in medicine to we get wrong because if assumptions?

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

This is what we were waiting for. A direct comparison between apixaban and rivaroxaban for the treatment of acute VTE. Apixaban reduces bleeding risk in the first 3 months by >50%!

Practice changing investigator-initiated RCT.

#ISTH2025

10 months ago 72 37 4 7
Advertisement
Lightning rounds 53: GI Q&A with Elliot Tapper – Critical Care Scenarios

Recently had @ebtapper.bsky.social on the Critical Care Scenarios podcast talking GI and this topic came up.

icuscenarios.com/lightning-ro...

10 months ago 1 1 0 0

Totally agree regarding docusate. I start bowel regimen (typically senna) on admission. Like pain, much easier to get ahead of than to fix when out of control. Escalate as needed. BM at least every 3 days.

10 months ago 1 0 1 0

Not anesthesia but all my attendings are. We typically reverse prior to extubation in cases like you mention.

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
Video

New lesson in the POCUS course: Abdominal ultrasound!

#medsky #emimcc #POCUS

10 months ago 9 3 0 0

Mottling is one of this signs that gets me real worried.

10 months ago 4 2 0 0
Post image Post image Post image

beta-blocker in sepsis trials continue to mystify me

you have patients on reasonable doses of pressor (0.5 mcg/kg/min norepi equivalent) with an average MAP ~80 (mean diastolic BP ~60!)

you're worried about catecholamine toxicity

instead of reducing the pressors you add a beta-blocker😳 #EMIMCC

10 months ago 40 6 7 0

Don’t be distracted by the obvious pleural yuck…

10 months ago 0 0 0 0

My students know well of my disdain for the d-diner…

10 months ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement