EM Quick Hits 63 S-TEC and HUS, IM Epinephrine in OHCA, Dengue, Geriatric Trauma Imaging, TTP

Topics in this EM Quick Hits podcast Stephen Freedman on pediatric bloody diarrhea, S-TEC and hemolytic uremic syndrome (1:06) Justin Morgenstern on the evidence for IM epinephrine in out of hospital cardiac arrest (27:04) Matthew McArther on recognition and ED management of dengue fever (33:56) Andrew Petrosoniak on imaging decision making in trauma in older patients (47:20) Brit Long & Michael Gotlieb on recognition and management of TTP (59:10) Podcast production, editing and sound design by Anton Helman Podcast content, written summary & blog post by Brandon Ng, edited by Anton Helman, March, 2025 Cite this podcast as: Helman, A. Freedman, S. Morgenstern, J. McArther, M. Petrosoniak, A. Long, B. Gotlieb, M. EM Quick Hits 63 - S-TEC and HUS, IM Epinephrine in OHCA, Dengue, Geriatric Trauma Imaging, TTP. Emergency Medicine Cases. March, 2025. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/em-quick-hits-march-2025/. Accessed April 16, 2025. Pediatric bloody diarrhea: Shiga Toxin Producing E. Coli (S-TEC) and HUS Consider obtaining a stool specimen or rectal swab in the ED for PCR testing (not culture) to detect S-TEC, Salmonella, Shigella, and Campylobacter. Which children with bloody diarrhea require bloodwork? Most children with blood in stool do not require blood work. Indications for bloodwork include: * Hemodynamic instability * S-TEC is high on your differential (bloodwork may be useful as baseline) * Recent travel with bloody diarrhea and fever * Close contact with S-TEC cases (~10% household transmission rate) When to suspect S-TEC? * Severe crampy abdominal pain * >15-20 small frequent, mucousy, bloody stools per day * Low grade fever * Signs of microangiopathy (e.g. petechiae, jaundice) * Endemic area Children generally do not require stool O&P for acute diarrhea but should be considered for chronic abdominal pain, chronic diarrhea, or failure to thrive. When to test for C.difficile? There is a high carriage rate of C. diff (up to ~50% in children under 2 years old). Consider C. diff testing only in children with risk factors such as recent antibiotic use or hospitalization, or as a second line test on follow up if bloody diarrhea persists that is not noted to be from another bacterial etiology. Why is it important to recognize S-TEC? A complication of S-TEC infection is Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS), caused by Shiga toxin accumulation in the kidney which leads to the HUS triad: acute kidney injury, hemolysis, and thrombocytopenia. * Shiga toxin 2 (STX2) is specifically associated with a 15-20% risk of HUS in children <5 years * HUS development increases risk of dialysis to 50-60% within 1 week * Differentiating between STX1 (<1% risk of HUS) and STX2 toxin can help risk-stratify patients How to risk stratify a positive STEC result: * Assume blood in stool to be STX2 producing STEC until proven otherwise (non-bloody STEC unlikely making Shiga toxin 2 and unlikely to cause HUS) * Determine duration of diarrhea: HUS develops a median of 7 days after diarrhea onset * Diarrhea >10 days = low risk of HUS * Determining if toxin result is STX2+ (high risk) How to manage high risk patients with confirmed S-TEC? * Manage dehydration aggressively (volume depletion is associated with adverse outcomes in H...

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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/