EM Quick Hits 36 – Surviving Sepsis, Angle Closure Glaucoma, Bougies, Frostbite, Hot/Altered Patient, Central Cord Syndrome

Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast Brit Long on Surviving Sepsis Campaign: 2021 Updates (0:38) Nour Khatib on rural medicine case: angle closure glaucoma (11:59) Reuben Strayer on bougie vs endotracheal tube and stylet on first-attempt intubation (20:51) Justin Hensley on management of frostbite (31:35) Sarah Foohey on the hot and altered patient (39:50) Andrew Petrosoniak on central cord syndrome (47:47) Podcast production, editing and sound design by Anton Helman Podcast content, written summary & blog post by Raymond Cho, edited by Anton Helman Cite this podcast as: Helman, A. Long, B. Khatib, N. Strayer, R. Hensley, J. Foohey, S. Petrosoniak, A. EM Quick Hits 36 - Surviving Sepsis, Angle Closure Glaucoma, Bougies, Frostbite, Hot/Altered Patient, Central Cord Syndrome. Emergency Medicine Cases. March 2022. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-march-2022/. Accessed [date]. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: 2021 Updates relevant to EM Screening for Sepsis * New guidelines recommend against using qSOFA as a single screening agent * Commentary: NEWS score is likely a better single screening tool that is easy to use and can be done at triage Resuscitation * Fluids * Guidelines now only suggest rather than recommend using 30 cc/kg of IV crystalloid within the first 30 minutes of resuscitation * Balanced crystalloids such as Plasmalyte and Lactated Ringer's recommended as a first line over normal saline * Vasopressors * In most patients, norepinephrine is the first-line vasopressor, followed by vasopressin, then epinephrine * In patients with cardiac dysfunction, use norepinephrine as first line then dobutamine or epinephrine alone * In septic shock resistant to vasopressors, guidelines now support using IV hydrocortisone * Monitoring resuscitation * Use dynamic parameters (e.g. passive leg raise, stroke volume/pulse pressure variation, ultrasound) rather than using static parameters * Point-of-care ultrasound can be used to assess volume status (IVC, B-lines, cardiac activity) * For patients in septic shock, target a MAP of 65 mmHg * Adjunctive markers: use capillary refill, lactate to guide resuscitation * Antimicrobial therapy * In patients with possible sepsis without shock, consider investigating for other causes for up to 3 hours before starting antimicrobial therapy (adjusted from 1 hour from previous guidelines) * Choice of antimicrobials in the empiric phase * High risk of multi-drug resistant organisms: 2 agents with gram negative coverage * Low risk of multi-drug resistant organisms: 1 agent with gram negative coverage * High risk of MRSA: provide coverage for MRSA (eg. vancomycin) * No risk factors for MRSA: no routine MRSA coverage * Other * IV vitamin C is not recommended in septic shock Update 2023: A multicenter randomized controlled trial including 1563 patients with sepsis-induced hypotension refractory to initial treatment with 1-3L of IV fluids comparing a restrictive fluid strategy (prioritizing vasopressors and low intravenous fluid volumes) and a liberal flu...

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In-depth round table discussions with North America's brightest minds in Emergency Medicine on practical practice-changing EM topics since 2010, plus our EM Quick Hit series for a variety of short EM knowledge nuggets, and our Journal Jam series for EBM deep dives. World class Free Open Access Medical Education (FOAMed). For archived podcast episodes, show notes, quizzes, videos, discussions and an entire EM learning system, visit emergencymedicinecases.com. For donations, please visit https://emergencymedicinecases.com/donation/