
Dr. McKay, welcome to the Champagne Club!


The workaround for this problem is to ‘end’ an exam before you save any images. That resets the clock and your study should cross over on the correct day. It does not save an ’empty study’ and no file without any images are sent to qPath. It’s a freebie. I’d recommend doing that. It will make your images much easier to find in qPath.
Continue readingAnaphylaxis occurs on a spectrum. Although anaphylactic shock is a well defined form of distributive shock, your patient does not have to have “shock” to have “anaphylaxis”.
Continue readingAdd 0.01 ml of 1:1,000 epinephrine per ml of lidocaine.
We keep 5 and 30 ml vials of lidocaine in the ED. To make 30 ml of 1:100,000 lidocaine with epi, draw up 0.3 ml of 1:1000 epinephrine with a tuberculin or insulin syringe and inject into the 30 ml vial. To make 10 ml, use two 5 ml vials. Inject the 0.1 ml of epi into one of the 5 ml vials of lidocaine, then draw up both 5 ml vials of lidocaine into one 10 ml syringe. Voila.
Continue readingThe Arkansas Department of Health has loosened their regulation on who qualifies for monoclonal antibodies as a treatment for COVID-19. They released an updated list of qualifications on July 19. I’ll list them here and add a link to download the entire document.
Continue readingSupraventricular Tachycardia with abnormal conduction (“aberrancy”) is often difficult to distinguish from Ventricular Tachycardia. The 2015 AHA guidelines on the management of adults with SVT state that the presence of AV dissociation (i.e., the presence of P waves visible among the QRS complexes at a rate slower than the ventricular rate) or fusion/capture beats “provides the diagnosis of ventricular tachycardia.” Other criteria are suggestive, but not confirmatory. Diagnostic algorithms – Brugada or Vereckei for example, are complicated and can be difficult to apply.
Continue readingAt the beginning of resident conference each week, we run through a list of common problems you might in encounter in the ED. It’s ‘open book,’ but is supposed to go really quickly – the whole list should take less than 10 minutes. Here is that list – the “roll call.” At this point we have 2 lists: one has general medicince / toxicology items, the other has EKG tidbits. We will alternate these every month or so and may add another one with antibiotics or whatever else seems to fit the format. Get familiar with it. These are things you will use for the rest of your life.

For any non-blog-savvy folks (of which I am one), the simplest way to follow the blog is to click the “follow” tab that shows up in the bottom right corner when you open a page. No need to create a wordpress account – just enter your email address. Then you will receive an email with a link to confirm. Click it, and that’s it. You will get emails whenever a new post is added. For whatever reason, the “follow” button goes away as you scroll down a page but comes back if you scroll up.
